So you've built the hardware, programmed and tested it! What now?
I'm sorry to say that the client program is very badly documented --- it's
moving too quickly for the documentation to keep up. It does respond to
--help
or help
depending on context. There are some common properties,
described below.
If possible, try using the GUI, which should provide simplified access for most common operations.
FluxEngine's job is to read magnetic data (called flux) off a disk, decode it, and emit a filesystem image (called, er, an image); or, the other way round, where an image is read, converted to flux, and written to a disk.
A file system image typically has the extension .img
. It contains a
sector-by-sector record of the decoded data on the disk. For example, on a
disk with 512 byte sectors, one sector will occupy 512 bytes. These are
typically what you want in everyday life. FluxEngine supports a variety of file
system image formats, including
LDBS, imd,
Macintosh's DiskCopy 4.2 and some others, including
Amiga's .adf
, Atari ST's .st
, and so on.
Flux, however, is different. It represents the actual magnetic data on the
disk. This has to be decoded before anything useful can be done with it (like
turning it into a file system image). It's possible to read the flux data off
the disk and write it to a file, known as a flux file, which allows you to
fiddle with the decode parameters without having to touch the disk again, which
might be fragile. FluxEngine supports several different kinds of flux file,
including its own, SuperCard Pro's .scp
format, and the Kryoflux stream
format. A flux file will typically contain from 80 to 150 kilobytes of data
per track.
In general, FluxEngine can use either a real disk or a flux file interchangeably: you can specify either at (very nearly) any time. A very common workflow is to read a disk to a flux file, and then reread from the flux file while changing the decoder options, to save disk wear. It's also much faster.
To use, simply plug your FluxEngine (or Greaseweazle) into your computer and run the client. If a single device is plugged in, it will be automatically detected and used.
If more than one device is plugged in, you need to specify which one to use
with the --usb.serial
parameter, which takes the device serial number as a
parameter. You can find out the serial numbers by running the command without
the --usb.serial
parameter, and if more than one device is attached they will
be listed. The serial number is also shown whenever a connection is made.
You can work with more than one FluxEngine at the same time, using different invocations of the client; but be careful of USB bandwidth. If the devices are connected via the same hub, the bandwidth will be shared.
The FluxEngine client is a command line program. As parameters it takes one or more words telling it what to do, and then a bunch of configuration options. Configurations can be specified either on the command line or in text files.
Here are some sample invocations:
# Read an PC 1440kB disk, producing a disk image with the default name
# (ibm.img)
$ fluxengine read ibm --1440
# Write a PC 1440kB disk to drive 1
$ fluxengine write ibm --1440 -i image.img -d drive:1
# Read a Eco1 CP/M disk, making a copy of the flux into a file
$ fluxengine read eco1 --copy-flux-to copy.flux -o eco1.ldbs
# Rerun the decode from the flux file, tweaking the parameters
$ fluxengine read eco1 -s copy.flux -o eco1.ldbs --cylinders=1
Configuration options are represented as a hierarchical structure. You can either put them in a text file and load them from the command line:
$ cat config.textpb
encoder {
ibm {
trackdata {
emit_iam: false
}
}
}
$ fluxengine write ibm --1440 config.textpb -i image.img
...or you can specify them on the command line:
$ fluxengine write ibm --1440 -i image.img --encoder.ibm.trackdata.emit_iam=false
Both the above invocations are equivalent. The text files use Google's protobuf syntax, which is hierarchical, type-safe, and easy to read.
The ibm
string above is actually a reference to an internal configuration file
containing all the settings for writing PC disks, and the --1140
refers to a
specific definition inside it. You may specify as many profile names or textpb
files as you wish; they are all merged left to right. You can see all these
settings by doing:
$ fluxengine write ibm --1440 --config
The --config
option will cause the current configuration to be dumped to the
console, and then the program will halt.
Going into the details of the configuration is complicated and mostly futile as
it's likely to change as things get modified. Brief but up-to-date information
about each configuration setting is available with the --doc
option. Note
that not all combinations of settings make sense.
The FluxEngine program has got multiple sub-tools, each of which performs a
different task. Run each one with --help
to get a full list of
(non-configuration-setting) options; this describes only basic usage of the
more common tools.
-
fluxengine read <profile> <options> -s <flux source> -o <image output>
Reads flux (possibly from a disk) and decodes it into a file system image.
<profile>
is a reference to an internal input configuration file describing the format.<options>
may be any combination of options defined by the profile. -
fluxengine write <profile> -i <image input> -d <flux destination>
Reads a filesystem image and encodes it into flux (possibly writing to a disk).
<profile>
is a reference to an internal output configuration file describing the format. -
fluxengine rawread -s <flux source> -d <flux destination>
Reads flux (possibly from a disk) and writes it to a flux file without doing any decoding. You can specify a profile if you want to read a subset of the disk.
