Hello,
You beat me to it! I was about to reply that the Connections Museum of
Seattle would have more info about this, or know people who do.
This video of their channel shows a 3ESS software boot :
On Mon, Sep 25, 2023 at 6:25 PM segaloco via TUHS <tuhs(a)tuhs.org> wrote:
Hello, my studies lately bring me to the question: Are there any
extant examples of telephone switching software, built on UNIX,
from the various parts of the Bell System prior to the
introduction of the 5ESS and 3B20D? My focus veers earlier as
some 5ESS/3B20D/DMERT technology is still in active use, that
sleeping dragon can lie.
Your best bet may be to contact Sarah Autumn at the Connections
Museum, they have a 1ESS and 3ESS.
http://www.telcomhistory.org/connections-museum-seattle-exhibits/electronic…
I don't remember if they have the 1A variant but they should have the
BSPs for all of this which would give you a lot of what you are after.
What's gotten me curious is reading about 1ESS in a BSTJ volume I
picked up, noting the particulars on how previous concerns of
manual and electro-mechanical systems were abstracted into
software. Even without surviving examples, were previous systems
such as the 1ESS central control ever ported to or considered for
porting to UNIX, or was the hardware interface to the telco lines
too specific to consider a future swap-out with, say, a PDP11
running arbitrary software? Columbus's SCCS (switching, not
source code) also comes to mind, although all I know that survives
of that is the CB-UNIX 2.3 manual descriptions of bits and pieces.
By the way, it's funny, I have UNIX to thank for my current
experiments with telephones and other signalling stuff, what with
making me study the Bell System more generally. It's starting to
come full circle in that I want to take a crack at reading
dialing, at least pulse, into some sort of software abstraction on
a SBC that can, among other things, provide a switching service on
top of a UNIX-like kernel. I don't know what I'd do with such a
thing other than assign work conference call rooms their own phone
numbers to dial with a telephone on a serial line...but if I can
even get that far I'd call it a success. One less dependency on
the mobile...
- Matt G.