PPU power up state: Difference between revisions

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(Simplify explanation a bit more.)
(clarify what memory is external to the PPU per talk)
Line 25: Line 25:
| odd frame || no || no
| odd frame || no || no
|-
|-
| CHR RAM || pattern || unchanged
| OAM || pattern || pattern
|-
|-
| NT RAM || mostly $FF || unchanged
| NT RAM (external, in Control Deck) || mostly $FF || unchanged
|-
|-
| SPR RAM || pattern || pattern
| CHR RAM (external, in Game Pak) || unspecified pattern || unchanged
|}
|}


Line 47: Line 47:
*During the warmup state, the PPU outputs a solid color screen, usually grey, but it depends on the hardware.
*During the warmup state, the PPU outputs a solid color screen, usually grey, but it depends on the hardware.
*The Reset button on the Control Deck resets the PPU only on the front-loading NES (NES-001). On top-loaders (Famicom, NES-101), the Reset button resets only the CPU.
*The Reset button on the Control Deck resets the PPU only on the front-loading NES (NES-001). On top-loaders (Famicom, NES-101), the Reset button resets only the CPU.
*Nametable memory in the Control Deck and CHR RAM in the Game Pak are unchanged by Reset, as are the CHR bank settings of most mappers. Their contents are unspecified at power on.


== Best practice ==
== Best practice ==

Revision as of 16:42, 19 January 2015

In March 2008, Blargg reverse-engineered the power-up/reset state and behavior of the NES PPU, NTSC version.

Initial Register Values
Register At Power After Reset
PPUCTRL ($2000) 0000 0000 0000 0000
PPUMASK ($2001) 0000 0000 0000 0000
PPUSTATUS ($2002) +0+x xxxx U??x xxxx
$2003 $00 unchanged1
$2005/$2006 latch cleared cleared
PPUSCROLL ($2005) $0000 $0000
PPUADDR ($2006) $0000 unchanged
PPUDATA ($2007) read buffer $00 $00
odd frame no no
OAM pattern pattern
NT RAM (external, in Control Deck) mostly $FF unchanged
CHR RAM (external, in Game Pak) unspecified pattern unchanged

? = unknown, x = irrelevant, + = often set, U = unchanged

  • The PPU comes out of reset at the top of the picture. See this frame timing diagram.
  • Writes to the following registers are ignored if earlier than ~29658 CPU clocks after reset: $2000, $2001, $2005, $2006. This also means that the $2005/$2006 latch will not toggle. The other registers work immediately: $2002, $2003, $2004, $2007, $4014.
    • There is an internal reset signal that clears $2000, $2001, $2005, $2006, the $2005/$2006 latch, and the $2007 read buffer. (Clearing $2005 and $2006 corresponds to clearing the VRAM address latch (T) and the fine X scroll. Note that the VRAM address itself (V) is not cleared.) This reset signal is set on reset and cleared at the end of VBlank, by the same signal that clears the VBlank, sprite 0, and overflow flags. Attempting to write to a register while it is being cleared has no effect, which explains why writes are "ignored" after reset.
  • If the NES is powered on after having been off for less than 20 seconds, register writes are ignored as if it were a reset, and register starting values differ: $2002 = $80 (VBL flag set), $2003 = $2F or $01, and $2006 = $0001 .
  • The VBL flag ($2002 bit 7) is usually clear at power, and unchanged by reset. It is next set around 27384, then around 57165.
  • Preliminary testing on a PAL NES shows that writes are ignored until ~33132 CPU clocks after power and reset, 9 clocks less than 311 scanlines. It is conjectured that the first VBL flag setting will be close to 241 * 341/3.2 cycles (241 PAL scanlines); further testing by nocash has confirmed this.
  • It is known that after power and reset, it is as if the APU's $4017 were written 10 clocks before the first code starts executing. This delay is probably the same source of the 9 clock difference in the times for PPU writes being ignored. The cause is likely the reset sequence of the 2A03, when it reads the reset vector.
  • 1: Although $2003 is unchanged by reset, it is changed during rendering and cleared at the end of normal rendering, so you should assume its contents will be random.
  • During the warmup state, the PPU outputs a solid color screen, usually grey, but it depends on the hardware.
  • The Reset button on the Control Deck resets the PPU only on the front-loading NES (NES-001). On top-loaders (Famicom, NES-101), the Reset button resets only the CPU.
  • Nametable memory in the Control Deck and CHR RAM in the Game Pak are unchanged by Reset, as are the CHR bank settings of most mappers. Their contents are unspecified at power on.

Best practice

The easiest way to make sure that 29658 cycles have passed, and the way used by commercial NES games, involves a pair of loops like this in your init code:

  bit $2002   ; clear the VBL flag if it was set at reset time
vwait1:
  bit $2002
  bpl vwait1  ; at this point, about 27384 cycles have passed
vwait2:
  bit $2002
  bpl vwait2  ; at this point, about 57165 cycles have passed

Due to the $2002 race condition, alignment between the CPU and PPU clocks at reset may cause the NES to miss an occasional VBL flag setting, but the only consequence of this is that your program will take one frame longer to start up. You might want to do various other initialization, such as getting the mapper and RAM into a known state, between the two loops.

See also

References