Rebuilding the PDP-11/70 with a Raspberry Pi (wixsite.com)
"You could look at this as a smallish PDP-11/70, built with modern parts," Oscar Vermeulen writes on his site. "Or alternatively, and equally valid, as a fancy front panel case for a Raspberry Pi."
Long-time Slashdot reader cptnapalm writes: Oscar Vermeulen's PiDP-11 front panel, modeling a PDP-11/70 in all its colorful glory, has been released to beta testers. This is Mr. Vermeulen's second DEC front panel; his PiDP-8 was released a few years ago. The PiDP-11 panel is designed to work with a Raspberry Pi running simh or, possibly, a FPGA implementation of the Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-11... In addition to the front panel with its switches and blinkenlights, also included is a prototyping area for the possibility of adding new hardware...
UNIX and later BSD were developed on the PDP-11, including both the creation of the C language, the pipe concept and the text editor vi.
Long-time Slashdot reader cptnapalm writes: Oscar Vermeulen's PiDP-11 front panel, modeling a PDP-11/70 in all its colorful glory, has been released to beta testers. This is Mr. Vermeulen's second DEC front panel; his PiDP-8 was released a few years ago. The PiDP-11 panel is designed to work with a Raspberry Pi running simh or, possibly, a FPGA implementation of the Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-11... In addition to the front panel with its switches and blinkenlights, also included is a prototyping area for the possibility of adding new hardware...
UNIX and later BSD were developed on the PDP-11, including both the creation of the C language, the pipe concept and the text editor vi.
I'm always amazed at what people use a Pi for. While bad mouthed for it's limitations it seems the Swiss Knife of tiny SBC devices.
ed. Not vi, ed.
Now get off my lawn, I'm growing belt onions right there.
The builder set up a prototyping area, and my thought would be to install an audio amp and speakers to replicate the 12 (? it's been 40 years for me...) fans it needed for cooling. To say nothing of the RK-05. Of course an organization that could afford a /70 could probably afford the RP06 drives to go with it.
I remember wishing that someday if I could get really rich, I could someday have an 11/45.
I miss those days, cut my baby teeth on a PDP 11/70 with RSX11M+ OS. Did Fortran 66, Fortran 77, Assembler and C code on them.
We also had 11/34s and a really small one in the lab with a low serial number. It came with the pizza box drives and paper-tape reader/writers.
been there, done that, got the T-shirt, burned it, going back home
Score 1 for pedantry.
Would anyone have difficulty making this distinction, or are you just going for the satisfaction of pointing something out?
Agreed. I'd be much more impressed to see this running from an FPGA and interfacing with Massbus peripherals.
Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
He rebuilt the front panel and switches from photographs, primarily. This is a serious effort.
http://obsolescenceguaranteed....
Not a tinkerer.
The highlight of my Digital Electronics II Lab course in college was to design and prototype a PDP5 using 74xx series logic chips on breadboards. In comparison, the PDP 11/70 was an advanced supercomputer, but the task of designing even the simplest computer at the gate level really created an appreciation for the complexity of processors. It took 20 breadboards to prototype and worked for just a few minutes before a chip lost its smoke somewhere. Fun days!
This article is not about the emulator. That's been around for a while.
This is about reproducing the physical hardware - the switches and lights and all that. You say "that's not rebuilding. That's putting a fancy front on" - you realize one has to design and build the "fancy front" before putting it on, right?
fun game: Name DEC pdp11 OS by running idle light pattern...
RT11, RSTS/E, RSX11 all had different light patterns.
What would I want to party on a dude as though it were 1979?
Oh God, please not the PDP--11/70 series!!!! (I forget, was that the one you had to boot up with paper tape????) Now, the older Perkin/Elmer super-minis were sweet!
To get the full 32-bit experience
I'd be impressed to find Massbus peripherals that were still operable.
CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
My `emergency' floppy always had a copy of 'edlin' on it; didn't eat up too much of your 360KB disk space but, if memory serves, it only handled files under 64KB. I always found it hilarious when people would delete edlin in order to save valuable hard disk space and then not have anything to edit a screwed up autoexec.bat. For big jobs, there was Logitech's 'point' editor that shipped with their mice. Would edit pretty much anything that could fit in memory. I managed to return many a corrupted WordPerfect document to a usable state using that editor after someone boogered them up---usually after trying to pull in a graphic that was too large.
CUR ALLOC 20195.....5804M
That's very cool that you have that.
If you want to interface it with an RPi, I bet the guy doing the project in the article might like to here from you.
The big boxes were racks that also held tape drives and rack-mounted disk pacs. Sometimes these were plopped into washer-machine height carriages.
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
Yes, but you run RSTS/E or Unix first, then load the BASIC interpreter. It's line-number stuff!
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
I'm pleasantly surprised they tagged this correctly. Of course, the Digital Equipment Corporation hadn't exactly been lighting up the news, since they've been toast for nearly 20 years :-) Kudos for remembering them!
that that is is that that is not is not
Put an Antminer in the case for authenticity.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Was that "really small one" a PDP-11/05?
I think in the late '80s it only handled 4k. There was another editor that handled larger files, I don't recall the name.
.bak, and all was well.
At that time I was the network administrator for a state gov't agency, and I once got a help desk call from a fellow IT worker who said her computer wouldn't boot. I asked what was the last thing she did: she needed to make a configuration change, so she edited command.com.
I knew that couldn't be right. I grabbed my boot and utility floppies, went to her office, and sure enough, her computer wouldn't boot. Booted it off my master floppy, did a DIR C:\, and there was a Command.com sized 4096 bytes and a Command.bak that was 65k. She'd opened it in edlin, saw all the hex code, and exited instead of quitting. It wrote the memory back to the 4k mark and that was it. I guess she meant to edit config.sys or autoexec.bat, I don't remember. Copied a fresh copy of command.com to the computer rather than use the one there, deleted the
When you sympathize with stupidity, you start thinking like an idiot.