From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: michael_davidson@pacbell.net (Michael Davidson) Date: Thu, 30 Sep 2004 17:58:48 -0700 Subject: [TUHS] 6-bit, 7-bit and 9-bit byte UNIXes References: <20040930233847.503FB379@minnie.tuhs.org> Message-ID: <002901c4a751$cfa01160$0400a8c0@DELL4100> > > Was there any UNIX with 6-bit wide, 7-bit wide or 9-bit wide bytes or all > UNIXes are 8-bit wide bytes? > BBN had a version of UNIX for the C/70 machine which had 10 bit bytes. This is memorialized in the "IP/TCP Implementation Status" section of the historic RFC 801 which describes the NCP to TCP transition plan, thus: APPENDIX D. IP/TCP Implementation Status Please note that the information in this section may become quickly dated. Current information on the status of IP and TCP implementations can be obtained from the file TCP-IP-STATUS.TXT on ISIF. BBN C70 UNIX Date: 18 Nov 1981 From: Rob Gurwitz The C/70 processor is a BBN-designed system with a native instruction set oriented toward executing the C language. It supports UNIX Version 7 and provides for user processes with a 20-bit address space. The TCP/IP implementation for the C/70 was ported from the BBN VAX TCP/IP, and shares all of its features. This version of TCP/IP is running experimentally at BBN, but is still under development. Performance tuning is underway, to make it more compatible with the C/70's memory management system. [ ... ]