Operating systems of the 1970s handling dates beyond the year 2000

Noel Chiappa jnc at mercury.lcs.mit.edu
Mon Jan 19 09:11:56 CST 2015


    > From: Mark Longridge

    > I had to wonder if any of the older operating systems from the 1970s or
    > older could do this.
    > So, did any operating system programmers from this time period have
    > the foresight to use 4 digits for the year?

It's probably worth distinguishing between the internal clock, the ability to
set dates > 1999, the ability to print dates > 1999, etc.

For instance, both Multics and Unix had an internal clock that ran correctly
past the century end. (Although they do run out / roll over not too much later
- in Multics' case, in 2039. For the Multics one, see here:

  http://www.multicians.org/jhs-clock.html

for more.)

However, in the case of Unix, both date setting and the canonical routine for
date printing (separate code) didn't handle dates after 1999; for input, the
year was only two digits, and for output, the first two digits were hard-coded
to '19'. However, for calculating dates (which returned a vector of numbers),
that part did theoretically work correctly for years after 1999 (it returned
[$YEAR-1970]), but...

There was a separate bug that caused the year calculation to fail in the
closing months of 1999. Whether the person who wrote the code knew of the bug
- it's a fairly simple one, an overflow of a short integer - I don't know, but
it's possible they did, and on calculating when it would happen, decided that
the fact that it would coincidentally also happen at century end meant it
could be ignored at that point. However, once that was fixed, the date
calcuation routine returned the correct year (without needing to change the
interface).

I don't know whether date input/calculation/output on Multics had similar
issues: if you google "Multics leap year" it shows the source code for a
couple of routines dealing with dates, but alas it's all in 645/6180
assembler, so I can't really grok it! It looks like it _might_ work, though
(it seems to calculate the number of years since Multics' epoch - 1901 - and
add that to 1901).

If I had more time to expend, I could look at ITS too... :-(

	Noel


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