[TUHS] Fwd: 386BSD released

Bakul Shah bakul at iitbombay.org
Sat Jul 17 03:03:09 AEST 2021


More from Yost below.

My purpose in relating this was to point out that the original unix
implementation choices were mostly fine; they just had to be tweaked a
bit. Clearly an independent implementation such as in Linux would veer
off in a different direction, done in a different era and with different prior
experience. I was a bit surprised that Bruce didn't make this same
tweak to cblock size but no way of knowing his reasons now.

> Begin forwarded message:
> 
> From: Dave Yost 
> Subject: Re: [TUHS] 386BSD released
> Date: July 16, 2021 at 9:21:53 AM PDT
> To: Bakul Shah
> 
> Plz forward this
> thanks
> 
> This was in early 1983 or late 1982.
> 
> We got the serial driver to go 19200 out and 9600 in.
> 
> I did 2 things in the Fortune Systems 68k serial driver:
> • hand-coded asm pseudo-DMA, suggested by Robert P Warnock III
> • cblock size 128 bytes instead of 8, count ’em, 8.
> 
> From Lyons,
>   https://cs3210.cc.gatech.edu/r/unix6.pdf <https://cs3210.cc.gatech.edu/r/unix6.pdf>
> the unix v6 serial driver used a clist of cblocks, like this:
> 
> 
> The pseudo-DMA interrupt handler was a function made up of a few hand-coded 68k instructions, entered into C code as hex data. That code transferred one byte into or out of a cblock, and at the end of the cblock it grabbed the next cblock from a queue and rang the “doorbell” hardware interrupt, which caused a “software interrupt” at lower priority for further processing. Rob put the doorbell into the architecture with a couple of gates on the board because he was well aware of this software interrupt trick, which was already used in bsd. For some reason I didn’t look at the bsd code, probably because Rob’s explanation was lucid and sufficient.
> 
> I once had occasion to mention this, and specifically the relaxing of the draconian 8 byte cblock size, to Dennis Ritchie. He said, sure, why not, the 8 byte cblock size was just a neglected holdover from early days.
> 
> This approach was just an interrupt version of what I had proposed to Rick Kiessig as a first project at Fortune Systems: to get a 30x speed up when writing to the Fortune Systems memory-mapped character display hardware. I had done the same thing a few years earlier in Z80 in C code in a serial CRT terminal. It’s simple and obvious: make the inner loop do as little as possible. The most primitive operation needs to be a block operation, not a byte-at-a-time operation.

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