Friday, December 1, 2017

Sega 315-5XXX ULAs: #214, #217, #218

In a previous post we mentioned that a few of the Sega 315-5XXX series are special. This brief post documents what we found.

To review, the following chips were lumped together for analysis:

Sega #Decap #
315-557114
315-557215
315-557316
315-5672217
315-5673214
315-5674218
315-5677211
315-5677A215
315-5678212
315-5679A213
315-5679B216

For the most part these were assumed to be a mix of Fujitsu DSPs. For example, here's an MB86233 (315-5571):



While the MB86234 (315-5677) is very close:


So what about the others?

Sega 315-5673 (#214)

Here's the package:


Which has this die:


Which is clearly not one of the DSPs. Markings:

Sega 315-5672 (#217)

Here's the package:


A bit suspicious since it has a wildly different number of pins than the others. Anyway, here's its die:


Which is also clearly does not look like the others. Markings:

Sega 315-5674 (#216)

Here's the package:


Also a different package, it was suspected this wasn't like the others. And here's the die:


Confirming this. Markings:

Summary

These chips are Fujitsu CG24 uncommitted logic arrays (ULAs). With the above new information, our Sega 315-XXXX table now has:

Sega #PartDecap #
315-5571MB8623314
315-5572MB8623315
315-5573MB8623316
315-5672CG24 ULA217
315-5673CG24 ULA214
315-5674CG24 ULA218
315-5677MB86234211
315-5677AMB86234215
315-5678MB86234212
315-5679AMB86234213
315-5679BMB86234216

Summarized as:
  • 315-557X: Fujitsu MB86233 DSP
  • 315-567X (lower): Fujitsu CG24 ULA
  • 315-567X (higher): Fujitsu MB86233 DSP

As there is no firmware to document on these chips, no further work will be done at this time. If at some point it becomes feasible to capture the original layout, we'll revisit.

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Wednesday, November 29, 2017

TGP status update

ROM status

In a previous post we talked about capturing TGP ROMs and later discussed a project to digitize them. However, as digitization proceeded, the quality of digitization was going down. After a bit of sleuthing, we noticed we had overlooked something.

First, one thing that had been noticed was that some chips have this interesting alternating bit appearance (ex: 315-5677a):


That is, the bits on the left of the column pairs are lighter than the ones on the right. Wasn't sure what to make of this, but most of the bits were resolvable, so didn't care too much.

Anyway, here's 315-5571 at 20x:


And here's 315-5677 at 20x:


Other than some color differences, at first these look identical. But let's put them together:


Aha! There was a slight process shrink. This turns out to be enough that it slightly reduced the accuracy of recovering some of the ROMs. Specifically, MB86233 is the large process, and MB86234 is the smaller process.

That aside, these dies are actually quite similar.


 And here's a MB86234 (315-5677):


At first these look identical, but there are some small differences, such as upper left layout. Here's MB86233 (315-5571):






While MB86234 (315-5677) looks like this;


Upper right also has some noticeable differences.

Moving forward

Following this, MB86234 were cleaned and re-shot at much higher resolution. This was a bit tricky as it made image stitching a lot harder, but most of the issues have now been resolved.

While some of the 20x MB86234 were fine, for example (315-5679A):


Others we couldn't get as nice an image at 20x (315-5679B):


But looked a lot better at  100x (315-5679B):


Although the contrast may not be as good, more detail is available, such as bits appearing as a + instead of a white blob. This allows, for example, differentiating a dust blob from a bit.

We are currently checking over results to see if the new results can be captured with CV or should be given to the typing monkeys. Most likely though we'll generate a CV reference and compare it to the crowdsourced result. We are also evaluating if any of the existing captured sets need to be re-done due to suspected errors. Hopefully though we can simply filter out inconsistent tiles and just recheck those.

Die ID

One interesting tidbit is comparing die IDs. For example, here is 315-5677:


Here is a table documenting the relationship between the various parts:


Sega #PartDecap #Die IDProcess
315-5571MB8623314MB 86233-002 Large
315-5572MB8623315MB 86233-005Large
315-5573MB8623316MB 86233-004Large
315-5677MB86234211MB 86234-004Small
315-5678MB86234212MB 86234-002Small
315-5679AMB86234213MB 86234-004Small
315-5677AMB86234215MB 86234-005Small
315-5679BMB86234216MB 86234-005Small

In particular, there are duplicate IDs! Haven't looked over these yet to see if the ROMs are identical.

