Good day all, figured I'd start a thread on this matter as I'm starting to piece
enough together to articulate the questions arising in my research.
So based on my analysis of the 3B20S UNIX 4.1 manual I've been working through, all
evidence points to the formalized SGS package and COFF originating tightly coupled to the
3B-20 line, then growing legs to support VAX, but never quite absorbing PDP-11 in
entirety. That said, there are bits and pieces of the manual pages for the object format
libraries that suggest there was some providence for PDP-11 in the development of COFF as
well.
Where this has landed though is a growing curiosity regarding:
- Whether SGS and COFF were tightly coupled to one another from the outset, with SGS being
supported by the general library routines being developed for the COFF format
- Whether COFF was envisioned as a one-size-fits-all object format from its inception or
started as an experiment in 3B-20 development that wound up being general enough for other
platforms
- If, prior to this format, there were any other efforts to produce a unifying binary
format and set of development tools, or if COFF was a happy accident from what were a
myriad of different architectural toolset streams
One of the curious things is how VAX for a brief moment did have its own set of tools and
a.out particulars before SGS/COFF. For instance, many of the VAX-targeted utilities in
3.0/System III bear little in common option/manual-wise with the general common SGS
utilities in System V. The "not on PDP-11" pages for various SGS components in
System V much more closely resemble the 3B-20 utilities in 4.1 than any of the non
PDP-11/VAX-only bits in System III.
Some examples:
- The VAX assembler in System III contains a -dN option indicating the number of bytes to
set aside for forward/external references for the linker to fill in.
- The VAX assembler in System V contains among others the -n and -m options from 4.1 which
indicate to disable address optimization and use m4 respectively
- The System V assembler goes on to also include -R (remove input file after completion)
-r (VAX only, add .data contents to .text instead) and options -b, -w, and -l to replace
the -d1, -d2, and -d4 options indicated in the previous VAX assembler
- System V further adds a -V to all the SGS software indicating the version of the
software. This is new circa 5.0, absent from the 4.1 manual like the R, r, b, w, and l
options
- The 4.1 manual's singular ar(1) entry still agrees with the System III version. No
arcv(1) is listed, implying the old ar format never made it to 3B-20
- The System V manual has both this ar(1) version as well as the new COFF-supporting
version. Not sure if this implies the VAX ar format was expanded to support the COFF stuff
for a little while until they decided on a new one or what.
- The System III ld (which is implied to support PDP and VAX) survives in System V, but is
cut down to supporting PDP-11 only
- The COFF-ish ld shows up in 4.1, is then extended to VAX presumably in the same breath
as the other COFF-supporting bits by Sys V, leading to two copies like many others,
PDP-11-specific stuff and then COFF-specific stuff
The picture that starts to form in the context of all of this is, for a little while in
the late 70s/early 80s, the software development environments for PDP-11, VAX-11, and
3B-20 were interplaying with each other in often times inconsistent ways. Taking a peek at
the 32V manuals, the VAX tools in System III appear to originate with that project, which
makes sense. If I'm understanding the timeline, COFF starts to emerge from the 3B-20
project and USG probably decides that's the way to go, a unified format, but with
PDP-11 pretty much out the door support wise already, there was little reason to apply
that to PDP-11 as well, so the PDP-11 tools get their swan song in System V, original
VAX-11 tools from 32V are likely killed off in 4.x, and the stuff that started with the
3B-20 group goes on to dominate the object file format and development software stuff
until ELF comes along some time later.
I guess other questions this raises are:
- Were the original VAX tools built with any attention to compatibility with the PDP-11
bits Ken and Dennis wrote many years prior (based on some option discrepancies, possibly
not?)
- Do the VAX utilities derive from the Interdata 8/32 work or if there was actually
another stream of tools as part of that project?
- Was there any interplay between the existing tool streams (original PDP-11, 32V's
VAX utilities, possibly Interdata 8/32) and the eventual COFF/SGS stuff, or was the latter
pretty well siloed in 3B-20 land until deployment with 4.1?
- Matt G.