14 KiB
Guide to run operating system images on w11a systems
Table of content
I/O emulation setup
All UNIBUS peripherals which exchange data (currently DL11, DZ11, LP11, PC11, DEUNA, RK11, RL11, RPRH, and TM11) are currently emulated via a backend process. The communication between the FPGA board and backend server can be via
-
Serial port
- via an integrated USB-UART bridge
- on Arty A7, Basys3, Cmod A7 and Nexys4, and Nexys A7 with an
FT2232HQ, allows up to 12M Baud - on Nexys3 with an
FT232R, allows up to 2M Baud - for all FTDI USB-UART it is essential to set them to
low latencymode. That was the default for Linux kernels 2.6.32 to 4.4.52. Since about March 2017, one gets kernels with 16 ms default latency again, thanks to kernel patch 9589541. On newer systems, it is essential to install a udev rule which automatically sets low latency, see the documentation in tools/sys.
- on Arty A7, Basys3, Cmod A7 and Nexys4, and Nexys A7 with an
- via RS232 port, as on S3board and Nexys2
- using a serial port (/dev/ttySx) is limited to 115 kBaud on most PCs.
- using a USB-RS232 adapter was tested up to 460k Baud.
- via an integrated USB-UART bridge
-
Direct USB connection using a Cypress FX2 USB controller
- is supported on the Nexys2 and Nexys3 FPGA boards
- much faster than serial port connections (see below)
- also allows configuring the FPGA over the same USB connection
-
Notes:
- A 12M Baud connection, like on a Nexys4, gives disk access rates and throughputs much better than the real hardware of the 70's and is well suitable for practical usage.
- In an OS with good disk caching like 2.11BSD the impact of disk speed is actually smaller than the bare numbers suggest.
- A 460k Baud connection gives in practice a disk throughput of ~20 kB/s. This allows to test the system but is a bit slow for real usage.
- USB-RS232 cables with an FTDI
FT232Rchip work fine, tests with Prolific TechnologyPL2303based cable never gave reliable connections for higher Baud rates.
Recommended setup for best performance (boards ordered by vintage):
| Board | Channel/Interface | nom. speed | peak transfer rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arty S7 | USB-UART bridge | 12M Baud | 1090 kB/sec |
| Arty A7 | USB-UART bridge | 12M Baud | 1090 kB/sec |
| Basys3 | USB-UART bridge | 12M Baud | 1090 kB/sec |
| Cmod A7 | USB-UART bridge | 12M Baud | 1090 kB/sec |
| Nexys A7 | USB-UART bridge | 12M Baud | 1090 kb/sec |
| Nexys4 | USB-UART bridge | 12M Baud | 1090 kb/sec |
| Nexys3 | Cypress FX2 USB | USB2.0 speed | 30000 kB/sec |
| Nexys2 | Cypress FX2 USB | USB2.0 speed | 30000 kB/sec |
| S3board | RS232+USB-RS232 cable | 460k Baud | 41 kB/sec |
FPGA Board setup
Recommended setups
-
- connect USB cable to micro-USB connector labeled 'J10'
- to configure via Vivado hardware server
make <sys>.vconfig
-
- connect USB cable to micro-USB connector labeled 'PROG'
- to configure via ivado hardware server
make <sys>.vconfig
-
- connect USB cable to micro-USB connector
- to configure via Vivado hardware server
make <sys>.vconfig
-
Nexys4 and Nexys A7 (or Nexys4 DDR)
- connect USB cable to micro-USB connector labeled 'PROG'
- to configure via Vivado hardware server
make <sys>.vconfig
-
- use Cypress FX for configure and and rlink communication
- connect USB cable to micro-USB connector labeled 'USB PROG'
- to configure via FX2 and jtag tool
make <sys>.jconfig
-
- connect USB cable to mini-USB connector (between RS232 and PS/2 port)
- to configure via FX2 and jtag tool
make <sys>.jconfig
-
- connect the USB-RS232 cable to the RS232 port
- connect a JTAG programmer (e.g. Xilinx USB Cable II) to JTAG pins
- to configure via ISE Impact
make <sys>.iconfig
Rlink and Backend Server setup
All examples below use the same basic setup
-
set up
vt100emulator windowscd $RETROBASE/tools/oskit/<oskit-name> console_starter -d DL0 & console_starter -d DL1 & -
set up rlink connection using
ti_rribackend server via theti_w11quick start wrapper script. Ensure that all 8 switches on the board are in the indicated positions (SWI=...). The concrete boot script name is given in the following sections-
for sys_w11a_arty or sys_w11a_as7 over serial
SWI = 0110 (gives console light emulation...) ti_w11 -tuD,12M,break,xon @<oskit-name>_boot.tcl -
for sys_w11a_b3 over serial
SWI = 00000000 00101000 (gives console light display on LEDS) ti_w11 -tuD,12M,break,xon @<oskit-name>_boot.tclNote: the basys3 w11a has only 176 kB memory (all from BRAMS!). u5ed works fine. XXDP, RT11 and RSX-11M should work. 211bsd will not boot, neither most RSX-11M+ systems.
-
for sys_w11a_c7 over serial
ti_w11 -tuD,12M,break,xon @<oskit-name>_boot.tclNote: the c7 w11a has only 672 kB memory (512 SRAM + 160 BRAM). u5ed, u7ed, XXDP, RT11, RSX-11M and most most RSX-11M+ systems should work. 211bsd works only in the 'non-networking' configuration 211bsd_rpmin.
