Yes, RT11 (when it introduced Sysgen, which was later than V2) did so by supplying sources
that had been stripped of their comments. So they were useful for sysgen but not (easily)
useable for custom OS changes.
DEC did offer source licenses for many of its operating systems, at extremely high prices.
They also offered listings, typically on microfiche, still substantially more expensive
than the binary licenses but not nearly as crazy as source.
And sometimes you could get source or listings as a special deal. In college we started
out with RSTS-11 V4, which had a major reliability problem (as in: roughly daily crash).
As part of trying to keep the customer placated, DEC supplied full OS sources, 5 dectapes.
We printed them (on our 30 cps Silent 733 terminals). I used them to learn about RSTS as
a student, which got me hired by the computer center. ("I make it my habit to hire
students before they become dangerous" -- Michael A. Hall, director of computer
services.) I still have copies of those files.
paul
On Dec 28, 2017, at 10:57 PM, David C. Jenner via
cctalk <cctalk at classiccmp.org> wrote:
The sources to each release were usually included with the distribution so that custom
system settings could be sysgened. The sources are uncommented, however.
You could implement this by finding the commented out source in the sources and
regenerating the system, with the code in the appropriate place.
Dave