From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: bqt@update.uu.se (Johnny Billquist) Date: Tue, 28 Oct 2014 23:48:10 +0100 Subject: [TUHS] 11/40E and 11/60 In-Reply-To: References: <544FD684.6090001@update.uu.se> Message-ID: <54501D2A.30607@update.uu.se> On 2014-10-28 19:22, Clem Cole wrote: > > On Tue, Oct 28, 2014 at 1:46 PM, Johnny Billquist > wrote: > > DEC actually made two PDP-11s that were micro programmable. The > 11/60 and the 11/03 (if I remember right). DEC never had > microprogramming for the 11/40, but obviously CMU did that. > > > C.mmp was 11/40E's and C.m* was LSI/11's and both needed them for the > capabilities support. I never really got to mess with the WCS units - > although we learned about them (along with ISPL/ISPS in courses), I did > hack on the OS and in user space of both systems - which was a wonderful > experience. It was how I learned about capabilities which I still have > soft spot. But around that time, I was also introduced to this strange > new system language and system and started to get paid better as a > programmer for a group using it. I never went back ;-) Yeah, it was the C.mmp I was thinking of when I said that CMU obviously had to have been playing at this. > BTW: the 780 & 750 had ustore but it was not user documented and the > tools were internal. Paul Guilbo wrote much of both and later would > write the uCode for the Masscomp FPU and APU. Paul was bitching about > the great tool(s) they had had at DEC, so one weekend two of us on the > SW team got sick of his bitching a couple of us hacked up a uCode > assembler in the same key in Yacc/lex/C (not BLISS ;-). :-) As someone else mentioned, the 11/780 had a separate product for user written microcode. I think it actually also included a different board for the CPU, with more memory for the microcode. So it must have been documented externally somehow, somewhere. The 11/750 was not documented for external use, I think. However, I have some vague memory of seeing something about user written microcode for it as well. And of course, Ultrix had a microcode patch for the 11/750, which fixed some bugs in a couple of instructions. This microcode patch is still included in the NetBSD/vax distribution. :-) The 86x0 machines always loaded microcode from the FE RL02, and there is documentation on that microcode available today, although it was DEC internal at the time. And I still happen to have access to an 8650. But no time to actually try and play with the microcode. And that machine is rather complex as well. That's when things started to get pipelined and other stuff that makes things much more difficult to fool around with. Johnny -- Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus || on a psychedelic trip email: bqt at softjar.se || Reading murder books pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol