Difference between revisions of "ELF operating system"

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(External links: Operating system design considerations for the packet-switching environment.)
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Work on it started in early 1973;  it went into experimental service in early 1974, and by 1976 about 30 sites on the ARPANET were using it. It was later used by researchers at [[Bolt, Beranek, and Newman|BBN]] to support the first [[router]]s on the experimental [[Internet]].
 
Work on it started in early 1973;  it went into experimental service in early 1974, and by 1976 about 30 sites on the ARPANET were using it. It was later used by researchers at [[Bolt, Beranek, and Newman|BBN]] to support the first [[router]]s on the experimental [[Internet]].
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ELF went through major changes during development. ELF-I had an emphasis on high throughput at the expense of modularity. ELF-II improved modularity but reduced throughput. VM ELF moved applications out of kernel space to separate user spaces.
  
 
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Revision as of 12:35, 28 October 2021

ELF was a real-time multi-programming operating system for the PDP-11 (hence the name - 'elf' is German for 'eleven); generally, those with PDP-11 Memory Management (both kinds). It allowed processes to be created and terminated, and allowed them access to inter-process communication and timers; allocation and freeing of main memory was also provided. It was written in assembly language; applications could also be written in BCPL and BLISS-11.

It was originally intended to allow users at terminals to simultaneously utilize time-sharing systems on the ARPANET, using NCP (use of which was a standard capability under ELF). It was a successor to ANTS in this role. It also allowed users to save files on local mass storage.

Work on it started in early 1973; it went into experimental service in early 1974, and by 1976 about 30 sites on the ARPANET were using it. It was later used by researchers at BBN to support the first routers on the experimental Internet.

ELF went through major changes during development. ELF-I had an emphasis on high throughput at the expense of modularity. ELF-II improved modularity but reduced throughput. VM ELF moved applications out of kernel space to separate user spaces.

See also

Further reading

  • D. L. Retz, ELF System Development - this apparently online at Stanford, but access to it seems to currently be restricted

External links