binutils-gdb/sim/example-synacor
Mike Frysinger c50b7c1b74 sim: synacor: migrate to standard uintXX_t types
Move off the sim-specific unsignedXX types and to the standard uintXX_t
types that C11 provides.
2022-01-06 01:17:38 -05:00
..
ChangeLog-2021
interp.c Automatic Copyright Year update after running gdb/copyright.py 2022-01-01 19:13:23 +04:00
Makefile.in Automatic Copyright Year update after running gdb/copyright.py 2022-01-01 19:13:23 +04:00
README
README.arch-spec
sim-main.c sim: synacor: migrate to standard uintXX_t types 2022-01-06 01:17:38 -05:00
sim-main.h sim: synacor: migrate to standard uintXX_t types 2022-01-06 01:17:38 -05:00

= OVERVIEW =

The Synacor Challenge is a fun programming exercise with a number of puzzles
built into it.  You can find more details about it here:
https://challenge.synacor.com/

The first puzzle is writing an interpreter for their custom ISA.  This is a
simulator for that custom CPU.  The CPU is quite basic: it's 16-bit with only
8 registers and a limited set of instructions.  This means the port will never
grow new features.  See README.arch-spec for more details.

Implementing it here ends up being quite useful: it acts as a simple constrained
"real world" example for people who want to implement a new simulator for their
own architecture.  We demonstrate all the basic fundamentals (registers, memory,
branches, and tracing) that all ports should have.