Difference between revisions of "VAX-11/780"
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The '''VAX-11/780''' was the first member to ship of the VAX-11 family of larger computers. The VAX series was conceived as the successor to the successful [[PDP-11]] series of [[minicomputer]]s, and in order to make the VAX seem more PDP-11 friendly, they retained the -11 moniker for the first VAXen, hence the -11/780 designation. | The '''VAX-11/780''' was the first member to ship of the VAX-11 family of larger computers. The VAX series was conceived as the successor to the successful [[PDP-11]] series of [[minicomputer]]s, and in order to make the VAX seem more PDP-11 friendly, they retained the -11 moniker for the first VAXen, hence the -11/780 designation. | ||
− | It was announced on October 25<sup>th</sup>, 1977 at [[Digital Equipment Corporation]]'s Annual Meeting of Shareholders.[[#ref_4|[4]]] | + | It was announced on October 25<sup>th</sup>, 1977 at [[Digital Equipment Corporation|DEC]]'s Annual Meeting of Shareholders.[[#ref_4|[4]]] |
One of the main design goals was to increase the address space available, in fact the VAX acronym originally stood for Virtual Address eXtension).[[#ref_3|[3]]] | One of the main design goals was to increase the address space available, in fact the VAX acronym originally stood for Virtual Address eXtension).[[#ref_3|[3]]] | ||
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The VAX-11/780 was given the codename "Star" and its operating system, VAX/VMS, was codenamed "Starlet".[[#ref_4|[4]]] VAX/VMS Version V1.0 shipped in 1978, along with the first revenue-ship 11/780s. | The VAX-11/780 was given the codename "Star" and its operating system, VAX/VMS, was codenamed "Starlet".[[#ref_4|[4]]] VAX/VMS Version V1.0 shipped in 1978, along with the first revenue-ship 11/780s. | ||
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==Operating Systems== | ==Operating Systems== | ||
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<div>11780 Field Maintenance Print Set. MP00539</div> | <div>11780 Field Maintenance Print Set. MP00539</div> | ||
<div>MS780-H Field Maintenance Print Set. MP01759</div> | <div>MS780-H Field Maintenance Print Set. MP01759</div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Dual-CPU experiment== | ||
+ | |||
+ | "In 1981, [George H. Goble] wired together the backplanes of two DEC VAX-11/780's and made the first multi-CPU Unix computer, preceding DEC's dual processor [[VAX-11/782]]. The operating system was based on the 4.2 BSD kernel, and the modifications thus made eventually made it into the 4.3 BSD Unix release. At the beginning of the 4.3 BSD user manuals, Bill Joy wrote a special note of thanks to GHG for being courageous enough to put the multi-CPU kernel into a production environment before anyone else did. (However, the frequent crashes for a while inspired the writing of many humorous text files by the Purdue University Electrical Engineering student body, such as 'The VAX had a Blowout', to be sung to the tune of London Bridge is Falling Down). The development of the Dual-CPU Unix system was the subject of Goble's Master's thesis." | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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<div id="ref_4">[4] Nothing Stops It! VAX Open VMS At 20. | <div id="ref_4">[4] Nothing Stops It! VAX Open VMS At 20. | ||
− | ==See also== | + | <!-- ==See also== |
* [[VAX-11/782]] | * [[VAX-11/782]] | ||
* [[VAX-11/785]] | * [[VAX-11/785]] | ||
+ | --> | ||
+ | ==External links== | ||
+ | |||
+ | * [https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/1067649.801738 A Dual Processor VAX 11/780] | ||
{{Nav VAX}} | {{Nav VAX}} |
Revision as of 20:59, 21 December 2020
VAX-11/780 | |
Summary | |
---|---|
Announcement date: | October 1977 |
Codename: | Star |
OS support (VMS): | VMS V1.5 |
CPU Details | |
CPU name (VMS): | KA780 |
Number of processors: | 1 |
CPU technology: | Bipolar Schottky |
CPU cycle time: | 200ns [1] |
Instruction-buffer: | 8 bytes [1] |
Translation-buffer: | 128 entries [1] |
Control store: | 4K 99-bit words [1] |
Gate delay: | 3ns |
User Writable Control Store: | 2K 99-bit words [1] |
Cache: | 8KB [1] |
Compatibility mode: | Yes [1] |
Console processor: | LSI-11 [1] |
Console device: | RX01 [1] |
Memory | |
Minimum memory: | 2MB |
Maximum memory: | 64MB |
Physical address lines: | 30 |
Memory checking: | 8-bit ECC/longword [1] |
I/O | |
Max I/O throughput: | 5.0MB/s |
MASSBUS: | 4 @ 2.0MB/s |
UNIBUS: | 4 @ 1.5MB/s |
LAN support: | optional |
Performance | |
VUPs: | 1.0 [2] |
The VAX-11/780 was the first member to ship of the VAX-11 family of larger computers. The VAX series was conceived as the successor to the successful PDP-11 series of minicomputers, and in order to make the VAX seem more PDP-11 friendly, they retained the -11 moniker for the first VAXen, hence the -11/780 designation.
