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Mooneye Test Suite is a suite of Game Boy test ROMs

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Mooneye Test Suite

Mooneye Test Suite is a suite of Game Boy test ROMs.

Build Status

Prebuilt binary test ROMs are available here. They are automatically built and deployed whenever there's new changes in the main branch.

For documentation about known behaviour, see Game Boy: Complete Technical Reference

Suite structure

  • acceptance: the main "acceptance" tests which form the bulk of the test suite and are easily verifiable on hardware
  • emulator-only: tests that are complicated to verify on hardware (e.g. require special test hardware), so they are commonly executed only on emulators
  • madness: nope
  • manual-only: tests that require manual verification (e.g. looking at the screen, or listening to audio) on real hardware
  • misc: extra tests for CGB / AGB hardware that are not part of the main suite
  • utils: utilities that are not really tests, but might be useful to some people

Test naming

Some tests are expected to pass only a single console model:

  • dmg = Game Boy
  • mgb = Game Boy Pocket
  • sgb = Super Game Boy
  • sgb2 = Super Game Boy 2
  • cgb = Game Boy Color
  • agb = Game Boy Advance
  • ags = Game Boy Advance SP

In addition to model differences, SoC revisions can affect the behaviour. Revision 0 refers always to the initial version of a SoC (e.g. CPU CGB). AGB and AGS use the same SoC models, but in two different packages. The following SoC models have several revisions:

  • DMG: 0, A, B, C
  • CGB: 0, A, B, C, D, E
  • AGB: 0, A, A E, B, B E. Revision E also exists, but only in Game Boy Micro (OXY) so it is out of this project's scope. However, A E and B E are most likely actually just E revision in A or B-compatible package.

In general, hardware can be divided to a couple of groups based on their behaviour. Some tests are expected to pass on a single or multiple groups:

  • G = dmg+mgb
  • S = sgb+sgb2
  • C = cgb+agb+ags
  • A = agb+ags

For example, a test with GS in the name is expected to pass on dmg+mgb + sgb+sgb2.

Pass/fail reporting

Most tests report a single pass/fail state using a simple protocol which is designed to make it easy to detect the test result in both emulators and real hardware. On real hardware you can use the link port to read data sent by the test ROM. In emulators you can either use the link port, or detect the use of the LD B, B opcode, which is used as a "debug breakpoint" in some emulators.

A passing test:

  • writes the Fibonacci numbers 3/5/8/13/21/34 to the registers B/C/D/E/H/L
  • executes an LD B, B opcode
  • sends the same Fibonacci numbers using the link port. In emulators, the serial interrupt doesn't need to be implemented since the mechanism uses busy looping to wait for the transfer to complete instead of relying on the interrupt
  • executes an LD B, B opcode, followed by an infinite JR loop (JR pointing to itself)

A failing test:

  • writes the byte 0x42 to the registers B/C/D/E/H/L
  • executes an LD B, B opcode
  • sends the byte 0x42 6 times using the serial port
  • executes an LD B, B opcode, followed by an infinite JR loop (JR pointing to itself)

If you don't have a full Game boy system, pass/fail reporting can be sped up by making sure LY (0xff44) and SC (0xff02) both return 0xff when read. This will bypass some unnecessary drawing code and waiting for serial transfer to finish.

Hardware testing

There's tons of documentation and tons of emulators in the internet, but in the end I only trust real hardware. I follow a fairly "scientific" process when developing emulation for a feature:

  1. Think of different ways how it might behave on real hardware
  2. Make a hypothesis based on the most probable behaviour
  3. Write a test ROM for such behaviour
  4. Run the test ROM on real hardware. If the test ROM made an invalid hypothesis, go back to 1.
  5. Success!

