Remember that the LSX and Mini-UNIX systems were
developed for two different purposes.
1. LSX had limited resources available to it and thus
some general-purpose features had to be removed.
LSX supported some new features for the support
of real-time systems and intelligent terminals. The
features included contiguous files and asynchronous
read/write capabilities.
2. Mini-UNIX was developed to run on PDP11/10 computers
without memory management support at the hardware level.
Larger main memory and faster larger disks were available.
It was designed to support up to four users at a time, and
thus needed to support the latest UNIX System features
without the additional features available on LSX.
To answer the question below about kernel code to create
contiguous - the only change in the kernel code was to
recognize a contiguous file in the inode. The actual file
had to be created by a system program to keep the
kernel as small as possible.
Heinz
On 7/31/2022 12:57 PM, Noel Chiappa wrote:
{I was going to reply to an earlier message, but my
CFS left me with
insufficient energy; I'll try and catch up on the points I was goibf to make
here.}
From: Gavin Tersteeg
This leaves me with about 1.9kb of space left in
the kernel for
additional drivers
I'm curious how much memory you have in your target system; it must not be a
lot, if you're targeting LSX.
I ask because LSX has been somewhat 'lobotimized' (I don't mean that in
a
negative way; it's just recognition that LSX has had a lot of corners
trimmed, to squeeze it down as much as possible), and some of those trims
behind some of the issues you're having (below).
At the time the LSI-11 came out, semiconductor DRAM was just getting started,
so an LSI-11 with 8KB onboard and a 32KB DRAM card (or four 8KB MMV11 core
memory cards :-), to produce the 40KB target for LSX systems, was then a
reasonable configuration. These days, one has to really search to find
anything smaller than 64KB...
It might be easier to just run MINI-UNIX (which is much closer to V6, and
thus a known quantity), than add a lot of things back in to LSX to produce
what will effectively be MINI-UNIX; even if you have to buy a bit more QBUS
memory for the machine.
the LSX "mkfs" was hardcoded to create
filesystems with 6 blocks of
inodes. This maxed the number of files on a disk to 96, but even with
the maximum circumvented LSX would only tolerate a maximum of 101 files.
And here you're seeing the 'lobotomizing' of LSX come into play. That
'101'
made me suspicious, as the base V6 'caches' 100 free inodes in the
super-block; once those are used, it scans the ilist on disk to refill it.
The code in alloc$ialloc in LSX is hard to understand (there are a lot of
#ifdef's), and it's very different from the V6 code, but I'm pretty sure
it
doesn't refill the 'cache' after it uses the cached 100 free inodes. So,
you
can have as many free inodes on a disk as you want, but LSX will never use
more than the first 100.
(Note that the comment in the LSX source "up to 100 spare I nodes in the
super block. When this runs out, a linear search through the I list is
instituted to pick up 100 more." is inaccurate; it probably wasn't updated
after the code was changed. ISTR tis is true of a lot of the comments.)
Use MINI-UNIX.
A fresh filesystem that was mkfs'd on stock
V6 can be mounted on LSX,
but any attempt to create files on it will fail.
The V6 'mkfs' does not fill the free inode cache in the super-block. So,
it's
empty when you start out. The LSX ialloc() says:
if(fp->s_ninode > 0) {
...
}
u.u_error = ENOSPC;
return(NULL);
which would produce what you're seeing.
Also, another problem with trying to 'push' LSX into a previously un-handled
operating regions (e.g. large disks, but there are likely others) is that
there are probably things that are un-tested in that previously unused
operating mode, and there may be un-found bugs that you trip across.
Use MINI-UNIX.
Interestingly enough, existing large V6 RK05
images can be mounted,
read from, and written to. The only limitations on these pre existing
images is that if enough files are deleted, the system will randomly crash.
I had a look at the source (in sys4.c, nami.c, iget.c, rdwri.c, and alloc.c),
but I couldn't quickly find the cause; it isn't obvious. (When unlinking a
file, the blocks in the file have to be freed - that's inode 'ip' - and
the
directory - inode 'pp' - has to be updated; so it's pretty complicated.)
Use MINI-UNIX.
The information there about continuous files ...
will be extremely
helpful if I ever try to make those work in the future.
My recollection is that the LSX kernel doesn't have code to create contiguous
files; the LSX page at the CHWiki says "the paper describing LSX indicates
there were two separate programs, one to allocate space for such files, and
one to move a file into such an area, but they do not seem to be extant". If
you find them, could you let me know? Thanks.
Noel