Finally, where are the other Sega 315-5XXX parts? Stay tuned for a post in the near future.

Summary

We have collected sufficient data to document the TGP ROMs, but need to spend some time sifting through it to determine next steps. Stay tuned on the MW forum for announcements from Monkey administrators.

Enjoy this post? Please support us on Patreon! Note: with the Indiegogo campaign over we unfortunately don't currently have a way to accept one time donations.

Monday, October 30, 2017

Looking inside Taito C-Chip

This is a long standing WIP. Although this is not complete, thought we'd give an update as to where this project is and where its going.

Background

EDIT: we forgot to add background information. There's some info by Haze here

Package analysis

Among the samples received are some TAITO TC0030CMD "C-CHIP" integrated circuits.


Although generally little is known about this, a previous decap revealed its a multi-chip module (MCM). Given these are relatively scarce, we started by analyzing an x-ray someone took:


The package is filled with all kinds of goodies attached to an etched substrate!
This lines up with the previous decap, but also shows the missing bit:


Unfortunately, the above sample is missing the MCU section, which is critical for our analysis. After some discussion we decided we need to decap one ourselves to better understand the surrounding circuitry. Preparing for decap:


This was then filled with a relatively large pool of fuming nitric acid, heated, and rinsed, until the substrate was revealed:


And we have a full decap! Here's a close up of an NEC uPD4464A SRAM:


An NEC D27C64 EPROM:


 An NEC 65012-229 ASIC:



 An uPD78C11 MCU:


We then imaged the MCU ROM:


to allow analyzing the boot ROM firmware for test modes.

UPD78C11 mask ROM analysis

The primary aim of analyzing the boot ROM is to find test modes that allow reading out the EPROM. Such methods might include:
  • Find a test mode to directly read out EPROM
  • Find a way to load code into MCU to have it dump ROM ("trojan")
  • Repeatedly compute checksums and write bits, seeing if checksum changes
  • Analyze protection mechanisms, such as those that might require glitching
With that in mind, lets take a look.

Here is some early boot code:

; We land here if the “secret handshake” didn’t pass, i.e. the “normal” case.
; clear internal RAM
00000514: 34 00 FF           LXI     HL,$FF00
00000517: 6A FF              MVI     B,$FF
00000519: 60 91              XRA     A,A
0000051B: 3D                 STAX    (HL+)
0000051C: 52                 DCR     B
0000051D: FD                 JR      $051B
; zero the stack pointer
0000051E: 04 00 00           LXI     SP,$0000
00000521: 69 F0              MVI     A,$F0
00000523: 40 29 0F           CALL    $0F29 ; Set_bank
00000526: 40 43 05           CALL    $0543 ; boot_mask_checksum
00000529: 69 01              MVI     A,$01
0000052B: 70 79 01 14        MOV     ($1401),A
; main “loop”
0000052F: 70 69 01 14        MOV     A,($1401)
00000533: 67 03              NEI     A,$03 ; is 0x1401 == 0x03?
00000535: 54 69 05           JMP     $0569 ; sub_command_handler
00000538: 67 02              NEI     A,$02 ; is 0x1401 == 0x02?
0000053A: 54 0C 20           JMP     $200C ; run the eprom code
0000053D: 67 04              NEI     A,$04 ; is 0x1401 == 0x04?
0000053F: 54 00 00           JMP     $0000 ; reset the mcu
00000542: EC                 JR      $052F ; is 0x1401 anything else? Goto main
; end of main “loop”

We know that under normal circumstance (a game booting) it reaches this point and waits for "command 0x02" (run the EPROM code).

For reference, addresses 0x1401, 0x1402, 0x1403 are between the UPD78C11 and the 68K, these act as communication ports for sending / receiving commands.  They are used extensively by the games.

0x1000 – 0x13ff: banked RAM window. Also shared between 68K and UPD7811
0x2000 – 0x3fff: where EPROM lives in UPD78C11 space, not visible to 68K

However, there are a couple of other options in this table: one to reset the MCU and another to jump to an internal sub-command handler. This sub-command handler is a sort of "test mode" for the MCU and offers several debug features.  The idea of the trojan was to exploit these commands by changing the initial value sent by the 68K from 0x02 to 0x03 and make use of a specific command that would copy the EPROM area of the ROM to RAM, as documented later.

