From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: stewart at serissa.com (Lawrence Stewart) Date: Sun, 8 Dec 2019 20:09:02 -0500 Subject: [COFF] ARPAnet now 4 nodes In-Reply-To: <20191206173338.2BB0218C07E@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> References: <20191206173338.2BB0218C07E@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> Message-ID: > On 2019, Dec 6, at 12:33 PM, Noel Chiappa > wrote: > >> From: Lars Brinkhoff > >>> PARC's MAXC appears in the mid-1970s. > >> Maybe this is a good time to ask if anyone knows whether any of those >> diverse systems has software preserved? Specifically, the >> implementation of the NCP and 1822 Host-to-IMP protocols? > > Both MAXC's were PDP-10 re-implementations, and ran TENEX. So the basic > system is still around, not sure if they had any interesting local hacks > (well, probably PUP support; MIT tried to put it in MIT-XX, so it may > still exist on thats backup tapes). > I am pretty sure that the NCP implementation for the MAXCs was the TENEX version, with local mods by Ed Taft. I designed the Alto BBN-1822 interface, which was used for connecting to the Bay Area Packet Radio network and also used for PARC-MAXC2. MAXC1 had a Nova as the front end, about which I know nothing, but MAXC2 used an Alto. Both machines were 40 bit word microcoded machines programmed to be PDP-10s. Corporate wanted PARC to use SDS but the CSL folks wanted a 10, so they had to build one. The software specifically for the Alto 1822 survives, oddly enough, because Marc Verdiell (CuriousMarc)’s Alto Restoration project showed my old 1822 development disk pack in https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxFv2JNNW-A I found the bits at http://xeroxalto.computerhistory.org/Indigo/Alto-1822/.index.html I only tested my own code up to successful loopback to the local IMP, then Ed took over. I did the low level code for the PRNet interface, which was not NCP, and hooked it up to Hal Murray’s Mesa implmentation of the Pup stack. -Larry -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: