Nextor is a disk operating system for MSX computers. It is built on top of the source code of MSX-DOS 2.31, released in 1991.
The source code of Nextor is published with permission from the MSX Licensing Corporation under certain terms. Please take a moment to read the license terms for details.
Please visit the Nextor section in Konamiman's MSX page for binaries.
Note that there is no master
branch, but branches for each major version of Nextor (v2.0 and v2.1 currently).
-
source: The source code of Nextor itself.
-
wintools: Windows tools needed for building Nextor. Includes the source for two custom made tools:
mknexrom
(C) andSymToEqus
(C#). -
docs: Documentation for both users and developers.
You need:
- A Windows machine (if you succeed in building Nextor from a Linux machine, please let me know!)
- SDCC (http://sdcc.sourceforge.net), targetting the Z80 processor, to build FDISK.
- .NET Framework 2.0 or higher (for the
SymToEqus
tool in thewintools
folder) - The
wintools
folder must be added to thePATH
environment variable
Run the compile.bat
script located in the source\kernel
folder. If the FDISK tool has not been compiled already (the fdisk.dat
and fdisk2.dat
files do not exist in the bank5
folder), they will be compiled on the fly.
The generated kernel base file and the complete ROM files will be generated in the bin\kernels
folder. One ROM file will be generated for each folder existing in the source\kernel\drivers
folder.
If you make a change in the FDISK tool, you can compile it without having to compile the full kernel again. Just run the compile.bat
script in the source\kernel\bank5
folder (do NOT run compfdsk.bat
). The ROM files in bin\kernels
will be appropriately updated.
Run the compile.bat
script in the source\tools
folder. The tools will be generated in the bin\tools
folder.
Run the compile.bat
script in the source\command\msxdos
folder. The file will be generated in the bin\tools
folder.
Run the compile.bat
script in the source\command\command
folder. The file will be generated in the bin\tools
folder.
At this time there's no specific script (other than the original makefile) for building the original MSX-DOS command line tools.