Let me know if you have it.
I have the details from the patents, but it's not terribly useful.
With the die scan we can see how the ops are decoded. It's a very neat design, all of the "strangeness" comes out as a result of implementation.
/MikeJ
All I've dug out of my email archives so far is an email from Nick Tredennick.
> The best description of the internal workings of the MC68000 can be found in Chapter 11 of Francois Anceau's
> textbook The Architecture of Microprocessors. It does, however, contain a few errors.
The guy we use for decapping is MIA (we don't pay him anywhere near as much as he gets paid for real work, so it's pretty understandable). So it might still be sitting in his queue all these years later.
You probably don't want to implement the 68000 microcode though as the ALU was 16 bit, so performance wouldn't be that great. Cycle accuracy of the CPU on the Amiga was never that necessary, however for Atari ST emulation you really need it if you want to get all demos working.
If you just want it for inspiration then the book and patent are more likely to be useful. Otherwise it might be better to get a 68020 decapped.