Difference between revisions of "M9302 UNIBUS terminator"

From Computer History Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
m (External links: typo)
(Standard new wording about fault; +See also)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 4: Line 4:
  
 
It is a replacement for the original [[M930 UNIBUS terminator]], with so-called 'SACK Turnaround' functionality added.
 
It is a replacement for the original [[M930 UNIBUS terminator]], with so-called 'SACK Turnaround' functionality added.
 +
 +
Note that as a result of the 'SACK Turnaround' circuitry, if there's any break in a [[bus grant line]] (perhaps a missing [[grant continuity card]]) at ''any'' point before it gets to the M9302, the M9302 will jam SACK on (hanging the machine so that it will not run at all; this is fairly easy to recognize and fix). That is because the resulting 'open' input to the [[transistor-transistor logic|TTL]] [[gate]] monitoring the grant line in the device immediately down-stream from the break (perhaps in the M9302) will float high, thereby looking like a permanent incoming grant, which will be turned around by the M9302 as a permanent assertion of SACK. (As mentioned, in many [[PDP-11]] [[Central Processing Unit|CPUs]], that will [[KY11-L to CPU interface|freeze the CPU]].)
 +
 +
==See also==
 +
 +
* [[M8264 No-SACK Timeout Module]]
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Latest revision as of 12:35, 25 August 2024

M9302 terminator card

The M9302 UNIBUS terminator is a terminator for the UNIBUS; it provides all three functions of a UNIBUS terminator. The M9302 is a dual format card, intended for use in the two top (AB) sections of a MUD slot, or in a UNIBUS in/out slot.

It is a replacement for the original M930 UNIBUS terminator, with so-called 'SACK Turnaround' functionality added.

Note that as a result of the 'SACK Turnaround' circuitry, if there's any break in a bus grant line (perhaps a missing grant continuity card) at any point before it gets to the M9302, the M9302 will jam SACK on (hanging the machine so that it will not run at all; this is fairly easy to recognize and fix). That is because the resulting 'open' input to the TTL gate monitoring the grant line in the device immediately down-stream from the break (perhaps in the M9302) will float high, thereby looking like a permanent incoming grant, which will be turned around by the M9302 as a permanent assertion of SACK. (As mentioned, in many PDP-11 CPUs, that will freeze the CPU.)

See also

External links