FYI: The sources to CDL are in the TUHS archives. On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 7:56 AM Douglas McIlroy < douglas.mcilroy@dartmouth.edu> wrote: > CDL was for designing wired circuit boards, not integrated circuits.. > It was used to design the Datakit switch, the Belle chess machine and > other hardware. > > I suspect the cited IC-design tool was one that Steve Johnson created > for use in a short course that Carver Mead taught at Bell Labs. I am > not aware that it saw use outside of that course. > > Doug > > On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 12:37 AM Christian Dreier via TUHS > wrote: > > > > Hello there, > > > > I recently watched an old Unix promotion video by AT&T on YouTube (AT&T > > Archives: The UNIX Operating System: https://youtu.be/tc4ROCJYbm0) and > > they mention a design tool for integrated circuits (apparently named > > L-Gen or lgen; timestamped link: https://youtu.be/tc4ROCJYbm0?t=1284). > > > > Part of this software is a language implemented with YACC that appears > > to describe the behavior of digital logic, like modern hardware > > description languages, i.e. Verilog and VHDL. > > > > Does anyone have information about this, in particular: > > - Documentation > > - Which projects were realized with this? > > - Source code, if possible > > > > I asked this question on retrocomputing.stackexchange.com (see > > https://retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/q/26301/26615) but so far there > > is no satisfying answer. A "Circuit Design Language" (CDL) is mentioned > > and there is some good information about it but it has another syntax > > (as shown in the video vs. the documentation about CDL) and apparently > > another purpose (description of board wiring vs. logic behavior). > > > > Best regards, > > Christian > -- Sent from a handheld expect more typos than usual