Ken Shirriff's blog

Computer history, restoring vintage computers, IC reverse engineering, and whatever

Showing posts with label reverse-engineering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reverse-engineering. Show all posts

Silicon reverse engineering: The 8085's undocumented flags

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The 8085 microprocessor has two undocumented status flags: V and K. These flags can be reverse-engineered by looking at the silicon of the ...
7 comments:

Inside the ALU of the 8085 microprocessor

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The arithmetic-logic unit is a fundamental part of any computer, performing addition, subtraction, and logic operations, but how it works i...
12 comments:

Notes on the PLA on the 8085 chip

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The 8085 processor uses a PLA (programmable logic array) to control much of the activity within the processor, such as instruction decoding ...
2 comments:

The 6502 CPU's overflow flag explained at the silicon level

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In this article, I show how overflow is computed in the 6502 microprocessor at the transistor and silicon level. I've discussed the mat...
16 comments:

The 6502 overflow flag explained mathematically

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The overflow flag on the 6502 processor is a source of myth and confusion. In this article, I explain signed and unsigned binary arithmetic...
17 comments:

Inside the Firesheep code: how it steals your identity

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You may have heard about Firesheep , a new Firefox browser add-on that lets anyone easily snoop over Wi-Fi and hijack your identity for serv...
6 comments:
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