Difference between revisions of "DH11 asynchronous serial line interface"

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(Main unit: +M791 Berg conn card)
(Later implementations: DHU11 not in fact program compatible)
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==Later implementations==
 
==Later implementations==
  
The DH11 was later re-implemented as the [[DHU11]], which was mostly programmatically identical, but fitted on a single [[DEC card form factor|hex-height]] card, which plugged into a [[Modified UNIBUS Device|MUD]] slot.
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The DH11 was later re-implemented as the [[DHU11 asynchronous serial line interface|DHU11]], which was not programmatically identical to the DH11, but had the same capabilities. (It also had the input timer, discussed above.) It fitted on a single [[DEC card form factor|hex-height]] card, which plugged into a [[Modified UNIBUS Device|MUD]] slot.
  
For the [[QBUS]], the [[DHV11]] and [[DHQ11]] (again, programmatically identical) appeared; they only supported 8 lines (via two quad breakout panels) each, however.
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For the [[QBUS]], the [[DHV11 asynchronous serial line interface|DHV11]] and [[DHQ11 asynchronous serial line interface|DHQ11]] (the former was mostly programmatically identical to the DHU11; the latter could be set to exactly emulate either a DHU11 or a DHV11) appeared; they only supported 8 lines each (via two quad breakout panels), however.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==

Revision as of 10:52, 31 December 2020

The DH11 asynchronous serial line interface is a UNIBUS peripheral which provides up to 16 asynchronous serial lines. Output used DMA (with each line having its own buffer pointer and count); on input a 64-character FIFO buffer made over-runs unlikely.

As a UNIBUS device, it was usable on the PDP-11 and VAX computers. Although it first appeared very early on in the lifetime of the PDP-11, it was extremely powerful and flexible, and remained an option for a very long time.

The parameters for each line:

  • separate input and output baud rates
  • character length (5-8 bits)
  • stop bits (1, 1-1/2 and 2)
  • parity (odd, even, none)

could be set dynamically (unlike, for example, the DJ11, which set parameters for groups of lines using jumpers)

Fourteen supported baud rates ranged from 50 to 9600, along with 0 (to disable a line); two additional speeds were available with optional clock FLIP CHIPs. A 'break' condition on the line (i.e. continuous assertion) could also be generated and detected.

For modem control, a single DM11-BB Modem Control Option‎ per DH11, mounted in the main DH11 backplane along with the rest of the DH11 cards, was required. (The DM11-BB is logically a separate device, albeit one housed in the DH11.)

Device registers

The registers LPR through BCR are replicated, with one for each line in the device; the 'Line' field in the SCR indicates which one is currently available.

Register Abbreviation Address
System Control Register DHSCR 760020
Next Received Character Register DHNRCR 760022
Line Parameter Register DHLPR 760024
Current Address Register DHCAR 760026
Byte Count Register DHBCR 760030
Buffer Active Register DHBAR 760032
Break Control Register DHBRCR 760034
Silo Status Register DHSSR 760034

The addresses shown are for the first DH11 in a system; additional ones are normally set to be at 760040, 760060.

760020: System Control Register (DHSCR)

TI SI OIE SIE MCLR NXM MAINT CNXM RI RIE MEX Line
15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00

760022: Next Received Character Register (DHNRCR)

DPR OVR FRM PAR Line Data
15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00

760024: Line Parameter Register (DHLPR)

Echo HFD TSpeed RSpeed ODD PAR Unused 2SB Length
15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00

760034: Silo Status Register (DHSSR)

Rsvd Unused Fill XMem Alarm
15 14 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 01 00

Initial implementation

The original implementation took an entire double system unit backplane, containing multiple cards (see list below). It came in 'earlier' and 'later' versions.

In the 'early' versions, modular 'line conditioning' units allowed support of either 20mA or EIA RS-232 serial lines; these were installed in a separate rack-mounted dual-height DM11 distribution panel backplane (which required its own independent power supply).

H317-B with cover off

In the 'later' units, to reduce the cost, line conditioning was performed on boards mounted in the main DH11 backplane, and a rack-mounted passive H317-B distribution panel provided connectors for individual lines.

These 'later' versions only supported EIA-type line conditioning (with or without modem control); to add modem control, a different implementation of the DM11-BB was required (one which did the EIA level conversion on the control lines internally).

