Difference between revisions of "OS/8"

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OS/8 was the primary [[operating system]] for the [[PDP-8 family|PDP-8]]. OS/8 is different from modern OS's as you don't change paths/drives you assign the DSK: volume to whatever disk it is you want to work from.  Also running exe's have to be on the SYS: volume.
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OS/8 was the primary [[operating system]] for the [[PDP-8 family|PDP-8]]. OS/8 is a [[single-user]] OS, used for support of [[application]] [[software]].
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All [[peripheral]] operations are handled without using [[interrupt]]s. The [[file system]] uses contiguous [[file]]s. [[Batch]] operation was supported by an extension.
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It is different from modern OS's as you don't change paths/drives you assign the DSK: volume to whatever disk it is you want to work from.  Also running exe's have to be on the SYS: volume.
  
 
== Example of usage ==
 
== Example of usage ==

Revision as of 23:19, 22 June 2020


OS/8
Type: Time-sharing
Creator: DEC
Multitasking: limited with multiuser
Architecture: PDP-8
Date Released: 1970?


OS/8 was the primary operating system for the PDP-8. OS/8 is a single-user OS, used for support of application software.

All peripheral operations are handled without using interrupts. The file system uses contiguous files. Batch operation was supported by an extension.

It is different from modern OS's as you don't change paths/drives you assign the DSK: volume to whatever disk it is you want to work from. Also running exe's have to be on the SYS: volume.

Example of usage

delete basic.*
deassign dsk:
assign rxa1: dsk:
squish sys:

copy rxa0:<rxa1:*.sv

R FRTS
ADVENT
(ESCAPE)

Some commands

HELP

BASIC

DELETE

deletes a file. You can use wildcards.

SQUISH

Squish is like defrag, in that it'll actually delete files, and move stuff around so you can get the maximum free space..

COPY

copy copys a file, but the syntax is different from most OS's...

copy Destination:<source:FILES

So that the follwing:

copy rxa0:<rxa1:*.sv

copys all the .sv files from rxa1 to rxa0

RUN

Interesting notes

OS/8 could run under another OS RTS/8 as a virtualized guest, allowing each user to have their own virtual PDP-8.