On 07/14/2015 10:29 AM, Paul Koning wrote:
The accuracy of the FPGA depends on the approach. If it’s a structural (gate level) model, it is as accurate as the schematics you’re working from. And as I mentioned, that accuracy is quite good; it lets you see obscure details that are not documented and certainly not visible in a software simulator. The example I like to point to is the 6000 property that you can figure out a PPU 0 hard loop by doing a deadstart dump and looking for an unexpected zero in the instruction area: deadstart writes a zero where the P register points at that time. But you won’t find that documented or explained anywhere. The FPGA model derived from the schematics reproduces this behavior, and when you look at how it happens, the explanation becomes blindingly obvious. *This* is why I feel there’s a point in doing this sort of work.
I can agree with some points, but not others. In the 6600, for example, clock distribution was a big design issue--not so in an FPGA. You had racks of taper-pin mats of wiring between the cordwood moules extending over (by today's standards) long distances. Cooling was a huge issue. In those respects, an FPGA hardly resembles a "real" 6600.
--Chuck
