On 04/07/2013 08:49 AM, Arno Kletzander wrote:
Ethan Dicks <ethan.dicks at gmail.com> wrote:
Was it
indeed usual to build such large configurations based on an 11/23 back then?
That
was not a small configuration, but it wasn't uncommon.
[data points for system configurations from Ethan and Allison]
allison <ajp166
at verizon.net> wrote:
Not at all uncommon. Usually the disk round out
might have left out the
RQDX or the RX02
but many in the day wanted to move from 8" to 5.25 for space and needed
one system to do both.
OK, some more enlightenment absorbed.
You will want RX50 or RX02 as those were and are
common media.
Either way a RX02 or RX50 was the common simple and cheap storage
that offered portability.
Mass storage for my system is another area I need to
spend more thought on, for now I was planning to stay with the RL drives I got with the
case.
In the PDP11 world its easy to build a system that forgets portable IO.
A reminder PDP-11 as not a PC and even a 256kb floppy is viable storage
as RT11 fits on it.
RL packs were
over 160$ new and didn't like to
be bounced. FYI drives like RL02 were nearly as expensive as the base
machine ($8-12K).
The drives are not the problem, I have those. I will need to
check them out and get myself some more packs though. On second thought, some kind of
floppy might be nice, too, but that is not a must now.
cables, terminators and those
annoying and scarce drive ID plugs.
If anything the floppy is always a must on my systems as all my diags and
base RT11 systems are on that media (RX01, RX02, RX50, RX33, RX23).
If pressed for more mass storage, I could always put
my QBus SMD controller (and a CMD Phoenix fixed/removable drive combination I was recently
offered )to use with this machine, although I had got those rather imagined using them
with my VSII/GPX.
A viable uVAX is more than 150mb, (more like 300-500 for V7),
a loaded PDP11 is 30MB. Just difference is OS utilization.
I would not covet a large drive unless you had the application that
required it.
Its easier to
find Dias on RX50 or RX02 though I've seen them on TK50
but hated loading them form that (slow!).
I do have a TQK(mumble) board already
(which was originally also intended for the VSII), but no drive yet.
Save it as
loading diags from TK50 is both slow and painful assuming the
system can boot a tK50 (not guaranteed).
> TQK50,
DEQNA and RQDX3 at least sound sound a bit anachronistic
> to me, there surely must have been newer and more powerful
> processors out at the time those became available?
There were - you could get a MicroPDP-11 with a
KDJ11, and lots
of people did, but they cost more. I wouldn't have wanted to run
an RSX-11/M+ system on a KDF11, but I did see plenty of them on
KDJ11 processors (but even more on Unibus machines).
TK50 was tape DLT tape. DEQNA was ethernet, and RQDX3 was
MSCP floppy and hard disk controller.
CPU typically was 11/23+ or 11/73 later on for a price.
So the distinction between
the rackmount and MicroPDP/VAX eras wasn't as sharp as I imagined it.
I have such boards (ok, a DELQA in this case) in said VSII.
There was considerable overlap in uVAX and Qbus PDP-11, they shared all
the same
peripherals. The DEQNA is DELQA for all intents its a generational
thing. The key is
not all of the older PDP-11 software supported the later Qbus
uPDP-11/uVAX hardware.
I think
I'll have a rather minimal system (KDF11-B, 512kW RAM,
quad SLU, RLV12 + one or drives) for now, not making my first
foray into pdp technology more complicated than necessary.
I would call that a
mid-range Q-bus PDP-11 myself, not "minimal".
Among other characteristics, I personally think of Q22 as "not minimal".
You can do a lot with RT-11 in 18 bits of memory.
My fault, I should have been
more specific and included: "in terms of features/peripherals/board count".
Also, I was thinking relative to all 11s, not just QBUS.
The unibus 11s tended to
grow larger in IO as the bus speeds supported
higher transfer rates.
Also the larger Unibus PDP11s were faster than the 11/23 and the 11/73
only just caught up.
The fact that
it had 4MB of ram was uncommon as back in the day that was
as costly as the base machine if not more.
I understand that memory was at a
premium back then.
Out of interest, how common was core memory (H223 and similar) in QBUS systems?
Is BBU supported for the MOS memory options?
The older LSI11 systems had it if
there was a call for non volatile
memory, the cost was high.
