Reproducing old machines with newer technology (Re: PDP-12 at the RICM)
Jay Jaeger
cube1 at charter.net
Wed Jul 15 21:11:58 CDT 2015
This brings up a good point: just because a D Flip Flop is clocked by
something other than a system-wide (or subsystem-wide) clock does not
turn it into a latch. Flip flops can clocked by combinatorial inputs.
This can be a problematic thing of course, as they can cause glitch
problems - had a couple of those in our student-designed 12 bit
computer, where I ended up feeding the combinatorial input into a D Flip
flop that was clocked by the FPGA-wide 50 Mhz clock, and then fed the
output of that to the flip flops (in my case JK rather than D, but the
idea would be the same).
JRJ
On 7/15/2015 9:02 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
> On 07/15/2015 01:24 PM, Noel Chiappa wrote:
>> > On 7/14/2015 7:36 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
>>
>> > On the system 360 CPUs, they did not use flip-flops like we are
>> used
>> > to, today. They used latches ... Since these were discrete
>> transistor
>> > implementations, a real flip-flop was too expensive, but a
>> latch could
>> > be implemented in about 6 transistors, I think.
>> > The 11/45 used TTL ICs, so real FFs were available in that
>> technology,
>> > although they may have used latches as well.
>>
>> This confused me a bit, until I realized that you were using "latch"
>> for what
>> I think of as 'SR flip-flop', and "flip-flop" for 'D and JK flip-flops'.
>> Guess that shows how long ago I did hardware... :-)
>>
>> To be a bit more detailed, on the 360's, were those latches 'simple'
>> SR flops
>> (i.e. un-gated), or were they gated?
>>
>>
> Well, one would have to dig into the ALDs to be sure. But, the FEMMs
> have some large drawings that are essentially RTL in graphical form, and
> a lot of description of how it all worked. My understanding is all
> those registers were essentially D latches. So, they got one data input
> from the ALU or a mux, and a latch pulse, and provided a Q output. Each
> of these latches took up at least 4 SLT packages, I'm not sure exactly
> how many for sure. So, the whole latch was composed of something like 4
> NOR gates or the equivalent, plus one inverter.
>
> (Sorry about being so vague, I read a bunch of IBM FEMMs about a year
> ago when I had some spare time.)
>
> Jon
>
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