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-rw-r--r--examples/io/system573/iso.xml13
1 files changed, 6 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/examples/io/system573/iso.xml b/examples/io/system573/iso.xml
index 2226089..d22665c 100644
--- a/examples/io/system573/iso.xml
+++ b/examples/io/system573/iso.xml
@@ -1,8 +1,5 @@
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-<iso_project
- image_name="${CD_IMAGE_NAME}.bin"
- cue_sheet="${CD_IMAGE_NAME}.cue"
->
+<iso_project>
<track type="data">
<identifiers
system ="PLAYSTATION"
@@ -19,9 +16,9 @@
The System 573 BIOS does not parse SYSTEM.CNF, it's instead
hardcoded to look for an executable named PSX.EXE. Some modded
or hacked BIOS variants may instead look for slightly altered
- file names (QSY.DXD, SSW.BXF, TSV.AXG) as an obfuscation
- measure, so it's recommended to have multiple copies of the
- executable on the disc.
+ file names (QSY.DXD, SSW.BXF, TSV.AXG, GSE.NXX, NSE.GXX) as an
+ obfuscation measure, so it's recommended to have multiple
+ copies of the executable on the disc.
Note that this behavior can be abused to make multi-system CDs
with different executables for PS1 and 573 (i.e. have both
@@ -33,6 +30,8 @@
<file name="QSY.DXD" type="data" source="system573.exe" />
<file name="SSW.BXF" type="data" source="system573.exe" />
<file name="TSV.AXG" type="data" source="system573.exe" />
+ <file name="GSE.NXX" type="data" source="system573.exe" />
+ <file name="NSE.GXX" type="data" source="system573.exe" />
<dummy sectors="1024"/>
</directory_tree>