All test ROMs are manually run with these devices:

Device Model Mainboard SoC Detailed information
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-01 DMG-CPU G01176542
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-02 DMG-CPU A G02487032
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-04 DMG-CPU B G10888299
Game Boy DMG-01  DMG-CPU-06 DMG-CPU C GM6058180
Super Game Boy SHVC-027 SGB-R-10 SGB-CPU-01 SGB Unit #2 [gekkio]
Game Boy Pocket MGB-001 MGB-CPU-01 CPU MGB   M10280516
Super Game Boy 2 SHVC-042 SHVC-SGB2-01 CPU SGB2 SGB2 Unit #1 [gekkio]
Game Boy Color CGB-001 CGB-CPU-01 CPU CGB C10203977
Game Boy Color CGB-001 CGB-CPU-01 CPU CGB A C10400331
Game Boy Color CGB-001 CGB-CPU-02 CPU CGB B C11778414
Game Boy Color CGB-001 CGB-CPU-03 CPU CGB C CGB Unit #1 [gekkio]
Game Boy Color CGB-001 CGB-CPU-05 CPU CGB D CH20983903
Game Boy Color CGB-001 CGB-CPU-06 CPU CGB E CH24224683
Game Boy Advance AGB-001 AGB-CPU-01 CPU AGB AH10045235
Game Boy Advance AGB-001 AGB-CPU-10 CPU AGB A AH12465671
Game Boy Player DOL-017 DOL-GBS-20 CPU AGB A E GBS Unit #3 [gekkio]
Game Boy Advance SP AGS-001  C/AGS-CPU-01 CPU AGB B XJH10027945
Game Boy Advance SP AGS-001  C/AGS-CPU-21 CPU AGB B E XEH17807928

Additional devices

I also have access to more devices with different mainboard revisions, but I think the CPU revision is all that matters if we study the deterministic behaviour and not analog characteristics (e.g. audio filtering), or behaviour that is known to be non-deterministic. Even if audio sounded different between two units with the same CPU revision but different mainboard revisions, I'd expect the difference to be caused by individual device variation or different revisions of support chips (e.g. RAM/AMP/REG).

The main "test fleet" is already very big, so I only test on these devices if there's evidence of behaviour that depends on mainboard revision or individual units.

Device Model Mainboard SoC Detailed information
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-01 DMG-CPU G01036814
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-03 DMG-CPU B G06551776
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-05 DMG-CPU B G13289095
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-06 DMG-CPU B
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-07 DMG-CPU B (blob) G38953646
Game Boy DMG-01 DMG-CPU-08 DMG-CPU C (blob)
Super Game Boy SNSP-027 SGB-R-10 SGB-CPU-01 SGB Unit #7 [gekkio]
Game Boy Pocket MGB-001 MGB-ECPU-01 CPU MGB   MH12573718
Game Boy Pocket MGB-001 MGB-LCPU-01 CPU MGB   M12827347
Game Boy Pocket MGB-001 MGB-LCPU-02 CPU MGB   MH20284468
Game Boy Light MGB-101 MGL-CPU-01 CPU MGB L10610653
Game Boy Color CGB-001 CGB-CPU-04 CPU CGB D C19220030
Game Boy Advance AGB-001 AGB-CPU-02 CPU AGB AJ12569062
Game Boy Advance AGB-001 AGB-CPU-03 CPU AGB A AJ14804298
Game Boy Advance AGB-001 AGB-CPU-04 CPU AGB A AJ15529163
Game Boy Player DOL-017 DOL-GBS-10 CPU AGB A GBS Unit #1 [gekkio]
Game Boy Advance SP AGS-001  C/AGS-CPU-10 CPU AGB B XEH12776954
Game Boy Advance SP AGS-001  C/AGS-CPU-11 CPU AGB B XJF10485171
Game Boy Advance SP AGS-001  C/AGS-CPU-30 CPU AGB B E XEH20137204
Game Boy Advance SP AGS-101  C/AGT-CPU-01 CPU AGB B E XU72764025-1

I'm still looking for the following mainboards, but these are probably not required for reverse engineering:

  • SGB-R-01
  • SGB-N-01
  • SGB-N-10
  • C/AGS-CPU-20
  • DOL-GBS-01

For now, the focus is on DMG/MGB/SGB/SGB2, so not all tests pass on CGB/AGB/AGS or emulators emulating those devices.

License and copyright

Mooneye Test Suite is licensed under MIT. Copyright (C) 2014-2022 Joonas Javanainen joonas.javanainen@gmail.com

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Mooneye Test Suite is a suite of Game Boy test ROMs

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