KL10
KL10 | |
Manufacturer: | Digital Equipment Corporation |
---|---|
Architecture: | PDP-10 |
Year Design Started: | January, 1972 |
Year First Shipped: | June, 1975 |
Form Factor: | mainframe |
Word Size: | 36 bits |
Logic Type: | ECL ICs |
Design Type: | clocked synchronous, microcoded |
Microword Width: | 80 |
Microcode Length: | 1280 (Model A) 2K (Model B) |
Clock Speed: | 500 nsec |
Cache Size: | 2K words |
Memory Speed: | 1.0 μsec (initial core memory), 500 nsec (later MOS main memory) |
Physical Address Size: | 22 bits |
Virtual Address Size: | 18 bits (Model A and B) 23 bits (Model E) |
Memory Management: | paging, 512-word pages |
Operating System: | TOPS-10, TOPS-20, ITS, WAITS, TENEX, TYMCOM-X |
Predecessor(s): | KI10 |
Successor(s): | none |
Price: | US$250K (CPU), US$600K-1.2M (system) |
The KL10 was the third generation of PDP-10 processors. It was built out of ECL, on hex cards. It was the first microprogrammed PDP-10 processor; the design was inspired by Stanford's Superfoonly.
The CPU had two main units, the 'E Box' ('Execution') and the 'M Box' ('Memory'). It provided three types of busses to the rest of the components of the system; the 'E Bus', from the E Box; and the 'S Bus' ('Storage'), and later the 'C Bus' ('Channel'), from the M Box. The S Bus was for the attachment of main memory units (it was later upgraded to something called the 'X Bus'), while the C Bus alowed DMA accesss to main memory.
Up to 4 DTE20 Interfaces (which allowed connection of a PDP-11 front end), and up to 8 RH20 MASSBUS controllers could be connected to the E Bus (the latter were also connected to the C Bus). At least one PDP-11, the 'master', was required; it could bootstrap the KL10, including loading the microcode.
A DMA20 Memory Bus Controller could be attached to the S Bus, to provide an external memory bus (compatible with the earlier KA10 and KI10). Similarly, an DIA20 In/Out Bus Controller could be attached to the E Bus, to provide a KA10/KI10 compatible I/O bus.
The KL10 was used in the DECsystem-10 models 108x and 109x systems (initially with an external memory bus), and in the high-end 20xx systems of the DECSYSTEM-20 line (with an internal memory bus).
Like its predecessor, the KI10, it was initially released in a single-processor version; a two-CPU version was released later.
Versions
There were a number of variants over the lifetime of the KL10; the situation is confusing because many of the 'models' (e.g. 'Model C' and 'Model D') appear to be names for particular configurations (with various options, such as the DMA20 and DIA20).
One early significant division between KL-based systems is between those with an external memory bus, and those with an internal memory bus (the native S Bus).
In terms of actual CPU hardware variants, the early 'Model A' only supported a single DTE20, and no RH20s (the latter possibly as it had no C Bus); it was the later 'Model B' KL10 which supported up to 4 DTE20s and up to 8 RH20s (along with a larger microcode store).
The later KL10 'Model E' (sometimes denoted as the 'KL10-PV') supported the 'Extended' PDP-10 architecture, with support for multiple 'sections' (256K-word address spaces), available to both the kernel and the user (although apparently only TOPS-20 supported the latter). A Model B could be field upgraded to a Model E, but it needed a new backplane.
The 'KL10-R' appears to be a Model E in a new cabinet design, one compliant with newer FCC RFI emissions standards.
Well-known KL10's
There was a single KL10 ITS machine, MIT-MC. It was later renamed to MX after a KS10 took the 'MC' identity, and was finally shut down in 1988; it is now in storage at the Living Computers Museum. There was also a KL10 in the SAIL WAITS system.