From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: jnc@mercury.lcs.mit.edu (Noel Chiappa) Date: Mon, 28 Jul 2014 09:27:17 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [TUHS] First Unix that could run on a PDP-11 with QBUS Message-ID: <20140728132717.73DD218C0B2@mercury.lcs.mit.edu> > From: Dave Horsfall > I recall that there were other differences as well, but only minor. In > my paper in AUUGN titled "Unix on the LSI-11/23" it will reveal all > about porting V6 to the thing. I did a google for that, but couldn't find it. Is it available anywhere online? (I'd love to read it.) I seem to recall vaguely that AUUGN stuff were online, but if so, I'm not sure why the search didn't turn it up. > I vaguely remember that the LTC had to be disabled during the boot > process, for example, with an external switch. I think you might be right, which means the simulated 11/23 I tested on wasn't quite right - but keep reading! I remember being worried about this when I started doing the V6 11/23 version a couple of months back, because I remembered the 11/03's didn't have a programmable clock, just a switch. So I was reading through the 11/23 documentation (I had used 11/23s, but on this point my memory had faded), trying to see if they too did not have a programmable clock. As best I can currently make out, the answer is 'yes/no, depending on the exact model'! E.g. the 11/23-PLUS _does_ seem to have a programmable clock (see pg. 610 of the 1982 edition of "microcomputers and memories"), but the base 11/23 _apparently_ does not. Anyway, the simulated 11/23 (on Ersatz11) does have the LTC (I just checked, and 'lks' contains '0177546', so it thinks it has one :-). But this will be easy to code around; if no link clock is found (in main.c), I'd probably set 'lks' to point somewhere harmless (054, say - I'm using 050/052 to hold the pointer to the CSW, and the software CSW if there isn't a hardware one). That way I can limit the changes to be in main.c, I won't have to futz with clock.c too. Noel PS: On at least the 11/40 (and maybe the /45 too), the line clock was an option! It was a single-height card, IIRC.