On 2015-09-24 01:15, Antonio Carlini wrote:
  On 21/09/15 14:15, Noel Chiappa wrote:
   From:
tony duell 
  In some cases it should be possible to write a
machine code 
 program
  that executes on 2 processors with wildly
different instruciton 
 sets.
 I have this bit set that I was told (or something, the memory is _very_
 vague) that early versions of the KL-10 had this hack; the root block
 on the
 disk was the boot block both the PDP-10 and the PDP-11 front end
 machine, and
 the first instruction or two was very cleverly construced and sent the
 two
 machines different ways. Alas, I looked in the front-end PDP-11 code
 (in the
 KLDCP; directory) and saw no signs of this, so maybe it was an urban
 legend?
 
 
 I can't find a definitive reference right now, but I *think* that the
 ODS-1 disk format
 was first used on the PDP-11 and then later used in early versions of
 VMS. I *think*
 that it was arranged such that a PDP-11 booting and a VMS system booting
 could
 be done from the same disk by arranging for each to interpret the boot
 block in
 a way that each was happy with. 
I think that is incorrect, since early VMS didn't havea  boot block. The
VAX-11/780 was always booted from the PDP-11, and it started with VMB.
VMB was gotten from the FE, and VMB in turn understood the file system.
It wasn't until the VAX-11/750 that DEC did a VAX that used boot blocks.
And then, of course, the boot block is just the first block(s) on the
disk. Don't matter what file system you might have...
        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