Well, the real ones were Pdp11/34 based without memory management, so 56 kB net 
could be used, but under simh every pdp11 runs at warp speed unless bridled 
somewhat.
The memory could be core with parity checking but I am not sure they had 
already mos memory available in the 11/34.
When the first static 4k mos 5V only chips came about - so no refresh necessary 
which was problematic in simple cpu architectures - we used them to replace the 
limited expensive 4k/8k pdp8e core memories for a single self made 32kW omnibus 
module, but that is aside ... It still was a time of the soldering iron though.

Reindert

-----Original Message-----
From: Johnny Billquist [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, 21 July, 2020 00:19
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Simh] FW: pdp 11 timing -->anf10 workstation on pdp11 with 
throttling

Well, then the first question that needs to be answered, which model of
PDP-11 was that code expected to run on, because the results will differ 
depending on that. Also, what kind of memory? (I would guess some old, small 
core memory boards.) The PDP-11 execution speed really does vary based on many 
factors, on real hardware...

   Johnny

On 2020-07-21 00:13, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> 
> L.S.
> 
> Actually where this is important, is when using Pdp11 based ANF10 
> workstations in the Tops10 realm.
> 
> When starting up, the Anf10 software on the pdp11 sim test various devices 
> for functionality thereby using instruction count based loops etc.
> When all the devices necessary (paper tape reader/punch, incremental plotter 
> interface, DZ and DH multiplexors, DMS and DUP/KDP devices and DL11 
> interfaces) are properly verified, it cranks up the communication 
> configuration with  scanning the network for active Pdp10 Tops10 host systems.
> The throttling of the pdp11 should be carefully selected to let this function.
> 
> 
> Reindert
> 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Simh [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Johnny 
> Billquist
> Sent: Monday, 20 July, 2020 23:20
> To: Paul Moore <[email protected]>; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Simh] pdp 11 timing
> 
> Instruction timing as such is not relevant. Different implementations had 
> very different timings, not to mention that speed of memory also makes a 
> difference.
> 
> Devices basically do not have a strict timing either, but yes, there is 
> plenty of software that assumes that an interrupt does not happen before a 
> single instruction have been executed after the previous interrupt, from the 
> same device, for example.
> On real hardware that was just an absurd case that lots of code never 
> considered, since it wasn't really physically possible for it to happen.
> 
> The throttling in simh is because some people want the emulation to somewhat 
> mimic the real thing. For some people, that experience of slowness is 
> desirable.
> 
>     Johnny
> 
> On 2020-07-20 23:10, Paul Moore wrote:
>> (I am writing my own emulator just because I have never done that 
>> before, and the PDP 11 is such a pivotal system in the history of 
>> modern computing it seemed worth learning about, and what better way 
>> to learn than to emulate it )
>>
>> So how important is timing of instruction execution and device response?
>>
>> The PDP 11 docs go  to great length giving instruction timing. But 
>> the fact that there is a % throttle in simh suggest that’s not important.
>> I assume that turning that throttle up and down makes the emulated 
>> CPU go faster and slower. I have seen code using simple counters as 
>> delays but I assume that if you want precision you use the Kw11.
>>
>> With regards device responses I have found that going ’too fast’
>> upsets code. If they do something that triggers an interrupt (set ‘go’
>> for
>> example) and the interrupt arrives too soon (like before the next
>> instruction) they get surprised and can misbehave (you could argue 
>> that’s a bug, but that’s irrelevant). So always wait a few beats. But 
>> I assume there is no reason to try to precisely emulate the timing of 
>> , say, a disk drive. (The early handbooks state how awesome the async 
>> nature of the IO subsystem is cos you can swap out old for new and 
>> things just go faster).
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> http://mailman.trailing-edge.com/mailman/listinfo/simh
>>
> 

-- 
Johnny Billquist                  || "I'm on a bus
                                   ||  on a psychedelic trip
email: [email protected]             ||  Reading murder books
pdp is alive!                     ||  tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol

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