[TUHS] Release of 8th, 9th and 10th Editions Unix
Larry McVoy
lm at mcvoy.com
Wed Mar 29 04:19:15 AEST 2017
On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 02:02:06PM -0400, Brad Spencer wrote:
> Larry McVoy <lm at mcvoy.com> writes:
>
> >> My understanding is that the 3/50 is indeed some sort of VME system, as
> >> is the 4/110, with some address related oddities. But it has been a
> >> very long time since I booted a 3/50 up... The 3/50 I have are in their
> >> cases, I just opened them up for the pictures.
> >
> > Hmm, so the 4/110 being VME is for sure correct, I had one of those when
> > I was at Sun. The 3/50, I just don't think it was VME. I believe they
> > made a version that was a single VME board but so far as I know that was
> > a different beast. I could be wrong, I googled a bit and couldn't figure
> > it out.
> >
> > What I know for sure is, unlike a 4/110, you couldn't open up the case
> > and shove more VME stuff in there. If the 3/50 was a VME board I'm not
> > sure what the point was other than, perhaps, to reuse the same part in
> > a small case. I can't see Andy doing that, he was super cost sensitive.
>
>
> I think that the 3/50 was a "single board" VME system... and as you say
> you really couldn't add anything to it. I will pull one out and get
> some close up shots of the connectors and perhaps the answer can be
> determined by physical inspection. I also looked at the config file for
> NetBSD for the sun3 and it very much mentions vme all over the place,
> but that may not have applied to the 3/50. Is it possible that just VME
> connector was used for power and the like... but nothing else??
That actually rings a bell, could be.
I think it was 3/110 that had the same case/bus as the 4/110. Less sure
about that, I'm not sure I've ever used a 3/110. Got a lot of miles on
a 4/110, did a ton of UFS work on that machine.
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