On 2015-09-18 15:45, tony duell wrote:

As far as I know, the VAX11/730 (There is one next to me waiting for me to have 
time
to restore it) has the microcode entirely in RAM. Classic PERQs (3 in the next 
room) have

The PDP-11 console loads the microcode from disk then mostly just sits there
looking pretty whilst the VAX runs.

The 11/780 has a PDP11 to load the microcode (I think) but the 11/730 makes do 
with an
8085. After booting I think that handles the console port still.

The VAX-11/78x had some microcode on a floppy. Not sure if it was required in order to run the machine, or if just a few select bits and pieces were on that floppy. It's been way too many years since I touched those machines. Maybe someone else will know?

The VAX-11/750 have the microcode in rom, but it has a system by which you can patch the microcode. There is some ram, but not enough to hold all the microcode. You you can "overwrite" selected addresses of the microcode, and this was/is used both by VMS, Ultrix and NetBSD to fix a few bugs in the machine.

The VAX-11/730 would have to have the microcode on TU58, as that is the console media. Quite possible that it actually do load the microcode from there at power up. I've heard that those machine were slow in so many ways... :-)

The VAX-86x0 machines have the microcode on the front-end RL02. All of it. You want a copy? :-)

        Johnny

Reply via email to