On 3/15/18, 9:29 AM, "cctech on behalf of Veit, Holger via cctech"
<cctech-bounces at
classiccmp.org on behalf of cctech at classiccmp.org> wrote:
You might look up Nick Tredennick's book "Microprocessor Logic Design:
The Flowchart Method" which is sold at Amazon for an obscene price - but
maybe some university library has a copy. It's focus is on a methodology
for designing microcode, and it uses the design of the single chip 370
to explain it. I suppose it was a PhD thesis.
The main point is that the 370 is NOT an 68000 with a different
microcode; instead it is said that it implements the bus interface of
the 68K in order to interface easily with existing peripherals (rather
than reinventing the wheel). The internal data paths and register sets
may be similar between the 68K and the 370 (actually it is quite
possible that at Motorola they were aware of IBM mainframe
architectures...) but that's all likely. The control unit design
described in the book was completely redesigned for the purpose of
describing the proposed methodology.
Holger
There are two distinct products (well, one product and one project that never made it onto
a product) here that get confused. First, the XT/370. This card uses a 68000 with modified
firmware (nick was one of the Motorola engineers helping implement this for IBM), as well
as a modified 8087, and a stock 68000. Later, Nick left Motorola and came to work at IBM
on the Micro/370. The Micro/370 is the 370 on a single chip, and it uses the 68000 bus,
but is otherwise different from it. A good writeup of the story can be found here:
http://www.cpushack.com/2013/03/22/cpu-of-the-day-ibm-micro-370/
Camiel