Versions

The 'early' versions of the DH11 were:

  • DH11-AA - Basic unit (110VAC), requires line conditioning units in addition
  • DH11-AB - Telegraph line version (see below)
  • DH11-AC - Basic unit (220VAC), requires line conditioning units in addition

The 'later' versions were:

  • DH11-AD - EIA level conversion, modem control
  • DH11-AE - EIA level conversion, no modem control

For the telegraph line option, the line conditioning backplane and its power supply were omitted, and up to two DH11's were connected to a DC08CS Telegraph Converter Panel.

Main unit

M791 connector card

The 'basic' DH11 included the following hex-width boards:

  • M7277 - Transmit scanner
  • M7278 - Registers and byte count
  • M7288 - Line parameters control
  • M7289 - Receiver scanner

a dual-width and two quads:

  • M7279 - FIFO buffer
  • M7280 (2) - Octal UARTs

and a number of single-width cards:

  • M4540 - Crystal clock
  • M7360 - Priority selector
  • M796 - UNIBUS master control
  • M7821 (2) - Interrupt control (transmit. receive, and NPR)
  • M405 - Baud clock (optional; 2)
  • M791 - Berg connector header connector card

Board locations (as seen from the board insertion side of the backplane, not the wire-wrap pin side, as is common in DEC documentation) are:

Connector
Slot A B C D E F
1 UNIBUS In Reserved for DM11-BB
2 M7821 M796 Reserved for DM11-BB
3 M7278
4 M7277
5 M7289
6 M7821 M405 (optional) M7280
7 M7360 M971 (cable) M7280
8 M7288
9 UNIBUS Out M7279 M405 (optional) M4540

An optional M794 maintenance card could be plugged into the slot normally used by the M971, for testing.

The 'later' versions of the DH11 both included:

  • M5906 EIA conversion module

which occupied a dual slot (used by an M7360 Priority Selector card and an M971 Cable Connector card, used to connect the DH11 to the line conditioning units, in the 'early' versions).

The -AD version, which included a 'later' DM11-BB for modem control, also used:

  • M7807 - Mux and Bus Control
  • M7808 - Mux and Modem Scan Control

These boards fitted into the same slots occupied by the DM11-BB boards in the 'early' versions (the M7807 in slot 1, the M7808 in slot 2).

Distribution panels

The rack-mounted passive distribution panel initially used in the 'later' versions was the H317-B passive distribution panel, initially created for the DJ11, which mounted directly into a standard 19" rack, and contained 16 DB-25P connectors.

It was connected to the DH11 with a pair of BC08S cables, which carried the 'main' signals (data, etc - i.e. non-modem control); these cables were thus required for both 'later' versions. For the modem control signals (Carrier Detect, etc) used with the DH11-AD, four BC08R cables were used.

H3007

Later, the H3007 8-line EIA distribution panel, designed for use in later DEC cabinets with improved EMI characteristics, was introduced; the H3007 fits into the standard panel 21cm x 10cm cutout found in these systems.

Design flaw

Some time after it was introduced, it became apparent that there was a design flaw associated with the 'silo alarm' functionality. This mechanism allowed increased processing efficiency by allowing multiple input characters to be processed with a single interrupt; it involved a register (the 'Silo Alarm Level') which contained a count of the number of characters required in the input buffer (the 'silo') before an interrupt was generated.

The problem is that if less characters than that arrive, and then no more, an interrupt is never generated. So, code which uses higher levels for the silo alarm has to periodically check to see if less characters than that have arrived, and are waiting.

(Apparently, the designer admitted that this was a flaw; he indicated that there should have been a timer, such that after the first character entered the silo, if the silo was still non-empty after the timer ran out, an interrupt would be generated.)

Later implementations

The DH11 was later re-implemented as the DHU11, which was not programmatically identical to the DH11, but had the same capabilities. (It also had the input timer, discussed above.) It fitted on a single hex-height card, which plugged into a MUD slot.

For the QBUS, the DHV11 and DHQ11 (the former was mostly programmatically identical to the DHU11; the latter could be set to exactly emulate either a DHU11 or a DHV11) appeared; they only supported 8 lines each (via two quad breakout panels), however.

External links