Here's the sub-command handler:

; sub_command_handler
; set bank to 0
00000569: 69 F0              MVI     A,$F0
0000056B: 40 29 0F           CALL    $0F29 ; Set_bank
; set high two portF bits to 11 to disable PROG and ???
0000056E: 64 05 C0           MVI     PF,$C0
; set portA data to 0xFF
00000571: 64 00 FF           MVI     PA,$FF
; set portA mode to output
00000574: 69 00              MVI     A,$00
00000576: 4D D2              MOV     MA,A
; set portA data to 0xFF AGAIN [why?]
00000578: 64 00 FF           MVI     PA,$FF
; write 0x0a to $1401 status/mode reg (1010)
0000057B: 69 0A              MVI     A,$0A
0000057D: 70 79 01 14        MOV     ($1401),A
; set REG_C to 0x00
00000581: 6B 00              MVI     C,$00
; set REG_B to 0x00
00000583: 6A 07              MVI     B,$07
; load HL with 0x05A7 which points to a table of test indices
00000585: 34 A7 05           LXI     HL,$05A7
; read ($1401) to A
00000588: 70 69 01 14        MOV     A,($1401)


; compare secondary test value with table of valid test commands at 5A7 and use the ‘offset’ into the table at 5a7 as the parameter for the TABLE opcode at 596
0000058C: 70 ED              NEAX    (HL+)
0000058E: C4                 JR      $0593
0000058F: 43                 INR     C
00000590: 52                 DCR     B
00000591: FA                 JR      $058C
00000592: EE                 JR      $0581
;
00000593: 0B                 MOV     A,C
00000594: 60 C1              ADD     A,A
00000596: 48 A8              TABLE
00000598: 21                 JB
00000599: AE 05              ; Program_all_banks (0B)
0000059B: 34 06              ; Program_and_verify_all_banks (0C)
0000059D: E4 06              ; Eprom_blank_check (0F)
0000059F: 0F 07              ; Eprom_verify (14)
000005A1: 79 07              ; Eprom_sum16 (12)
000005A3: A7 07              ; Reset_mcu (04)
000005A5: AA 07              ; Eprom_unlock (17) ?
; table of valid ‘sub-commands’ which can be written by host to $1401 (external 0x401); these correspond to the 7 TableSubroutines above.
000005A7: 0B 0C 0F 14 12 04 17

We intended to exploit the EPROM unlock command, which expects you to feed a 128 byte key (magic word) in (with careful timing) at which point it will copy the content of the EPROM to the RAM. Details here:

; Eprom_unlock - compare the block at 81B-89A against data input through $1402.
000007AA: 64 05 C0           MVI     PF,$C0
000007AD: 34 1B 08           LXI     HL,$081B ; point HL at the table
000007B0: 6A 7F              MVI     B,$7F ; length of table
000007B2: 24 80 01           LXI     DE,$0180 ; delay 0x180 times
000007B5: 23                 DCX     DE
000007B6: 0C                 MOV     A,D
000007B7: 60 9D              ORA     A,E
000007B9: 48 0C              SK      Z
000007BB: F9                 JR      $07B5
000007BC: 70 69 02 14        MOV     A,($1402) ; read 402
000007C0: 70 FD              EQAX    (HL+) ; equal to table?
000007C2: 4E 37              JRE     $07FB ; mismatch
000007C4: 52                 DCR     B
000007C5: EC                 JR      $07B2 ; match
; if match and B=0, fall through

; dump_eprom_to_sram
000007C6: 34 00 20           LXI     HL,$2000
000007C9: 86                 CALT    ($008C) ; SetRAMBank0
000007CA: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007CD: 87                 CALT    ($008E) ; SetRAMBank1
000007CE: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007D1: 88                 CALT    ($0090) ; SetRAMBank2
000007D2: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007D5: 89                 CALT    ($0092) ; SetRAMBank3
000007D6: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007D9: 8A                 CALT    ($0094) ; SetRAMBank4
000007DA: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007DD: 8B                 CALT    ($0096) ; SetRAMBank5
000007DE: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007E1: 8C                 CALT    ($0098) ; SetRAMBank6
000007E2: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007E5: 8D                 CALT    ($009A) ; SetRAMBank7
000007E6: 40 0B 08           CALL    $080B ; dump_hl_to_sram_page
000007E9: 40 9B 08           CALL    $089B ; Wait0xE10
000007EC: 40 9B 08           CALL    $089B ; Wait0xE10
000007EF: 69 18              MVI     A,$18
000007F1: 70 79 01 14        MOV     ($1401),A
000007F5: 40 9B 08           CALL    $089B ; Wait0xE10
000007F8: 54 69 05           JMP     $0569 ; sub_command_handler