I happen to have 16KW of qbus core. Also core had a far slower cycle
time than Ram of
the day. Core that ran at 1.5us was fast where ram on the day was
under 1us and dropping.
I would
call that a mid-range Q-bus PDP-11 myself, not "minimal".
(...)
Among other characteristics, I personally think of Q22 as "not minimal".
You can do a lot with RT-11 in 18 bits of memory.
Yes, you can even in 16bits. I
also have a tiny system using M8186 in a
12 slot dual wide cage running 512KB ram (4 boards), MRV11 (boot),
DLV11J for serial IO, and TU58 for storage. It boots the TU and copies
it to VM: and reboots from there making for a small but very fast
RT-11 system. The OS only use the 28KW and the rest is a virtual
disk (ram disk) big enough to copy the whole base os and a few
useful apps.
What OS to use is yet another undecided question, I haven't even
read up on the options.
I could also just try out some bare metal programming at the ODT for a start.
Start
with RT11 as a base os and it will allow you to test and get
comfortable at lower
cost to learn. It will be transferable knowledge to RSTS or RSX, may
help with getting Unix
on the machine.
I think you meant 150MB for RQDXm for its upper
limit. For larger
there were large disks but that was uncommon for Qbus 11s.
RT11 could barely fill (the whole mess) a 20mb drie with much room
left over. For RSTS or RSX a 31mb (RD52) was enough and two
did the trick.
So with just 1-2 RL0x drives, I'm pretty much stuck with RT-11?
I've read that it has a lot in common with later DOS, so that might not even be a bad
thing after all :)
RT11 only need a RX02. one RL02 can hold the entire RT11 install
kit
(EVERTHING).
I run RT11 on TU58 tape (256kb per tape *2), one tape ahs the whole os
with about
30-50K free space the other is not required.
RSTS and RSX may want more than one RL02 for enough space for users.
A RD52 (31MB) is large enough that RT11 barely filled a corner. RSTS runs
many users in that space , RSX will fit with a lot of free space.
Unix V6 fist on a RL02 with about 3-5000 free blocks (block =512bytes).
Compared to VAX/VMS V5.44H barely fits on a 150mb drive with limited
user space.
Command line for both RT and VMS looks the same (DCL).
The base monitor and os can run in 16kb of ram on PDP11.
larger systems
often had mag tape either DLT (tk50)
or 9track for backup and sneakernet (off site or remote systems
before WAN).
No such stuff in sight alas, but ISTR there is some sort of emulator
software that makes a PC act as a serially-attached tape device?
Yes, it can allow
emulation of the TU58 tape that used a serial interface.
At 38.2K RT11 takes about 5 minutes to boot on a tu58 (real) the
emulated version
is faster (no physical rewind/searches needed) but its still not fast
enough to consider
anything other than RT.
When I was
using the BA11N system I described, I owned an RL01
because I couldn't afford an RL02.
FWIW, I was messing with this system just last month. It's still intact.
Nice
to hear that. How problematic are the BA11-N power supplies, BTW?
Not bad really but they are aging and until you know the status of what
you get test it!
The system I still use is the tall (50") rack
BA-11 CPU I used in my office
when I was in the Mill (ML03-6/B5) as a utility system for printing and
off line (non VAX work). Still fun to use and I even have a few
uVAX3100s running VMS for it to talk to.
Cool.
Seconded :)
Actually I have seven Uvax 3100s, two are m76s, 3 uVAX-2000, one has no
media as
I use it to format media and two uVAX-IIs one in ba23 and the other in a
BA123
with a full rack of disks (RQDX3 RX50, RD4, CMD SCSI and three RZ56s).
The PDP-11 collection includes LSI-11 in BAllN, BA11V with m8186 F11,
three BA11S boxes with 11/2, 11/23, and 11/23+ and a Ba11s in a 50" rack
(the loaded 11/73 system). There is also an H11 (LSI11 with heath IO,
memory,
and box). I keep a Ba23 in a pedestal case uPDP-11 (11/23based, rqdx2
with RD31 and RX50).
The only other DEC systems I have are Robin aka VT180 which is a VT100
with Vt180 board so it can be a complete terminal with Z80 based computer
that runs CP/M.
The rest of my collection of toys are all CP/M systems either S100 or
SBC based.
Allison