-
for sys_w11a_n4 or sys_w11a_n4d over serial
SWI = 00000000 00101000 (gives console light display on LEDS) ti_w11 -tuD,12M,break,cts @<oskit-name>_boot.tcl -
for sys_w11a_n3 or sys_w11a_n2 over fx2
SWI = 00101100 ti_w11 -u @<oskit-name>_boot.tcl -
for sys_w11a_s3 over serial
SWI = 00101010 ti_w11 -tu<dn>,460k,break,xon @<oskit-name>_boot.tclNotes:
-
the letter after
-tuis either the serial device number, denoted as<dn>, or the letterDfor auto-detection of Digilent boards with an FT2232HQ based interface.- for Arty A7, Basys3, Cmod A7, Nexys4, and Nexys A7 board simply use
D - otherwise check with
ls /dev/ttyUSB*to see what is available <dn>is typically '1' if a singleFT2232HQbased board is connected, like an Arty, Basys3, Cmod A7, or Nexys4. Initially, two ttyUSB devices show up, the lower is for FPGA configuration and will disappear when the Vivado hardware server is used once. The upper provides the data connection.<dn>is typically '0' if only a single USB-RS232 cable is connected
- for Arty A7, Basys3, Cmod A7, Nexys4, and Nexys A7 board simply use
-
on LED display
-
is controlled by SWI(3)
0 -> system status 1 -> DR emulation --> OS specific light patterns
-
-
on Hex display
-
is controlled by SWI(5:4)
-
boards with a 4 digit display
00 -> serial link rate divider 01 -> PC 10 -> DISPREG 11 -> DR emulation -
boards with 8 digit display
SWI(5) select for DSP(7:4) display 0 -> serial link rate divider 1 -> PC SWI(4) select for DSP(3:0) display 0 -> DISPREG 1 -> DR emulation
-
-
-
SimH simulator setup
Sometimes it is good to compare the w11a behavior with the PDP-11 software emulator from the SimH project. See INSTALL_simh for installation instructions and supported versions.
Under $RETROBASE/tools/simh two setup files are provided which configure
SimH to reflect the w11a setup as close as possible:
setup_w11a_min.scmd
Very close to the current w11a state when it runs on an s3board- processor: 11/70, no FPP, 1 Mbyte
- periphery: 2 DL11, LP11, RK11, PC11
setup_w11a_max.scmd
Planned configuration for the w11a, in addition- processor: 4 Mbyte memory (as on Nexys2, Nexys3,...)
- periphery: in addition DZ11, RL11/RL02, RK70/RP06, TM11/TU10
Startup scripts are provided with each oskit. They call the w11a_max
configuration, so will show in the emulator what w11a can do when
finished.
All examples below use the same basic setup
-
set up vt100 emulator window for 1st and 2nd DL11
cd $RETROBASE/tools/oskit/<oskit-name> console_starter -s -d DL0 & console_starter -s -d DL1 &Note: the
-sensures that the port numbers used by SimH are taken! -
start the simulator
pdp11 <oskit-name>_boot.scmd
oskits
Ready to be used 'oskits' are provided under
$RETROBASE/tools/oskit/<oskit-name>
The tarballs with the disk images are provided from a web server and have to be installed separately.
Unix systems
Legal and license issues
Ancient UNIX systems for the PDP-11 can now be freely used under the 'Caldera license'. 2.11BSD was released 1992 under the 4 clause BSD license. Taken together
- Unix V1 to V7
- all BSD Unix versions for PDP-11
can be freely distributed and used for non-commercial purposes.
Several oskits are provided:
| oskit Name | OS | Disk/Tape | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| u5ed_rk | Unix 5th Ed. System | RK05 | |
| u7ed_rp | Unix 7th Ed. System | RP04 | very preliminary, port to w11a in progress |
| 211bsd_rk | 2.11BSD system | RK05 | very elementary subset |
| 211bsd_rl | 2.11BSD system | RL02 | small subset |
| 211bsd_rp | 2.11BSD system | RP06 | full system |
| 211bsd_rpmin | 2.11BSD system | RP06 | full system; tuned for small memory (min 512 kB, better 640 kB) |
| 211bsd_rpeth | 2.11BSD system | RP06 | full system; with DEUNA Ethernet |
For further details consult the README.md file in the oskit directory.
DEC operating systems
Legal and license issues
Unfortunately, there is no general hobbyist license for DEC operating systems for PDP-11 computers. The 'Mentec license' is commonly understood to cover some older versions of DEC operating systems, for example
- RT-11 V5.3 or prior
- RSX-11M V4.3 or prior
- RSX-11M PLUS V3.0 or prior
on a simulator. It is commonly assumed that the license terms cover the usage of the PDP11 simulator from the 'SimH' suite. Usage of the e11 simulator is not covered according to the author of e11.
THIS LICENSE DOES NOT COVER THE USAGE OF THESE HISTORIC DEC
OPERATING SYSTEMS ON ANY 'REAL HARDWARE' IMPLEMENTATION OF A
PDP-11. SO USAGE ON THE W11 IS NOT COVERED BY THE 'Mentec-license'.
Some oskits are provided with systems sysgen'ed to run on a configuration like the w11a.
-
Feel free to explore them with the SimH simulator. The boot scripts for SimH are included (
<kit>.simh) -
In case you happen to have a valid license feel free to try them out the w11a and let the author know whether is works as it should. For convenience the boot scripts are also included (
<kit>.tcl).
Several oskits are provided:
| oskit Name | OS | Disk/Tape | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| rsx11m-31_rk | RSX-11M V3.1 | RK05 | |
| rsx11m-40_rk | RSX-11M V4.0 | RK05 | |
| rsx11mp-30_rp | RSX-11M+ V3.0 | RP06 | |
| rt11-40_rk | RT-11 V4.0 | RK05 | |
| rt11-53_rl | RT-11 V5.3 | RL02 | |
| xxdp_rl | XXDP 22 and 25 | RL02 |
For further details consult the README.md file in the oskit directory.