MSX CAS Packager is a command line interface (CLI) tool to manage MSX CAS files. A CAS file is a very common file format used to represent the contents of a MSX cassete tape.
Using MCP you can perform the following actions on a CAS file.
- List CAS files. You can obtain a list of files contained in the CAS file.
- Add files to a new or existing CAS file. This is one the most powerful features of MCP. You can create your own CAS files with your files. Basic programs, assembler programs, data, etc, can be stored into a CAS file.
- Extract contents from existing CAS file. Did you ever want to make some reverse engineering of your favorite MSX games? Now that's possible thanks to MCP! You can extract the files of a CAS file, read their Basic programs, study its binary code, etc.
- Export CAS files to WAV format. This feature, combined with the ability to create new CAS files with your own programs, makes possible to convert the CAS file into WAV that can be played to your MSX hardware cassette interface. Code your own games and play them in your real MSX!
By the way, MCP is free and open source. You only have to obey the terms of the Mozilla Public License, which is basically:
- Use the software for anything you want, as long as you want, wherever you want.
- If you want to modify the software, read the terms carefully.
Latest version of MCP is 0.4.1. You will find installation binaries in the GitHub releases section.
If there is no package for your operating system and architecture there, please try to build from sources as described below.
MCP is written in Rust programming language. You will need Rust to be installed in the system to build MCP. The simplest method to do that is to go to the project website and download the latest distribution installer for your platform.
After installing Rust, just go to the top directory of your MCP's working copy and type:
$ cargo build --release
MCP will be build in the target/release
directory.
MCP is a command line utility (CLI), and therefore must be used from a console. If you don't know how to use a console have a look to the thousand of tutorials available on the Internet and come back later.
In you have installed from binaries, take into account that.
- In Windows platform, you will find an app launcher named
MCP Console
. This is just a Windows shell with the apprpriate%PATH%
definition to find themcp
program. Run this launcher and test it by typingmcp --help
. - In Mac OS X, the installer will put
mcp
command in/usr/local/bin
. In a typicall installation, this directory should be listed inPATH
environment variable, somcp
can be executed in your terminal. Please openTerminal
and typemcp --help
to check it works.
If you have installed from sources, you are responsible to put mcp
program
somewhere in your hard drive and (suggestion) include that directory in your
PATH
environment variable. If you do so you will be able to execute mcp
easily.
As mentioned above, executing mcp --help
will let you to know if mcp
is
working fine. But it also presents you the information needed to familiarize
yourself with the command options.
$ mcp --help
Usage: mcp -l <cas-file>
mcp -a <cas-file> <file>...
mcp -x <cas-file>
mcp -e <cas-file> <wav-file>
mcp --help
mcp --version
Options:
-h, --help Print this message
-v, --version Print the mcp version
-l, --list Lists the contents of the given CAS file
-a, --add Add new files to a given CAS file. If the CAS
file does not exist, it is created.
-x, --extract Extracts the contents from the given CAS file
-e, --export Exports the CAS file into a WAV file
Let's have a look to each of the commands to see how they work.
With mcp -l arkanoid.cas
(or longer version mcp --list arkanoid.cas
), we
can see the contents of the arkanoid.cas
file.
$ mcp -l arkanoid.cas
ascii | ark | 256 bytes |
bin | ARK | 96 bytes | [0xc000,0xc057]:0xc000
custom | | 32768 bytes |
As you can see, the contents of the file are shown. In this example we have three files in the CAS tape. The first column indicates the file type, which can be one of the following:
binary
: a binary file, probably containing a mix of binary code and data. It is typically loaded withBLOAD
command from the Basic interpreter.ascii
: an ASCII file, probably containing a non-tokenized Basic program. It is typically loaded withLOAD
command from the Basic interpreter.basic
: a Basic file, containing a tokenized Basic program. It is typically loaded withCLOAD
command from the Basic interpreter.custom
: custom data, aimed to be loaded by some program in a custom way.
The second column shows the name of the file. The third column shows the length of the file in bytes. The forth column is only shown for binary files, and it contains the memory addresses where the binary data will be placed: start address, end address and begin address.
