From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: norman@oclsc.org (Norman Wilson) Date: Sun, 18 Feb 2018 15:50:46 -0500 Subject: [TUHS] Happy birthday, Niklaus Wirth! Message-ID: <1518987049.23498.for-standards-violators@oclsc.org> As an aside about Wolfram and SMP (and one that actually has something to do with UNIX): I ran the VAX on which Wolfram et al (and it was very much et al) developed SMP. It started out running UNIX/TS 1.0. I know how that system was snuck out of Bell Labs, but if I told you I'd have to terminate you with extreme prejudice. (I wasn't involved anyway.) SMP really needed dynamic paging; the TS 1.0 kernel had only swapping. We had quite a few discussions about what to do. Moving wholesale to 3BSD or early 4BSD (this was in 1981) would have been a big upheaval for our entire user community. Those systems were also notorious at the time for their delicate stability: some people reported that they ran well, others that they crashed frequently. Our existing system was pretty solid, and I had already put some work into making it more so (better handling of low-level machine errors, for example). Somehow we ended up deciding that the least-painful path was to lift the VM code out of 4BSD and shoehorn it into our existing kernel, creating what we called Bastardized Paging UNIX. I did most of the work; I was younger and more energetic back then. Also considerably grumpier. In the heart of the page-in (I think) code, the Berkeley guys had written a single C function that stretched to about ten printed pages. (For those too young to remember printers, that means about 600 lines.) I was then and still am adamant that that's the wrong way to write anything, but I didn't want to take the time to rewrite it all, so (being young and grumpy) I relieved my feelings by adding a grumpy comment at the top of the source file. I also wrote a paper about the work, which was published in (of all places) AUUGN. I haven't read it in years but it was probably a bit snotty. It nevertheless ended up causing a local UNIX-systems-software company to head-hunt me (but at the time I had no interest in leaving Caltech), so it must not have been too rude. What days those were, when a single person could understand enough of the OS to do stuff like that in only a month or two, and get it pretty much right too. I did end up finding some interesting race-condition bugs, probably introduced by me, but fascinating to track down; e.g. something that went wrong only if a page fault happened at exactly the right time with respect to something else. Norman Wilson Toronto ON