; mismatch...
000007FB: 70 7A 03 14        MOV     ($1403),B ; write how far we got in the table comparison to 403
000007FF: 69 19              MVI     A,$19
00000801: 70 79 01 14        MOV     ($1401),A
00000805: 40 9B 08           CALL    $089B ; Wait0xE10
00000808: 54 69 05           JMP     $0569 ; sub_command_handler

; dump_hl_to_sram_page
0000080B: 24 00 10           LXI     DE,$1000
0000080E: 14 00 04           LXI     BC,$0400
00000811: 2D                 LDAX    (HL+)
00000812: 3C                 STAX    (DE+)
00000813: 13                 DCX     BC
00000814: 0A                 MOV     A,B
00000815: 60 9B              ORA     A,C
00000817: 48 0C              SK      Z
00000819: F7                 JR      $0811
0000081A: B8                 RET

The UP78C11 has two different outcomes from this function that the 68K should be able to see:
  • Failure writes
    • 1401 = 0x19
    • 1403 = number of bytes that were correct
  • Pass writes
    • 1401 = 0x18
As the exact timing between the 68k and 78C11 is unknown, and the only result we can get from this command is "the number of correct values" that were passed, we have to try and brute force the timings needed.  Too slow or too fast will result in failure.

To do this we made a table on the 68K side containing a "delay" value for each of the 128 bytes that needed sending.

I sent each byte, waited the delay in my table, sent the next byte etc. (not caring if the UPD78C11 code was accepting or rejecting that specific byte).

At some point during this stream of bytes being sent the UPD78C11 would respond, giving us the position of the last byte that was actually successfully received by the internal code.

Once we had that response we could stop sending, because we knew the position last byte that had been successfully received.

With this knowledge the timing delay could be adjusted, and the whole process tried again until a timing window that worked for each byte was found.  Essentially we reduced the delay for that byte, then restarted the process.

By repeating this process until the timing was correct for each byte we were able to send the whole key, and, in MAME, using hacked up Volfied code managed to pass the key check and trigger the "copy to RAM" process, at which point the 68K was able to see whatever we’d put in the C-Chip EPROM area.

Above: early test rig before using a full PCB

The code in MAME was extensively tested and worked for a wide margin of timing videos, allowing for the 68K and UPD78C11 to be running up to 10x different speed than we were guessing.  It was robust, and SHOULD have worked on a PCB.

It didn’t

We are speculating that the following line is to blame:

0000056E: 64 05 C0           MVI     PF,$C0

This is called immediately after going into the sub-command handler.

At that point, the 68K no longer saw any of the status bytes in the 0x1401, 0x1403 comms ports, as if access to the ports had been blocked or remapped.  The UPD87C11 also no longer seemed to respond to commands written to these ports (such as the one to reset the MCU) suggesting that this ‘MVI PF, $C0’ was completely disabling the communication area between the CPUs.

We know the CPU entered the sub-command handler, because we know it was waiting for command 0x02 at the point where we sent command 0x03 on startup, meaning we knew exactly where it was in it’s internal code, but after that line is executed we no longer see any of the expected responses.

It’s possible it remaps it to somewhere else, but limited evidence meant we had no way of knowing this.

The only other place PF is written is early in startup, with another fairly odd piece of code.  From what we could tell PF goes to the ASIC so could be doing anything.

; from RST
_start:
; disable interrupt
000001E5: BA                 DI
; Mask all interrupts
; figure 5-24
000001E6: 64 07 FF           MVI     MKL,$FF
000001E9: 64 06 FF           MVI     MKH,$FF
; Memory mapping
; pg 25, figure 4-9
; 0x0E:
; External access enable
; 16 KB
000001EC: 69 0E              MVI     A,$0E
000001EE: 4D D0              MOV     MM,A
; Figure 4-10: Mode F Register (MF)
; configures I/O for input vs output
; 1 => input
000001F0: 69 3F              MVI     A,$3F
000001F2: 4D D7              MOV     MF,A
; A/D channel mode
000001F4: 64 80 0F           MVI     ANM,$0F
; Set ASIC upd4464 SRAM bank to bank 0
000001F7: 69 F0              MVI     A,$F0
000001F9: 70 79 00 16        MOV     ($1600),A
; Ports A-C all inputs
000001FD: 69 FF              MVI     A,$FF
000001FF: 4D D2              MOV     MA,A
00000201: 4D D3              MOV     MB,A
00000203: 4D D4              MOV     MC,A
; zero the latter 3 of the ASIC RAM/Semaphore bytes
00000205: 69 00              MVI     A,$00
00000207: 70 79 01 14        MOV     ($1401),A
0000020B: 70 79 02 14        MOV     ($1402),A
0000020F: 70 79 03 14        MOV     ($1403),A


