Difference between revisions of "MOS operating system"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(+Ext link)
(Link to BBN.)
Line 3: Line 3:
 
It supported [[process]]es (but not [[preemption]], or creation/termination of processes), queued inter-process messages, asynchronous I/O, and allocation and freeing of [[main memory]]; it had no [[file system]] or other support for [[secondary storage]].
 
It supported [[process]]es (but not [[preemption]], or creation/termination of processes), queued inter-process messages, asynchronous I/O, and allocation and freeing of [[main memory]]; it had no [[file system]] or other support for [[secondary storage]].
  
The original version was written in [[MACRO-11]], the [[assembly language]] for the PDP-11; it was later re-written at least three times in [[C programming language|C]]: at BBN, at UCL, and at Proteon. The latter version was portable, and also ran on the [[Motorola MC68000|MC68000]] and [[AMD29000]].
+
The original version was written in [[MACRO-11]], the [[assembly language]] for the PDP-11; it was later re-written at least three times in [[C programming language|C]]: at [[BBN]], at UCL, and at Proteon. The latter version was portable, and also ran on the [[Motorola MC68000|MC68000]] and [[AMD29000]].
  
 
All were somewhat extended from the original; the first two fairly extensively, the latter only to make use of [[up-call]]s in the I/O system, and to support [[pseudo-terminal]]s.
 
All were somewhat extended from the original; the first two fairly extensively, the latter only to make use of [[up-call]]s in the I/O system, and to support [[pseudo-terminal]]s.

Revision as of 11:58, 20 August 2021

The MOS operating system (formally the 'Micro Operating System', but informally 'Mathis' Operating System', after the creator, Jim Mathis) was an operating system, originally for the PDP-11, used for a number of packet switches and similar network applications.

It supported processes (but not preemption, or creation/termination of processes), queued inter-process messages, asynchronous I/O, and allocation and freeing of main memory; it had no file system or other support for secondary storage.

The original version was written in MACRO-11, the assembly language for the PDP-11; it was later re-written at least three times in C: at BBN, at UCL, and at Proteon. The latter version was portable, and also ran on the MC68000 and AMD29000.

All were somewhat extended from the original; the first two fairly extensively, the latter only to make use of up-calls in the I/O system, and to support pseudo-terminals.

External links