• Burroughs Mini-D

    From Al Kossow@aek@bitsavers.org to comp.sys.unisys on Wed May 10 09:03:05 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    Yesterday was researching the origins of the processor architecture of the 1970s small systems.
    Three-chip Fairchild PMOS CPUs show up a lot, documentation is confusing. The parts are collectable now because they look 'cool'.
    So far, I haven't found anyone who will answer my questions on the subject. They were known as the Mini-D or Burroughs Basic Data System (BDS) micro-processor
    Most of what I know so far has been pushed to bitsavers. The chip stuff is somewhat confusingly under http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/military/D-machine to keep all the information in one place.
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  • From Paul Kimpel@paul.kimpel@digm.com to comp.sys.unisys on Thu May 11 06:49:36 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: Burroughs Mini-D
    From: Al Kossow <aek@bitsavers.org>
    To:
    Date: Wed May 10 2023 09:03:05 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)

    Yesterday was researching the origins of the processor architecture
    of the 1970s small systems. Three-chip Fairchild PMOS CPUs show up a
    lot, documentation is confusing. The parts are collectable now
    because they look 'cool'. So far, I haven't found anyone who will
    answer my questions on the subject. They were known as the Mini-D or Burroughs Basic Data System (BDS) micro-processor Most of what I know
    so far has been pushed to bitsavers. The chip stuff is somewhat
    confusingly under
    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/military/D-machine to keep all the information in one place.

    There's a capitalization problem in the link above. The correct link is:

    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/Military/D_Machine/

    I worked for Burroughs in the Paoli (Philadelphia) area during the early
    '70s, and certainly heard about the D and Mini-D machines, but never
    knew much about them. I believe the full D machine was used in the B700/800/900, and knew that it was a very soft architecture, but that's
    about it. I have reached out to some colleagues from that time and we'll
    see what they have to say.

    Paul

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  • From scott@scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) to comp.sys.unisys on Thu May 11 16:02:22 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    Paul Kimpel <paul.kimpel@digm.com> writes:
    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: Burroughs Mini-D
    From: Al Kossow <aek@bitsavers.org>
    To:
    Date: Wed May 10 2023 09:03:05 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)

    Yesterday was researching the origins of the processor architecture
    of the 1970s small systems. Three-chip Fairchild PMOS CPUs show up a
    lot, documentation is confusing. The parts are collectable now
    because they look 'cool'. So far, I haven't found anyone who will
    answer my questions on the subject. They were known as the Mini-D or
    Burroughs Basic Data System (BDS) micro-processor Most of what I know
    so far has been pushed to bitsavers. The chip stuff is somewhat
    confusingly under
    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/military/D-machine to keep all the
    information in one place.

    There's a capitalization problem in the link above. The correct link is:

    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/Military/D_Machine/

    I worked for Burroughs in the Paoli (Philadelphia) area during the early >'70s, and certainly heard about the D and Mini-D machines, but never
    knew much about them. I believe the full D machine was used in the >B700/800/900, and knew that it was a very soft architecture, but that's >about it. I have reached out to some colleagues from that time and we'll
    see what they have to say.

    In Pasadena we had the B774/B874 which were used as data communications processor (DCP) front-ends for the medium systems mainframes. Aside
    from once using MSNDL to compile a network definition, I don't know
    much about the underlying architecture.
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  • From Timothy McCaffrey@timcaffrey420@gmail.com to comp.sys.unisys on Thu Jun 1 15:20:03 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    On Thursday, May 11, 2023 at 12:04:33rC>PM UTC-4, Scott Lurndal wrote:
    Paul Kimpel <paul....@digm.com> writes:
    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: Burroughs Mini-D
    From: Al Kossow <a...@bitsavers.org>
    To:
    Date: Wed May 10 2023 09:03:05 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)

    Yesterday was researching the origins of the processor architecture
    of the 1970s small systems. Three-chip Fairchild PMOS CPUs show up a
    lot, documentation is confusing. The parts are collectable now
    because they look 'cool'. So far, I haven't found anyone who will
    answer my questions on the subject. They were known as the Mini-D or
    Burroughs Basic Data System (BDS) micro-processor Most of what I know
    so far has been pushed to bitsavers. The chip stuff is somewhat
    confusingly under
    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/military/D-machine to keep all the
    information in one place.

