So I decided to write something that would allow me to run the executable right away after making any modifications. Making changes, recompiling MicroMumps and loading it onto a regular CP/M emulator via a disk image every time I moved a bit forward on the restoration was becoming too time consuming. RunCPM was written to serve as a test environment when I was restoring the only copy of Z80 MicroMumps v4.06 which exists online ( ). Makefiles are provided with the distribution. It can be built also on Cygwin (posix) and Mingw. RunCPM builds on Visual Studio 2013 or later. RunCPM emulates CP/M from Digital Research as close as possible, the only difference being that it uses regular folders on the host instead of disk images. If you miss using powerful programs like Wordstar, dBaseII, mBasic and others, then RunCPM is for you. No modification to the main code modules should be necessary. RunCPM is fully written in C and in a modular way, so porting to other platforms should be only a matter of writing an abstraction layer file for it. It can be built both on 32 and 64 bits host environments and should be easily portable to other platforms. RunCPM is an application which can execute vintage CP/M 8 bits programs on many modern platforms, like Windows, Mac OS X, Linux, FreeBSD, Arduino DUE and variants, like the Teensy or ESP32. (It is important to read this documentation fully before attempting to build RunCPM)
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