>>With a help of Ed (DXForth creator) the problem is recognized; Ed wrote:
>>
>>#v+
>> 4DOS (or something associated with it) is setting PIT timer 0
>> from mode 3 to
>> mode 2 - which in turn is causing MS in DX-Forth to run slow.
>>#v-
> Nice find, didn't really expect that. Any hints in the
At 02:06 AM 4/7/2012, Zbigniew wrote:
>2012/3/11, Bernd Blaauw :
>
> > Please let us know if/when you're able to pinpoint a culprit.
> > You might want to start with a MSDOS/Win9x bootdisk (www.bootdisk.com)
> > to eliminate FreeDOS components as the culprit, and to have a proven
> > reference plat
2012/3/11, Bernd Blaauw :
> Please let us know if/when you're able to pinpoint a culprit.
> You might want to start with a MSDOS/Win9x bootdisk (www.bootdisk.com)
> to eliminate FreeDOS components as the culprit, and to have a proven
> reference platform.
With a help of Ed (DXForth creator) the p
2012/3/11, Bernd Blaauw :
> Please let us know if/when you're able to pinpoint a culprit.
> You might want to start with a MSDOS/Win9x bootdisk (www.bootdisk.com)
> to eliminate FreeDOS components as the culprit, and to have a proven
> reference platform.
Just finished first tests: under original
2012/3/11, Bernd Blaauw :
> Please let us know if/when you're able to pinpoint a culprit.
> You might want to start with a MSDOS/Win9x bootdisk (www.bootdisk.com)
> to eliminate FreeDOS components as the culprit, and to have a proven
> reference platform.
Tried it yesterday under DOS 6.22 - there
Op 11-3-2012 17:21, Zbigniew schreef:
>> but as I suggested in a off-list reply to a question
>> that Eric Auer send me, the fact that sound output is effected as
>> well, this seems kind of confirm my suspicion on how JEMM is handling
>> IN/OUT statements when in protected mode, or something alon
2012/3/11, Ralf A. Quint :
> Still not sure why 4DOS would be causing it (if using that alone,
> without JEMMEX),
OK, I'll check it out again; maybe I made some mistake, since indeed
also I can't see any connection... will repeat the tests, then let you
know.
> but as I suggested in a off-list r
At 04:47 AM 3/11/2012, Zbigniew wrote:
>Yesterday I've found another related thing: while trying to test my
>soundcard with several games, I discovered, that "Civilization" has
>quite the same issue with FreeDOS: when ran under configuration
>"JEMMEX + 4DOS" it works very slowly (I'm using Sempron
Yesterday I've found another related thing: while trying to test my
soundcard with several games, I discovered, that "Civilization" has
quite the same issue with FreeDOS: when ran under configuration
"JEMMEX + 4DOS" it works very slowly (I'm using Sempron 2 GHz as CPU),
playing the background music
Hi,
On Sat, Mar 10, 2012 at 7:47 PM, Ralf A. Quint wrote:
>
> The "pause" call is for me the most likely culprit, doubt that this
> is something that could be fixed in DX-Forth, specially if it works
> without and with other memory managers...
I do at least know that "PAUSE" is a way to cooperat
At 01:09 PM 3/10/2012, Zbigniew wrote:
>If I correctly found the relevant sections of DX-Forth's kernel.asm
>(it's included in the package), the word is defined the following way:
>
>#v+
>[..]
>; runtime for deferred words - equiv to @ EXECUTE
>
>dodef: pop bx
> jmp [bx]
>[..
Hi,
I'm not heavily familiar with Forth or DX-Forth (sadly) though I've
(barely) used it a few times. IIRC, the author (Ed) frequents
comp.lang.forth, so you could report the alleged bug to him (directly
or via newsgroup).
I don't know what would be going on in JEMMEX or 4DOS. I don't think
the
While doing exercises with Forth - using DX-Forth (
http://www.netbay.com.au/~dxforth/ ) - I noticed, that its "ms" word
delays _exactly twice_ the given number of milliseconds.
Several tries revealed, that this word works correctly only when both
XMGR memory manager is used (not JEMMEX, for insta
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