VAX-11/780
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 |
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 |
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 Digital Equipment Corporation'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.
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.
References
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 |