1. The passthrough from VGA to 8514/A and/or 8514/A to VGA no longer relies on hackish places where to switch from/to, instead, relying on port 0x3c3 of VGA doing so (though the Mach8/32 still needs some places where to manually switch from/to, mainly the MCA one when configuring the EEPROM).
2. Implemented the MCA behalf of the Mach32 and its corresponding reset function.
3. Properly implemented (more or less) true color, including 24-bit BGR rendering
4. Other fixes such as color patterns and mono patterns being more correct than before in various operating systems and in 24-bit true color.
5. Implemented the onboard Mach32 video of the IBM PS/ValuePoint P60 machine.
6. Made the onboard internal video detect when it's 8514/A compatible or not (CGA/EGA/MDA/VGA/etc.). If the former is selected, then the video monitor flag is used instead (for QT).
7. The TGUI9400 and 9440, if on VLB, now detect the right amount of memory if on 2MB.
8. Initial implementation of the ATI 68875 ramdac used by the Mach32 and made the ATI 68860 8514/A aware when selected with the Mach32AX PCI.
9. Separated the 8514/A ramdac ports from the VGA ramdac ports, allowing seamless transition from/to 8514/A/VGA.
10. Fixed a hdisp problem in the ET4000/W32 cards, where it was doubling the horizontal display in 15bpp+ graphics mode.
11. Removed the 0x3da/0x3ba port hack that was on the Mach8/32 code, relying on the (S)VGA core instead.
12. Reworked and simplified the TGUI9440 pitch register based on logging due to no documentation at all.
Added the Mach8 and Mach32 ISA/VLB/PCI cards (initial implementation and MCA coming soon for the Mach32) and their corresponding EEPROM's.
Added INMOS XGA ISA card and updated the SVGA core to reflect its mapping as well as the Mach8/32 mapping when in 8514 monitor mode.
Mark the XGA button as already checked and locked when a standalone XGA BIOS card is present like the INMOS one. (QT only)
Same concept as above, but applies to the Mach8 and 32 for the 8514 option as well. (QT only)
This is a portable computer based around NEC V30 processor and what
seems to be a proprietary Epson chip set.
The chip set provides a XT-class keyboard controller/PPI, controller for
two DD floppy drives, CGA-compatible video, one serial and one parallel
port. There's no datasheet for the chip set.
The machine has a 640x200 monochromatic LCD display, optionally backlit
and an external CRT connector. There can be up to two floppy drives,
one of them optionally connected to an external connector (shared with
the parallel port). There are physical switches to enable the external
CRT and floppy connectors.
There's a battery-backed RTC/NVRAM that holds configuration, including
backlight timeout, UART configuration and floppy types.
The machine has two expansion slots, half the pich of a regular 8-bit
ISA, but electrically compatible. Hard drive and modem adapters were
available, I don't have them.
The checksums of the ROM images are as follows:
SHA1(2d58397f81f006e7729648dd3720e3004e20ac36) =
roms/machines/elt/HLO-B2.rom
SHA1(8c06cd3905f71f15fec2a3759cea5b2c5dc602c3) =
roms/machines/elt/HLO-A2.rom