-
fluxengine rawwrite -s <flux source> -d <flux destination>
Reads flux from a file and writes it (possibly to a disk) without doing any encoding. You can specify a profile if you want to write a subset of the disk.
-
fluxengine merge -s <fluxfile> -s <fluxfile...> -d <fluxfile
Merges data from multiple flux files together. This is useful if you have several reads from an unreliable disk where each read has a different set of good sectors. By merging the flux files, you get to combine all the data. Don't use this on reads of different disks, for obvious results! Note that this works on flux files, not on flux sources.
-
fluxengine inspect -s <flux source> -c <cylinder> -h <head> -B
Reads flux (possibly from a disk) and does various analyses of it to try and detect the clock rate, display raw flux information, examine the underlying data from the FluxEngine board, etc. There are lots of options but the command above is the most useful.
-
fluxengine rpm
Measures the rotation speed of a drive. For hard-sectored disks, you probably want to add the name of a read profile to configure the number of sectors.
-
fluxengine seek -c <cylinder>
Seeks a drive to a particular cylinder.
There are other tools; try fluxengine --help
.
Important note on rawread
and rawwrite
: You can't use these tools to
copy disks, in most circumstances. See the FAQ for more information.
Also, rawread
is not guaranteed to read correctly. Floppy disks are
fundamentally unreliable, and random bit errors may occur at any time; these
can only be detected by performing a decode and verifying the checksums on the
sectors. To perform a correct read, it's recommended to do fluxengine read
with the --copy-flux-to
option, to perform a decode to a filesystem image
while also writing to a flux file.
FluxEngine supports a number of ways to get or put flux. When using the -s
or
-d
options (for source and destination), you can use any of these strings:
-
drive:<n>
Read from or write to a specific drive.
-
<filename.flux>
Read from or write to a native FluxEngine flux file.
-
<filename.scp>
Read from or write to a Supercard Pro
.scp
flux file. -
<filename.cwf>
Read from a Catweasel flux file. Read only.
-
dmk:<directory>
Read from a Catweasel CMK directory. Read only.
-
<filename.a2r>
Write to a AppleSauce flux file. Write only.
-
kryoflux:<directory>
Read from a Kryoflux stream, where
<path>
is the directory containing the stream files. Read only. -
flx:<directory>
Read from a FLUXCOPY stream, where
<path>
is the directory containing the stream files. Read only. -
erase:
Read nothing --- writing this to a disk will magnetically erase a track. Read only.
-
testpattern:
Read a test pattern, which can be written to a disk to help diagnosis. Read only.
-
au:<directory>
Write to a series of
.au
files, one file per track, which can be loaded into an audio editor (such as Audacity) as a simple logic analyser. Write only. -
vcd:<directory>
Write to a series of
.vcd
files, one file per track, which can be loaded into a logic analyser (such as Pulseview) for analysis. Write only.
FluxEngine also supports a number of file system image formats. When using the
-i
or -o
options (for input and output), you can use any of these strings:
<filename.adf>
,<filename.d81>
,<filename.img>
,<filename.st>
,<filename.xdf>
Read from or write to a simple headerless image file (all these formats are
the same). This will probably want configuration via the
input/output.image.img.*
configuration settings to specify all the
parameters.
<filename.diskcopy>
Read from or write to a DiskCopy 4.2 image file, commonly used by Apple Macintosh emulators.
<filename.td0>
Read a Sydex Teledisk TD0 file image file. Note that only uncompressed images are supported (so far).
<filename.jv3>
Read from a JV3 image file, commonly used by TRS-80 emulators. Read only.
<filename.dim>
Read from a DIM image file, commonly used by X68000 emulators. Supports automatically configuring the encoder. Read only.
<filename.fdi>
Read from a FDI image file, commonly used by PC-98 emulators. Supports automatically configuring the encoder. Read only.
<filename.d88>
Read from a D88 image file, commonly used by various Japanese PC emulators, including the NEC PC-88.
FluxEngine is currently limited to reading only the first floppy image in a D88 file. When writing, a single unnamed floppy will be created within the image file.
The D88 reader should be used with the ibm
profile and will override
most encoding parameters on a track-by-track basis.
The D88 writer should likewise be used with the ibm
profile in most
circumstances as it can represent arbitrary sector layouts as read
from the floppy.
<filename.imd>
Read from a imd image file, imd images are entire diskette images read into a file (type .IMD), it's purpose is to recreate a copy of the diskette from that image. A detailed analysis is performed on the diskette, and information about the formatting is recorded in the image file. This allows ImageDisk to work with virtually any soft- sectored diskette format that is compatible with the PC's type 765 floppy diskette controller and drives.
FluxEngine is able to read from and write to an imd image file.
The imd reader should mostly be used with the ibm
profile or ibm deratives
and will override most encoding parameters on a track-by-track basis.
