PDP-9
Developer | Digital Equipment Corporation |
---|---|
Product family | Programmed Data Processor |
Type | Minicomputer |
Release date | 1966 |
Units sold | 445 |
Media | Paper tape, DECtape |
Platform | DEC 18-bit |
Mass | 750 pounds (340 kg) |
Predecessor | PDP-7 |
Successor | PDP-15 |
The PDP-9, the fourth of the five 18-bit minicomputers produced by Digital Equipment Corporation, was introduced in 1966.[1]: P.10 A total of 445 PDP-9 systems were produced,[2] of which 40 were the compact, low-cost PDP-9/L units.[3]
History
[edit]The 18-bit PDP systems preceding the PDP-9 are the PDP-1, PDP-4 and PDP-7. Its successor is the PDP-15.
Hardware
[edit]The PDP-9, which is "two metres wide and about 75cm deep,"[4] is approximately twice the speed of the PDP-7. It was built using discrete transistors, and has an optional integrated vector graphics terminal. The PDP-9 has a memory cycle time of 1 microsecond, and weighs about 750 pounds (340 kg).[5]: 1-7–1-8 The PDP-9/L has a memory cycle time of 1.5 microseconds, and weighs about 900 pounds (410 kg).[6]: 1-1, 15-8
It is DEC's first microprogrammed machine.[7][5]: 3-16
A typical configuration included:[2]
- 300 cps paper tape reader
- 50 cps paper tape punch
- DECtape for operating system and user files
- 10 cps console teleprinter, Model 33 KSR
Among the improvements of the PDP-9 over its PDP-7 predecessor are:
- the addition of status flags for reader and punch errors, thus providing added flexibility and for error detection[8]
- an entirely new design for multi-level interrupts, called the Automatic Priority Interrupt (API) option
- a more advanced form of memory management[9]
User/university-based research projects for extending the PDP-9 include:
- a hardware capability for floating-point arithmetic, at a time when machines in this price range used software for floating-point arithmetic[10]
- a PDP-9 controlled parallel computer[11]
Software
[edit]The system came with an OS that functions as single-user keyboard monitor, called ADSS (ADvanced Software System).[12] DECsys provided an interactive, single-user, program development environment for Fortran and assembly language programs.[13]
Both FORTRAN II[2] and FORTRAN IV[14] were implemented for the PDP-9.
MUMPS was originally developed on the PDP-7, and ran on several PDP-9s at the Massachusetts General Hospital.
Sales
[edit]The PDP-7, of which 120 were sold,[1]: p.8 was described as "highly successful".[2] The PDP-9 sold 445 units. Both have submodels, the PDP-7A[NB 1] and the PDP-9/L,[NB 2] neither of which accounted for a substantial percentage of sales.[1][NB 3]
See also
[edit]- Programmed Data Processor
- PDP-15 - successor to the PDP-9
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION - Nineteen Fifty-Seven To The Present (PDF). Digital Equipment Corporation. 1975.
- ^ a b c d "RI Computer Museum, DEC PDP-9, System Number 319".
- ^ ."The Early Architectures of DEC".
- ^ "David Millson - 50 years".
- ^ a b PDP-9 Maintenance Manual, Volume 1 (PDF). April 1972.
- ^ PDP-9/L User Handbook (PDF). June 1968.
- ^ C. Gordon Bell; Gerald Butler; Robert Gray; John E. McNamara; Donald Vonada; Ronald Wilson (1978). "Chapter 6: The PDP-1 and Other 18-bit Computers". In C. Gordon Bell; J. Craig Mudge; John E. McNamara (eds.). Computer Engineering: A DEC View of Hardware Systems Design. Digital Press. pp. 154–155. ISBN 0-932376-00-2.
- ^ Bob Supnik. "Architectural Evolution in DEC's 18b Computers" (PDF).
- ^ "PDP 9 Simulator Configuration". GitHub.com.
- ^ Ben Milton Huey (1969). Design of a floating point processor for the PDP-9 computer (MSc thesis). University of Arizona.
- ^ Wokhlu, Roop Krishen (1969). The logic design of a PDP-9 controlled parallel computer (MSc thesis). University of Arizona.
- ^ Digital Equipment Corporation. "Software Product Description, ADSS-B/F-15, Version SC, Advanced Software System, B/F" (PDF).
- ^ Bob Supnik (19 June 2006). "Technical Notes on DECsys" (PDF).
- ^ "User Manual - Linkage - PDP-9 Facilities" (PDF). Carnegie-Mellon University Hybrid Computation Laboratory. September 1968. Retrieved 19 September 2017.