It was announced on October 25th, 1977 at DEC's Annual Meeting of Shareholders.[4]
One of the main design goals was to increase the address space available, in fact the VAX acronym originally stood for Virtual Address eXtension).[3]
The first VAX-11/780 systems shipped with one quarter of a megabyte of memory, built from 4Kb chips.[3]
The 11/780 didn't have normal firmware, instead it loaded its microcode from floppy. There was also the VAX-11/785, which was an upgraded version.
The VAX-11/780 was given the codename "Star" and its operating system, VAX/VMS, was codenamed "Starlet".[4] VAX/VMS Version V1.0 shipped in 1978, along with the first revenue-ship 11/780s.
Contents
Operating Systems
The 11/780 was to ship with VMS 1.0.
Emulation
SIMH is the only known emulator for the 11/780. SIMH can address up to 128MB of RAM emulating an 11/780. Also the following peripherals are emulated:
- CPU VAX-11/780 CPU
- TLB translation buffer
- SBI system bus controller
- MCTL0,MTCL1 memory controllers, MS780C with 4MB memory each, or MS780E with 8MB-64MB each
- UBA DW780 Unibus adapter
- MBA0,MBA1 RH780 Massbus adapters
- TODR time-of-day clock
- TMR interval timer
- TTI,TTO console terminal
- RX console RX01 floppy disk
- DZ DZ11 8-line terminal multiplexer (up to 4)
- CR CR11 card reader
- LPT LP11 line printer
- RP RP04/05/06/07, RM02/03/05/80 Massbus disks, up to eight drives
- HK RK611/RK06(7) cartridge disk controller with eight drives
- RL RL11/RL01(2) cartridge disk controller with four drives
- RQ UDA50 MSCP controller with four drives
- RQB second UDA50 MSCP controller with four drives
- RQC third UDA50 MSCP controller with four drives
- RQD fourth UDA50 MSCP controller with four drives
- RY RX211 floppy disk controller with two drives
- TS TS11 magnetic tape controller with one drive
- TQ TUK50 TMSCP magnetic tape controller with four drives
- TU TM03 tape formatter with eight TE16/TU45/TU77 drives
- XU DEUNA/DELUA Ethernet controller
- XUB second DEUNA/DELUA Ethernet controller
More information about SIMH's VAX 11/780 emulation can be found here.
Related Documents
Dual-CPU experiment
"In 1981, [George H. Goble] wired together the backplanes of two DEC VAX-11/780's and made the first multi-CPU Unix computer, preceding DEC's dual processor VAX-11/782. The operating system was based on the 4.2 BSD kernel, and the modifications thus made eventually made it into the 4.3 BSD Unix release. At the beginning of the 4.3 BSD user manuals, Bill Joy wrote a special note of thanks to GHG for being courageous enough to put the multi-CPU kernel into a production environment before anyone else did. (However, the frequent crashes for a while inspired the writing of many humorous text files by the Purdue University Electrical Engineering student body, such as 'The VAX had a Blowout', to be sung to the tune of London Bridge is Falling Down). The development of the Dual-CPU Unix system was the subject of Goble's Master's thesis."
References
External links
v • d • e VAX Computers and Operating Systems |
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VAX-11/7xx (including VAX 86x0) - VAX-11/780 • VAX-11/785 • VAX-11/750 • VAX-11/730 • VAX 8600 • VAX 8650
VAX 8000 series (excluding VAX 86x0, above) - VAX 82xx/83xx series • VAX 85xx/87xx/88xx series MicroVAXen (many types also come in VAXserver and VAXstation models) - MicroVAX I • MicroVAX II VAXstation Series - VAXstation I • VAXstation II Late Model VAXen - VAX 4000 series • VAX 6000 series • VAX 7000 series • VAX 9000 series • VAX 10000 series |
Special Purpose VAXen - VAXft series • rtVAX series • Infoserver series
Clones - CM 1700 • TPA-11/580 |