The imd writer should likewise mostly be used with the ibm
profile in most
circumstances as it can represent arbitrary sector layouts as read
from the floppy.
With options it is possible to add a comment for the resulting image when archiving floppies. By default imd images assume MFM encoding, but this can by changed by suppling the option RECMODE_FM.
<filename.nfd>
Read from a NFD r0 image file, commonly used by various Japanese PC emulators, including the NEC PC-98. Read only.
Only r0 version files are currently supported.
The NFD reader should be used with the ibm
profile and will override
most encoding parameters on a track-by-track basis.
<filename.ldbs>
Write to a LDBS generic image file. Write only.
<filename.d64>
Write to a D64 image file, commonly used by Commodore 64 emulators. Write only.
<filename.raw>
Write undecoded data to a raw binary file. Write only. This gives you the
underlying MFM, FM or GCR stream, without actually doing the decode into
user-visible bytes. However, the decode is still done in order to check for
correctness. Individual records are separated by three \\0
bytes and tracks
are separated by four \\0
bytes; tracks are emitted in CHS order.
High density disks use a different magnetic medium to low and double density
disks, and have different magnetic properties. 3.5" drives can usually
autodetect what kind of medium is inserted into the drive based on the hole in
the disk casing, but 5.25" drives can't. As a result, you need to explicitly
tell FluxEngine on the command line whether you're using a high density disk or
not with the --drive.high_density
configuration setting.
If you don't do this, your disks may not read correctly and will certainly
fail to write correctly.
You can distinguish high density 5.25" floppies from the presence of a traction ring around the hole in the middle of the disk; if the ring is not present, the disk is probably high density. However, this isn't always the case, and reading the disk label is much more reliable.
Lots more information on high density vs double density disks can be found here.
These flags apply to many operations and are useful for modifying the overall behaviour.
-
--drive.revolutions=X
When reading, spin the disk X times. X can be a floating point number. The default is usually 1.2. Some formats default to 1. Increasing the number will sample more data, and can be useful on dubious disks to try and get a better read.
-
--drive.sync_with_index=true|false
Wait for an index pulse before starting to read the disk. (Ignored for write operations.) By default FluxEngine doesn't, as it makes reads faster, but when diagnosing disk problems it's helpful to have all your data start at the same place each time.
-
--drive.index_mode=X
Set the source of index pulses when reading or writing respectively. This is for use with drives which don't produce index pulse data.
X
can beINDEXMODE_DRIVE
to get index pulses from the drive,INDEXMODE_300
to fake 300RPM pulses, orINDEXMODE_360
to fake 360RPM pulses. Note this has no effect on the drive, so it doesn't help with flippy disks, but is useful for using very old drives with FluxEngine itself. If you use this option, then any index marks in the sampled flux are, of course, garbage.
When using fluxengined read
(either from a real disk or from a flux file) you
can use --decoder.write_csv_to=output.csv
to write out a CSV file containing
information about the location of every sector on the disk. You can then use
fluxengine analyse layout
to produce a graphical visualisation of this.
Here's a IBM PC 1232kB disk:
Blue represents data, light blue a header, and red is a bad sector. Side zero is on the left and side one is on the right.
The visualiser is extremely primitive and you have to explicitly tell it how
big your disk is, in milliseconds. The default is 200ms (for a normal 3.5"
disk). For a 5.25" disk, use --visualiser-period=166
.
Supplied with FluxEngine, but not part of FluxEngine, are some little tools I wrote to do useful things. These are built alongside FluxEngine.
brother120tool
,brother240tool
Does things to Brother word processor disks. These are documented on the Brother disk format page.
So you've just received, say, a huge pile of old Brother word processor disks containing valuable historical data, and you want to read them.
Typically I do this:
$ fluxengine read brother240 -s drive:0 -o brother.img --copy-flux-to=brother.flux --decoder.write_csv_to=brother.csv
This will read the disk in drive 0 and write out an information CSV file. It'll
also copy the flux to brother.flux
(replacing any old one) and write out a
CSV file for used when making a visualisation. If I then need to tweak the
settings, I can rerun the decode without having to physically touch the disk
like this:
$ fluxengine read brother -s brother.flux -o brother.img --decoder.write_csv_to=brother.csv
Apart from being drastically faster, this avoids touching the (potentially physically fragile) disk.
If the disk is particularly dodgy, you can force FluxEngine not to retry failed
reads with --decoder.retries=0
. This reduces head movement. This is not
recommended. Floppy disks are inherently unreliable, and the occasional bit
error is perfectly normal; FluxEngine will retry and the sector will read fine
next time. If you prevent retries, then not only do you get bad sectors in the
resulting image, but the flux file itself contains the bad read, so attempting a
decode of it will just reproduce the same bad data.
See also the troubleshooting page for more information about reading dubious disks.