NMI thread
There are three main ways that a game loop on the NES can be organized:
- Main only
- Game logic and output in the main loop, and only incrementing a flag in the NMI handler to let the main loop know that . The drawback is that it's very easy for music to slow down or for raster splits to fail if the game is using too much CPU time.
- NMI only
- Game logic and output with the NMI handler in an infinite JMP loop. always in this order: PPU, APU, read controls, game logic. For example, Super Mario Bros. uses this.
- NMI and main
- Game logic in the main loop, PPU and APU output in the NMI handler.
Waiting for vertical blank by waiting for the NMI handler to increment a flag is the simplest thing that could possibly work. And it does work for games without a status bar or for games whose upper limit on CPU use is easy to predict. It may also work for games whose mapper has a scanline counter that triggers an IRQ.
But once your game world becomes more complex, the simple method may cause problems.
For example, consider a video game that has a status bar and several critters running around.
It may occasionally take longer than one screen to process AI, physics, and display updates once enough critters with complex movement patterns are spawned, such as multiple Hammer Brothers in Super Mario Bros. or all the ducks turtles in the middle of World 3-7 of Super Mario Bros. 3.
This will cause your game to slow down when an NMI occurs while your game is doing something else.
And if your scanline counter is based on sprite 0 hit and not an IRQ, it will cause visual glitches as the status bar flickers.
So sometimes, it's useful to do more than the bare minimum in your NMI handler. To make a top status bar rock-solid in the face of excessive game logic, you can move VRAM uploads and sprite 0 handling into the NMI handler. The main program prepares VRAM updates in main RAM, and once the VRAM update request is ready, it turns on a flag VRAM_update_ready to let the NMI handler know. This is similar to multithreaded programming, but because the NMI handler itself is never interrupted, the locking can be much simpler than it is in multithreaded programming on a PC.
The NMI thread has these steps:
- Let the main program know that NMI has occurred, as in the simple method.
- Push all registers.
- If VRAM_update_ready is false, go to step 5.
- Copy data from the VRAM update request areas in RAM into VRAM and OAM.
- Set VRAM_update_ready to false.
- Set the scroll position using PPUCTRL and PPUSCROLL.
- (Optional) Run the music code.
- (Optional) Wait for sprite 0 hit and change the VRAM address.
- Pull all registers and return.
Make sure to do anything related to VRAM and OAM before other things like music. Vertical blanking time is valuable, and you should make the most of it.
Even though the NES CPU has only one NMI vector, ordinarily within ROM, it's possible to switch among multiple NMI handlers using a small amount of self-modifying code.
<source lang="6502"> RTI_opcode = $40 JMP_opcode = $4C
.segment "BSS" nmi_trampoline: .res 3
.segment "CODE"
- other code
ldx #<some_nmi_handler ldy #>some_nmi_handler jsr change_nmi_handler
- other code
- Sets the NMI handler to the ISR whose code begins at YYXX.
- If an NMI occurs during this process, it will be ignored (RTI).
change_nmi_handler:
lda #RTI_opcode sta nmi_trampoline stx nmi_trampoline+1 sty nmi_trampoline+2 lda #JMP_opcode sta nmi_trampoline rts
.segment "VECTORS"
.addr nmi_trampoline, reset_handler, irq_trampoline
</source>