    There's a capitalization problem in the link above. The correct link is:

    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/Military/D_Machine/

    I worked for Burroughs in the Paoli (Philadelphia) area during the early >'70s, and certainly heard about the D and Mini-D machines, but never
    knew much about them. I believe the full D machine was used in the >B700/800/900, and knew that it was a very soft architecture, but that's >about it. I have reached out to some colleagues from that time and we'll >see what they have to say.
    In Pasadena we had the B774/B874 which were used as data communications processor (DCP) front-ends for the medium systems mainframes. Aside
    from once using MSNDL to compile a network definition, I don't know
    much about the underlying architecture.
    I knew somebody who helped design the D-machine, unfortunately he died about 20 years ago.
    (nice guy, it was a loss).
    I believe it was originally built for a defense contract (or two) and was later adopted
    by the B800/B900 (aka. Small System) group. I think some/all of the Small System
    development was located in Boca Raton, FL at one time (at least, some other co-workers
    came from there when they closed down SS development).
    - Tim
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  • From Timothy McCaffrey@timcaffrey420@gmail.com to comp.sys.unisys on Thu Jun 1 15:22:11 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    On Thursday, June 1, 2023 at 6:20:04rC>PM UTC-4, Timothy McCaffrey wrote:
    On Thursday, May 11, 2023 at 12:04:33rC>PM UTC-4, Scott Lurndal wrote:
    Paul Kimpel <paul....@digm.com> writes:
    -------- Original Message --------
    Subject: Burroughs Mini-D
    From: Al Kossow <a...@bitsavers.org>
    To:
    Date: Wed May 10 2023 09:03:05 GMT-0700 (Pacific Daylight Time)

    Yesterday was researching the origins of the processor architecture
    of the 1970s small systems. Three-chip Fairchild PMOS CPUs show up a
    lot, documentation is confusing. The parts are collectable now
    because they look 'cool'. So far, I haven't found anyone who will
    answer my questions on the subject. They were known as the Mini-D or
    Burroughs Basic Data System (BDS) micro-processor Most of what I know >> so far has been pushed to bitsavers. The chip stuff is somewhat
    confusingly under
    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/military/D-machine to keep all the >> information in one place.

    There's a capitalization problem in the link above. The correct link is:

    http://bitsavers.org/pdf/burroughs/Military/D_Machine/

    I worked for Burroughs in the Paoli (Philadelphia) area during the early >'70s, and certainly heard about the D and Mini-D machines, but never >knew much about them. I believe the full D machine was used in the >B700/800/900, and knew that it was a very soft architecture, but that's >about it. I have reached out to some colleagues from that time and we'll >see what they have to say.
    In Pasadena we had the B774/B874 which were used as data communications processor (DCP) front-ends for the medium systems mainframes. Aside
    from once using MSNDL to compile a network definition, I don't know
    much about the underlying architecture.
    I knew somebody who helped design the D-machine, unfortunately he died about 20 years ago.
    (nice guy, it was a loss).

    I believe it was originally built for a defense contract (or two) and was later adopted
    by the B800/B900 (aka. Small System) group. I think some/all of the Small System
    development was located in Boca Raton, FL at one time (at least, some other co-workers
    came from there when they closed down SS development).

    - Tim
    I forgot to mention, the B800/B900 claim to fame was that it changed its instruction
    set depending on what programming language you used. So, there was a Fortran instruction set, and a Cobol instruction set, etc.
    - Tim
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  • From Al Kossow@aek@bitsavers.org to comp.sys.unisys on Thu Jun 1 16:25:05 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    On Thursday, June 1, 2023 at 3:22:12rC>PM UTC-7, Timothy McCaffrey wrote:
    I forgot to mention, the B800/B900 claim to fame was that it changed its instruction
    set depending on what programming language you used. So, there was a Fortran instruction set, and a Cobol instruction set, etc.

