[TUHS] head/sed/tail (was The Unix shell: a 50-year view)
Clem Cole
clemc at ccc.com
Fri Jul 16 05:27:36 AEST 2021
The 'second' C compiler was a PDP-10 and Honeywell (36-bit) target Alan
Synder did for his MIT Thesis.
It was originally targeted to ITS for the PDP-10, but it ran on Tops-20
also.
My >>memory<< is he used a 7-bit Character, ala SAIL, with 5 chars stored
in a word with a bit leftover.
You can check it out: https://github.com/PDP-10/Snyder-C-compiler
I believe that C compiler Nelson is talking about I believe is actually
Synder's that Jay either ported from ITS or WAITS.
We had some form of the Synder compiler on the PDP-10's at CMU in the late
1970s.
It was either Mike Accetta or Fil Aleva that wrote a program to read PDP-10
backup tapes, that I updated to deal with TOPS-20/TENEX 'dumper' format
which was similar/only different.
ᐧ
On Thu, Jul 15, 2021 at 3:03 PM Norman Wilson <norman at oclsc.org> wrote:
> Nelson H. F. Beebe:
>
> P.S. Jay was the first to get Steve Johnson's Portable C Compiler,
> pcc, to run on the 36-bit PDP-10, and once we had pcc, we began the
> move from writing utilities in Pascal and PDP-10 assembly language to
> doing them in C.
>
> ======
>
> How did that C implementation handle ASCII text on the DEC-10?
> Were it a from-scratch UNIX port it might make sense to store
> four eight- or nine-bit bytes to a word, but if (as I sense it
> was) it was C running on TOPS-10 or TOPS-20, it would have had
> to work comfortably with DEC's convention of five 7-bit characters
> (plus a spare bit used by some programs as a flag).
>
> Norman Wilson
> Toronto ON
>
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