; for (B = 0x12, B > 0; ++B)
; Move immediate data byte to register.
00000213: 6A 12              MVI     B,$12
; Decrement register and skip next instruction if borrow.
00000215: 52                 DCR     B
00000216: FE                 JR      $0215

/*
if ((adc_regs[0] == 0x80) || have CY interrupt) {
    PF = 0x40;
} else {
    PF = 0xC0;
}
*/
; CR0 ADC result?
; conversion result register
; unclear why comparing with 0x80
00000217: 4C E0              MOV     A,CR0
; Skip next instruction if immediate data byte equal to register
00000219: 77 80              EQI     A,$80
; Skip next instruction if no interrupt flag is set.
0000021B: 48 1A              SKN     CY
0000021D: C4                 JR      $0222
; neither condition
0000021E: 64 05 C0           MVI     PF,$C0
00000221: C3                 JR      $0225
; ADC or have interrupt
00000222: 64 05 40           MVI     PF,$40

So while in theory, and in MAME the "read out EPROM" area brute force trojan worked by exploiting this internal test mode of the UPD78C11, on real hardware it absolutely did not, leaving us with little to go on.

Brute force

We also considered a few other things like glitching or relatively small package modifications like taking control of a few bus lines.

One option is to directly read out the EPROM by rebonding it. Although this is a lot of work, it is relatively straightforward and will work if done correctly. Also getting a single full ROM extracted may ease boot ROM analysis by seeing how the game uses it. Finally getting a single game completed would be very valuable in the interest of progress.

We first came up with a plan how to cut it out of the package:


 Then planned out a PCB to hold it:


And modeled them together (scaled images) to make sure everything would reasonably fit together:


Note the actual board is cut out in the center and the chip rests on a carrier PCB below (shown later). This allows the bond wires to drop down straight onto the chip. Otherwise, if attached from the same plane, they would need to be formed to avoid hitting the edge of the die.

First, pins were removed from the package and it was backthinned to reveal the PCB:


Backthinning is required to keep a low profile on the lower mezzanine.

Anyway, cut to size, using the PCB traces / vias as a guide:


And then epoxied onto the bottom mezzanine:


And then stacked into the full assembly:


This was then bonded as done in previous posts:


Finally, this was dropped into an EPROM reader. Unfortunately, the connections are flaky and we were only able to get half of the ROM (one address line not connected). The discolored connections above are from re-dissolving some of them with nitric acid to attempt rebonding flaky connections.

Next steps

We are looking into a few options to proceed such as better understanding the ASIC. For example, there is at least one pin we don't understand well that could be required to activate the test mode. We may also re-capture the boot ROM to ensure we are analyzing the right code.

However, we are likely going to get access to a bonding machine in the near future. This will hopefully make rebonding the EPROM die relatively straightforward. Stay tuned for more info!

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Monday, August 21, 2017

HD647180 Ghox/Whoopee bonus round

In an earlier post we looked at processing firmware from HD647180 chips in the original decap lot. However, there are several related MCUs that were not included: Ghox and Whoopee:



Although we aren't generally accepting new chips, these were evaluated on case-by-case basis to be both easy to process and of moderate interest.

Like previous chips, we milled a cavity for acid:


Then decapped and masked them:



Which was followed with soldering to adapter boards and exposing to UV light.



Finally, they were inserted into an EPROM reader and which successfully extracted the data.

Enjoy this post? Please support us on Patreon! Note: with the Indiegogo campaign over we unfortunately don't currently have a way to accept one time donations.

Monday, July 24, 2017

Gotta capture 'em all!


The TGP ROM die images are going through extended processing as detailed here.


If you get some time swing on by and capture some bits!

Other: while there is a suggestion box, the sourcecode is also available on github if you want to directly make a pull request.