With mcp -a myprogram.cas myprog.bin
, you can create a new CAS file
myprogram.cas
that contains the file myprog.bin
.
$ mcp -a myprogram.cas myprog.bin
Adding myprog.bin... Done
You can check the contents of the new CAS file with mcp -l
.
$ mcp -l myprogram.cas
bin | myprog | 100 bytes | [0x8000,0x803e]:0x8000
The bin filename is intentionally shorten than the CAS file. Tape filenames
are limited to six bytes. If your bin file would be myprogram.bin
its name
would be truncated.
$ mcp -a myprogram.cas myprogram.bin
Adding myprogram.bin... Warning: filename myprogram.bin is too long, truncating
Done
$ mcp -l myprogram.cas
bin | myprog | 100 bytes | [0x8000,0x803e]:0x8000
MCP is able to determine the file type by the file extension with the following criteria:
file.bin
is interpreted and stored as binary file. The binary file ID byte (0xfe
) is automatically removed when dumped into the CAS file. Please remember that binary files in cassette do not include it.file.asc
is interpreted and stored as ASCII file. Its contents are automatically padded by MCP with EOF (end-of-file) bytes to have 256-byte aligned blocks required by MSX systems to load the file successfully.file.bas
is interpreted and stored as Basic file- Any other file extension is interpreted as and stored as a custom file
It is possible to add new files to an existing CAS file.
$ mcp -l myprogram.cas
bin | myprog | 100 bytes | [0x8000,0x803e]:0x8000
$ mcp -a myprogram.cas foobar.dat
Adding foobar.dat... Done
$ mcp -l myprogram.cas
bin | myprog | 100 bytes | [0x8000,0x803e]:0x8000
custom | | 6920 bytes |
Nevertheless, you don't have to add files one by one. You can specify several files and all them will be added to the CAS file.
$ mcp -l myprogram.cas
bin | myprog | 100 bytes | [0x8000,0x803e]:0x8000
custom | | 6920 bytes |
$ mcp -a myprogram.cas foobar2.dat foobar3.dat
Adding foobar2.dat... Done
Adding foobar3.dat... Done
$ mcp -l myprogram.cas
bin | myprog | 100 bytes | [0x8000,0x803e]:0x8000
custom | | 6920 bytes |
custom | | 29648 bytes |
custom | | 49272 bytes |
Using mcp -x arkanoid.cas
, you can extract the contents of arkanoid.cas
into the working directory.
$ mcp -x arkanoid.cas
Extracting ark.asc... Done
Extracting ARK.bin... Done
Extracting custom.001... Done
$ ls
ARK.bin ark.asc arkanoid.cas custom.001
The files are extracted using the following criteria:
- Binary files are extracted with the original name plus
.bin
extension. - ASCII files are extracted with the original name plus
.asc
extension. - Basic files are extracted with the original name plus
.bas
extension. - Custom files are extracted as
custom.XXX
, whereXXX
is a sequence number indicating the relative position of the custom file in the tape.
In case of ASCII files, the trailing EOF bytes are not copied to the target file so you can read the Basic source code as text.
In case of binary files, the leading ID byte (0xfe
) is automatically
prepended to the target file.
$ file ark.asc
ark.asc: ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators
$ cat ark.asc
10 BLOAD"cas:",R
Using mcp -e myprogram.cas myprogram.wav
you can export the contents of the
tape into a WAV file. The WAV file can be reproduced with your sound card to
load the data into a real MSX hardware using the cassette interface.
$ mcp -e myprogram.cas myprogram.wav
Encoding block 0... 371 KiB
Encoding block 1... 151 KiB
Encoding block 2... 2788 KiB
Encoding block 3... 11577 KiB
Encoding block 4... 19166 KiB
$ file myprogram.wav
myprogram.wav: RIFF (little-endian) data, WAVE audio, Microsoft PCM, 8 bit, mono 43200 Hz
The resulting file is ready to be played and make your homebrew programs loadable in your MSX computer.
MCP was coded by porting several code fragments from CAS Tools. Many thanks to Vincent van Dam for his software.
MCP export feature has been tested with several games in OpenMSX emulator. Many thanks to its authors and congratulations for making such a great software.