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Academic projects created using Assembly, in the Intel FPGA Monitor Program, for the laboratory work done while attending the McGill Course ECSE 324 Computer Organization

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ismailfaruk/ECSE324--Computer-Organization

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This reopository contains the laboratory projects done for the course ECSE 324, using ARMx86 Assembly and C.

Description

Lab experiments were done using an ARM processor on an Altera DE1-SoC single board computer. The FPGA chip on the DE1-SoC has an ARM processor in was programmed.

  • G39_Lab0 - Warmup - Flashing the computer system onto the board and running the demo program

  • G39_Lab1 - Introduction to ARM Programming - Fast standard deviation computation, centering an array and sorting in assembly.

  • G39_Lab2 - Stacks, Subroutines, and C - Fibonacci calculation using recursive subroutine calls, implementing stack. Computes the maximum of two numbers and returns the result.

  • G39_Lab3 - Basic IO, Timers and Interrupts - Setting up the basic I/O capabilities of the DE1-SoC computer - the slider switches, pushbuttons, LEDs and 7-Segment displays. After writing assembly drivers that interface with the I/O components, timers and interrupts are used to demonstrate polling and interrupt based stopwatch.

  • G39_Lab4 - High level IO - VGA, PS2 Keyboard, and Audio - Used the VGA controller to display pixels and characters, used the PS/2 port to accept input from a keyboard and used the audio controller to play generated tones. The application read raw data from the keyboard and displayed it to the screen if it is valid. It uses the PS/2 keyboard and VGA monitor. Also created a driver for the audio port. The driver takes one integer argument and write it to both the left and the write FIFO only if there is space in both the FIFOs. The subroutine returns an integer value of 1 if the data was written to the FIFOs, and return 0 otherwise. It plays a 100 Hz square wave on the audio out port.

  • G39_Lab5 - Synthesizer - Combines the low-level ARM programming techniques acquired in the course and implements a musical synthesizer. Takes as input f and t and returns signal[t]. Uses a timer to feed the generated samples to the audio codec periodically. Implements a volume control with the keyboard so that the user can turn the volume (amplitude) up or down. Displays the waveform on the lab computer monitor. Resulting in an audio synthesizer with 8 different frequencies, implementing IO, Timers and Interrupts.

Built With

Altera DE1-SoC

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This project is licensed under the GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE - see the LICENSE file for details

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Academic projects created using Assembly, in the Intel FPGA Monitor Program, for the laboratory work done while attending the McGill Course ECSE 324 Computer Organization

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