[TUHS] Any oldtimers remember anything about the KS11 on the -11/20?

ron minnich rminnich at gmail.com
Tue Jun 25 02:33:54 AEST 2019


ah nvm, yeah, KS11. Wow. That was just about the time I was getting
started in this game, memory is so hazy.

On Mon, Jun 24, 2019 at 9:21 AM ron minnich <rminnich at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> just double checking, in case the odd.html had a typo: it was a KS11,
> not a KT11-B? Is there any chance there was an error in recollection?
>
> ron
>
> On Sat, Jun 22, 2019 at 11:18 AM Noel Chiappa <jnc at mercury.lcs.mit.edu> wrote:
> >
> > This is an appeal to the few really-old-timers (i.e. who used the PDP-11/20
> > version of Unix) on the list to see if they remember _anything_ of the KS11
> > memory mapping unit used on that machine.
> >
> > Next to nothing is known of the KS11. Dennis' page "Odd Comments and Strange
> > Doings in Unix":
> >
> >   https://www.bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/odd.html
> >
> > has a story involving it (at the end), and that is all I've ever been able
> > to find out about it.
> >
> > I don't expect documentation, but I am hoping someone will remember
> > _basically_ what it did. My original guess as to its functionality, from that
> > page, was that it's not part of the CPU, but a UNIBUS device, placed between
> > the UNIBUS leaving the CPU, and the rest of the the bus, which perhaps mapped
> > addresses around (and definitely limited user access to I/O page addresses).
> >
> > It might also have mapped part of the UNIBUS space which the -11/20 CPU _can_
> > see (i.e.  in the 0-56KB range) up to UNIBUS higher addresses, where 'extra'
> > memory is configured - but that's just a guess; but it is an example of the
> > kind of info I'd like to find out about it - just the briefest of high-level
> > descriptions would be an improvement on what little we have now!
> >
> > On re-reading that page, I see it apparently supported some sort of
> > user/kernel mode distinction, which might have require a tie-in to the
> > CPU. (But not necessarily; if there was a flop in the KS11 which stored the
> > 'CPU mode' bit, it might be automatically cleared on all interrupts. Not sure
> > how it would have handled traps, though.)
> >
> > Even extremely dim memories will be an improvement on the blank canvas we
> > have now!
> >
> >         Noel


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