    - Tim
    I have a very large collection of material on the B1000 series which had S-Languages for each language
    The 700/800/80/90 used a small microprocessor which was much more limited and unfortunately there are almost no surviving
    machines or doumentation for them beyond what I've uploaded to bitsavers recently.
    I've also discovered a few of the remaining B80's in the US that had been saved were scrapped
    in the past decade.
    I tried emailing a few people involved in the development in Scotland recently and received no replies.
    I'm becoming concerned that what may have been produced about these systems has been lost.
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  • From Al Kossow@aek@bitsavers.org to comp.sys.unisys on Fri Jun 2 10:43:51 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    On Thursday, June 1, 2023 at 4:25:06rC>PM UTC-7, Al Kossow wrote:

    I'm becoming concerned that what may have been produced about these systems has been lost.
    I went back and looked at the implementations information I have for the 700/800/80/90 systems last night and
    they do run an interpreted system language on top of a microcoded 16 bit processor. Even on the B1000 side with
    the internal memos that I have there was apparently no detailed documents on how the systems actually worked
    beyond the communicates and data structures which changed with each release. I'm assuming if you had the need to know, you would just look at the source code and none of this information was
    really ever released to customers.
    The situation is much worse for the non-B1000 small systems. I've not even been able to find field service documentation
    beyond some schematic sets for those systems.
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  • From scott@scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal) to comp.sys.unisys on Fri Jun 2 18:08:56 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    Al Kossow <aek@bitsavers.org> writes:
    On Thursday, June 1, 2023 at 4:25:06=E2=80=AFPM UTC-7, Al Kossow wrote:
    =20
    I'm becoming concerned that what may have been produced about these syste= >ms has been lost.

    I went back and looked at the implementations information I have for the 70= >0/800/80/90 systems last night and
    they do run an interpreted system language on top of a microcoded 16 bit pr= >ocessor. Even on the B1000 side with
    the internal memos that I have there was apparently no detailed documents o= >n how the systems actually worked
    beyond the communicates and data structures which changed with each release= >.
    I'm assuming if you had the need to know, you would just look at the source=
    code and none of this information was
    really ever released to customers.

    The situation is much worse for the non-B1000 small systems. I've not even = >been able to find field service documentation
    beyond some schematic sets for those systems.

    On the DCOM tape (http://bitsavers.org/bits/Burroughs/Vseries/Vseries_Tape_Collection.tar.gz)
    there should be an NDL compiler that targets the B874 - takes a network topology
    and station description and compiles it into the 'firmware' for the b874 (b800) data communications processor which polls and selects stations and constructs packets to send to the host (input from station) and packets sent from the host (station output).

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  • From Timothy McCaffrey@timcaffrey420@gmail.com to comp.sys.unisys on Mon Jul 17 15:29:44 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.unisys

    On Friday, June 2, 2023 at 1:43:52rC>PM UTC-4, Al Kossow wrote:
    On Thursday, June 1, 2023 at 4:25:06rC>PM UTC-7, Al Kossow wrote:

    I'm becoming concerned that what may have been produced about these systems has been lost.
    I went back and looked at the implementations information I have for the 700/800/80/90 systems last night and
    they do run an interpreted system language on top of a microcoded 16 bit processor. Even on the B1000 side with
    the internal memos that I have there was apparently no detailed documents on how the systems actually worked
    beyond the communicates and data structures which changed with each release. I'm assuming if you had the need to know, you would just look at the source code and none of this information was
    really ever released to customers.

    The situation is much worse for the non-B1000 small systems. I've not even been able to find field service documentation
    beyond some schematic sets for those systems.
    IIRC, the D-machine (in a non-B1000/B800 usage) was originally designed for the military
    (ship board computer, I think). That may be why you are having a problem finding info
    on it. You would think all of those systems would have been replaced decades ago...
    - Tim
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