Difference between revisions of "PDP-11/04"

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(See also: SACK turnaround and CPU hangs)
m (External links: +pdp11 processor handbook)
 
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* [http://www.bitsavers.org/www.computer.museum.uq.edu.au/pdf/EK-11004-OP-001%20PDP-11-04%20System%20User's%20Manual.pdf PDP-11/04 system user's manual]
 
* [http://www.bitsavers.org/www.computer.museum.uq.edu.au/pdf/EK-11004-OP-001%20PDP-11-04%20System%20User's%20Manual.pdf PDP-11/04 system user's manual]
 
* [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/pdp11/1104/MP00019_1104_EngrDrws_Feb78.pdf PDP-11/04 engineering drawings]
 
* [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/pdp11/1104/MP00019_1104_EngrDrws_Feb78.pdf PDP-11/04 engineering drawings]
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* [http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/pdp11/handbooks/PDP-11_Processor_Handbook_1981.pdf pdp11 processor handbook - pdp11/04/24/34A/44/70]
 
* [http://www.vaxhaven.com/images/8/84/EK-11034-MC-003.pdf PDP-11/04/34/34A Maintenance Card] (EK-11034-MC-003)
 
* [http://www.vaxhaven.com/images/8/84/EK-11034-MC-003.pdf PDP-11/04/34/34A Maintenance Card] (EK-11034-MC-003)
 
* [http://www.corestore.org/1104.htm PDP-11/04] at corestore.org
 
* [http://www.corestore.org/1104.htm PDP-11/04] at corestore.org

Latest revision as of 23:36, 29 February 2024

PDP-11/04

The PDP-11/04 was a mid/late-70s implementation of the PDP-11 architecture for the UNIBUS; it was a replacement for the PDP-11/05. It used the KD11-D CPU, which was implemented on a single hex card (M7263), the first PDP-11 CPU to be contained on a single board.

It was the first PDP-11 to come standard without a 'proper' lights and switches front panel: the standard KY11-LA Operator's Console front panel had only 'Boot/Init', 'Halt/Cont', and power switches, and the system came with an M9301 ROM card which included a console emulator, which communicated through the console terminal.

DEC did offer the KY11-LB Programmer's Console as an option for the -11/04; it had an octal keypad, the usual 'Halt'/'Start'/etc keys, and a 6-digit LED display which showed address/data digitally.

It came in two chassis configurations: the BA11-L half-height box, which had the entire computer - card guide frame, backplane, power supply, and front panel - sliding into an evil jamming finger-trapping metal sleeve; and a full-height example, basically the same BA11-K box as used throughout the PDP-11 line. (This is very similar to its higher-spec twin, the PDP-11/34.)

Registers

Like its predecessor PDP-11/05, the general registers (R0-R5, SP and PC) have addresses assigned to them; they are also accessible from the UNIBUS, and therefore from the KY11-LB Programmer's Console, when the machine is halted. Their addresses are:

Address Register
777700 R0
...
777705 R5
777706 SP
777707 PC

Note that the registers are word-accessible at odd addresses on the UNIBUS (unlike any other device); and their addresses, like those on the -11/05, increment by 1, not by 2, as is usual for word-sized items.

In addition, four internal CPU registers which record the CPU's most recent memory operations are also available:

Address Register
777710 Source address
777711 Source data
777712 Destination address
777713 Destination data

See also

External links