Difference between revisions of "TOPS-10"
From Computer History Wiki
m (Proper cat) |
(Infobox.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{Infobox OS | ||
+ | | name = TOPS-10 | ||
+ | | creator = [[DEC]] | ||
+ | | current version = 7.04 | ||
+ | | type = Multi-tasking, multi-user, virtual memory | ||
+ | | architecture = [[PDP-10]] | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
'''TOPS-10''' was [[DEC]]'s [[operating system]] for the early [[PDP-10]] computers. It was descended from the 'Monitor' OS used on the [[PDP-6]]. It provided both [[batch]] and [[time-sharing]] capabilities. | '''TOPS-10''' was [[DEC]]'s [[operating system]] for the early [[PDP-10]] computers. It was descended from the 'Monitor' OS used on the [[PDP-6]]. It provided both [[batch]] and [[time-sharing]] capabilities. | ||
Revision as of 18:32, 2 April 2022
TOPS-10 | |
Type: | Multi-tasking, multi-user, virtual memory |
---|---|
Creator: | DEC |
Architecture: | PDP-10 |
This Version: | 7.04 |
TOPS-10 was DEC's operating system for the early PDP-10 computers. It was descended from the 'Monitor' OS used on the PDP-6. It provided both batch and time-sharing capabilities.
TOPS-10 allowed programs to be separated into data and object code segments; the latter could be shared by all processes running that program. Once support for virtual memory was added to the hardware (in the KI10), TOPS-10 added support for that.