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Author Topic: Disable kr during nls  (Read 43788 times)
armageddon
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« on: May 16, 2017, 03:17:47 PM »

To not to mess with others topics....

I'm still "learning" assembly language, IDAPRO and so,...

I would like to get rid of knock retard during nls, and and as this is a issue that affects more people, maybe we can together try to get a solution .

reading this posts from prj, it should be enough to disable kr by setting cwkr to 0 during nls and back to 1 after

Quote from: prj
If you have issues with knock after LC/NLS you need to modify the LC/NLS code to disable knock control when LC/NLS is active and re-enable knock control after LC/NLS has deactivated.
That way you will not have the problem with knock retard during flatshift.............Knock control on/off is a single bit on ME7. Same goes for misfires. Toggling this on or off is hardly rocket science, I know this because I've done this.


does the following code makes any sense?

at the begining of nls function

mov     r4, word_81999A(cwkr on k-box)
mov     byte_Fxxx, r4(unused ram)
bclr      word_Fxxx.0

and before exit nls function

bset    word_Fxxx.0

feel free to help Smiley
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fknbrkn
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« Reply #1 on: May 17, 2017, 03:35:14 AM »

the problem is not in your asm code
problem is logic

what the purpose of reading flash value of cwkr, moving it to unused ram location and then immediately clear this byte?
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armageddon
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« Reply #2 on: May 17, 2017, 04:14:27 AM »

Thanks for the input,

so what will be the correct way to set cwkr to 0 and then back to 1?
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prj
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« Reply #3 on: May 17, 2017, 04:35:39 AM »

Threads like this are good. It gives a lesson in humility.
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TijnCU
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« Reply #4 on: May 17, 2017, 09:26:25 AM »

you need to look at the FR and then you see:
CWKR > BIT
You do not need to alter CWKR. But you need to study more code first  Smiley
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nyet
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« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2017, 10:02:15 AM »

If CWKR is in flash you can't modify it on the fly. Certainly making a copy of it, then modifying the copy isn't going to accomplish anything, unless you change the ASM that reads CWKR such that it reads your copy instead.

Alternately, modify some of the resulting RAM variables instead.

Some obvious (RAM) candidates:

lkrnew, lkrold, B_drlkrdy, drlkrdy, drlkrra

I could be wrong about all of this, of course.

But I don't think CWKR does what you think it does, so all of the above is useless (although hopefully it addresses a major misconception you have about ASM hacking..)

Threads like this are good. It gives a lesson in humility.

Lack of humility isn't the problem in this case, IMO Tongue

I think forcing B_kr to 0 is all you need.

I could be wrong of course.
« Last Edit: May 17, 2017, 10:25:06 AM by nyet » Logged

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armageddon
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« Reply #6 on: May 17, 2017, 12:42:22 PM »

I think forcing B_kr to 0 is all you need.

I could be wrong of course.

thanks,

I have already tried it with b_kr, but as said previously by TijnCU, it did not work
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nyet
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« Reply #7 on: May 17, 2017, 12:45:50 PM »

thanks,

I have already tried it with b_kr, but as said previously by TijnCU, it did not work

You have to modify where it is calculated. If you just overwrite it randomly from elsewhere, it isn't going to work, since whatever you do will be overwritten by existing ASM where B_kr is calculated by the stock ASM.

I didn't read what TijnCU did, so I don't know if that is what he was trying to do or not.
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« Reply #8 on: May 17, 2017, 01:27:34 PM »

I had a problem with b_kr not working during NLS, but similarly the problem was wrong place.
If you change in the correct place, it will disable KR.
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prj
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« Reply #9 on: May 17, 2017, 02:01:54 PM »

b_kr is crank-sync. tsrldyn is 20ms scheduler iirc.
So yeah changing it in tsrldyn routine will accomplish nothing.
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gt-innovation
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« Reply #10 on: May 17, 2017, 03:15:12 PM »

thanks,

I have already tried it with b_kr, but as said previously by TijnCU, it did not work

Logic is simple.

1.Find where the codeword is checked on the original code.
2.Hijack it to your code(somewhere between lc and nls code)
3.make byte 0 while running
4.make byte 1 before exit

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armageddon
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« Reply #11 on: May 18, 2017, 04:07:15 AM »

You have to modify where it is calculated. If you just overwrite it randomly from elsewhere, it isn't going to work, since whatever you do will be overwritten by existing ASM where B_kr is calculated by the stock ASM.

ok, I think I am understanding what you are saying, but ASM it's still a little(alot Smiley ) confusing to me

found this, is this the right place?
Code:
loc_875E06:                             ; CODE XREF: ROM:loc_875DF8j
ROM:875E06                 jnb     word_FDB4.0, loc_875E1C
ROM:875E0A                 jnb     word_FD92.9, loc_875E1C
ROM:875E0E                 movbz   r4, byte_A50E
ROM:875E12                 and     r4, #10h
ROM:875E16                 jmpr    cc_Z, loc_875E1C
ROM:875E18                 bset    word_FD90.10  (b_kr)
ROM:875E1A                 jmpr    cc_UC, loc_875E1E
ROM:875E1C ; ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ROM:875E1C
ROM:875E1C loc_875E1C:                             ; CODE XREF: ROM:875E04j
ROM:875E1C                                         ; ROM:loc_875E06j ...
ROM:875E1C                 bclr    word_FD90.10  (b_kr)
ROM:875E1E
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SB_GLI
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« Reply #12 on: May 18, 2017, 07:43:39 AM »

Logic is simple.

1.Find where the codeword is checked on the original code.
2.Hijack it to your code(somewhere between lc and nls code)
3. Store original value
4. make byte 0 while running
5. restore original value


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prj
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« Reply #13 on: May 19, 2017, 10:35:07 AM »

Just jump to 0 if LC active and do nothing if it is not, let the original logic run - really not so hard...
No need to save store or restore anything.
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armageddon
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« Reply #14 on: May 20, 2017, 03:21:31 PM »

Assuming that the location above is the right place to clear b_kr.... what's the meaning of #10h ?

Code:
ROM:875E0E                 movbz   r4, byte_A50E
ROM:875E12                 and     r4, #10h



and another noob question, how to jump to there from nls routine?

do I have to modify the original ASM code to call nls routine?
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