From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: lm@mcvoy.com (Larry McVoy) Date: Fri, 10 Nov 2017 10:06:41 -0800 Subject: [TUHS] finding help in v7 in 1980 In-Reply-To: <0d7c61c7-7f5a-1854-64c3-737f4de1233c@gmail.com> References: <0d7c61c7-7f5a-1854-64c3-737f4de1233c@gmail.com> Message-ID: <20171110180641.GB25370@mcvoy.com> On Fri, Nov 10, 2017 at 12:00:15PM -0600, Will Senn wrote: > My question for you citizens of that long-ago era :), is this - what was it > like to sit down and learn unix V7 on a PDP? Not from a hardware or > ergonomics perspective, but from a human information processing perspective. > What resources did you consult in your early days and what did the workflow > look like in practical terms. I learned on the VAX, did some PDP-11 assembly but I dunno if I ever ran on one. Definitely spent a lot of time on 11/750, 11/780 and the 8600. The hardest part, for me, was learning command names. Where is dir? Oh, it's ls. Etc. I believe the 4BSD manuals (those ones with red/yellow/green plastic binders) had listings of the commands with the synopsis, either they did or someone gave such a thing. That was a big jump start. The next thing was someone gave me an account on ..!uwvax!slovax which was an 11/750 that had the 4.2BSD source on it. Many, many hours reading the source and having my eyes opened. --lm