Collection of PsyQ basic examples NOT using libgs
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PSX dev is fun!Hello gt

Nolibgs Hello Worlds !

So you want to begin developping on the original PSX but don't know where to start ?

This repo is destined to host a bunch of simple examples, each describing how to do one thing.

The code here will be using PsyQ, the "Official" Sony SDK, but we will not be using libGS, the Extended Graphics Library for the graphic stuff...

Instead we'll try to devise methods to reproduce libgs functions. This will not necessarly be more efficient, but we'll learn a lot more stuff !

Setting up the SDK : Modern GCC + PsyQ a.k.a Nugget+PsyQ

For this we'll rely heavily on grumpy-coder's work with pcsx-redux and various tools, which will provide us with:

  • A way to compile the code with a modern version of GCC
  • An emulator with a lot of debugging features

Let's do it !

  • On MacOs, a brew installation script can be found here.

  • On windows, install WSL2 and Debian then launch a GNU/Linux terminal, then proceed with the following instructions.

  1. Install the needed software packages ( aka dependencies in Linux world ) :
sudo apt-get install -y git make pkg-config clang-10 g++-9 gcc-mipsel-linux-gnu g++-mipsel-linux-gnu binutils-mipsel-linux-gnu libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavutil-dev libglfw3-dev libsdl2-dev libswresample-dev libuv1-dev zlib1g-dev
  1. Clone the pcsx-redux repo :
git clone https://github.com/grumpycoders/pcsx-redux.git --recursive
  1. Compile pcsx-redux :
cd pcsx-redux && ./configure && make
  1. Get the converted PsyQ 4.7 libs :
wget http://psx.arthus.net/sdk/Psy-Q/psyq-4.7-converted-full.7z
  1. Extract to [...]pcsx-redux/src/mips/psyq/ :
7z x -o/pcsx-redux/src/mips/psyq/
  1. That's it ! After that you can check everything's working byt trying to compile some example code :
cd pcsx-redux/src/mips/psyq/cube
make 

You should know have a 'cube.ps-exe' file in the folder. This is a PSX executable you can load with most emulators.

Embedding binary data in a ps-exe

So, if you don't know it yet, the fun in PSX development is to be able to upload your exes on real hardware with a USB/Serial cable. This means that the data you'll use in your program ( graphics, sounds, etc.) will have to be embedded in your exe in a binary form, as you won't be able to stream them from the serial port.

Well technically you could load them in memory before uploading your exe or stream them from a cd, but let's keep things simple for now.

With our setup, this is quite easy !

  1. In pcsx-redux/src/mips/common.mk , add the lines :
# convert TIM file to bin
%.o: %.tim
  $(PREFIX)-objcopy -I binary --set-section-alignment .data=4 --rename-section .data=.rodata,alloc,load,readonly,data,contents -O elf32-tradlittlemips -B mips $< $@

# convert VAG files to bin
%.o: %.vag
  $(PREFIX)-objcopy -I binary --set-section-alignment .data=4 --rename-section .data=.rodata,alloc,load,readonly,data,contents -O elf32-tradlittlemips -B mips $< $@

If you pay attention, you can see that's the same command, but for different file types. TIM files are bitmap images and VAG is the sound format used in this example. Each time you'll want to add a file type, just duplicate and change %.vag to %.filetype

Then, in your project folder, copy the makefile from the cube example :

mkdir new_project && cd new_project
cp ../cube/Makefile ../

All you have to do now is add the files you wish to embed to the SRCS variable, without forgetting the \ :

SRCS = main.c \
../common/crt0/crt0.s \
file_to_embed.ext \
  1. So this part takes care of converting our data to binary. Now to access them from your program, just use this in your sources :
extern ulong _binary_filename_extension_start[]; 
extern ulong _binary_filename_extension_end[];
extern ulong _binary_bowsht_tim_length[];

The filename variable must begin with _binary_ followed by the full path of your file, with . and / replaced by _ (underscore), and end with _start[]; or _end[]; or _length[]; source

_start and _end are pointers, while _length is a constant.

That's it! When you'll type make next time, it should convert your files to .o, then include them in your ps-exe.

Compiling the examples in this repo

All you have to do is uncomment the corresponding rules in Makefile then compile with make.

Links and Doc

Credits, thanks, hugs

Everything here was learnt from some more talented persons, mainly but not excluding others that hang around on the psxdev discord Nicolas Noble, Lameguy64, NDR008, Jaby smoll seamonstah, danhans42, rama, sickle, paul, squaresoft74, and lot mores !