Correction, I was able to track it down, this is what I was thinking of, not a Basic-16
board:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/225277136492?hash=item3473904e6c:g:Mx8AAOSwxl9jiPU…
I didn't expect to see that still up, for those who don't want to follow the
link, this is a link to a Bell Labs MAC-8 "Mactutor". Still tempting, if
it's still bumping around on eBay after my move I might just have to spring for it.
- Matt G.
------- Original Message -------
On Thursday, February 23rd, 2023 at 2:11 PM, segaloco via TUHS <tuhs(a)tuhs.org>
wrote:
Basic-16......augh I feel like I actually saw a
Basic-16 eval board of some kind pop up in auctions in my documentation search the past
few years. I thought about bidding but I didn't, could've had some cool hardware
to reply back with pictures of. Lesson learned, if something catches my attention enough I
should probably research it more closely.
Thanks for the article link, that pretty much captures the sort of "origin
story" I was seeking out on both the tools and format. I now realize I could've
known this already but didn't read far enough in the '84 Bell journal, I've
got copies of that and the '78 one, I forget how many juicy details are in there that
didn't make it into manuals and technical reports. All the more reason to go back
through and take some notes...
- Matt G.
------- Original Message -------
On Thursday, February 23rd, 2023 at 1:37 PM, Paul Ruizendaal pnr(a)planet.nl wrote:
> > Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2023 18:38:25 +0000
> > Subject: [TUHS] Re: Origins of the SGS (System Generation Software)
> > and COFF (Common Object File Format)
> >
> > For the sake of timelines:
> >
> > June 1980 - Publication date on the front page of the 3.0 manual in which the
utilities are still very much research for PDP-11 and 32V-ish for VAX where distinctions
matter.
> >
> > June 1981 - Publication date on the front page of the 4.1 manual in which the
man-pages very much refer to all of this as the "3B-20 object format"
> >
> > June 1982 - Publication date on the front page of the 5.0 manual by which point
these same pages had been edited and extended to describe the "common object file
format"
> >
> > Additions at the 1981 release include dump(1), list(1), and the ld-prefixed
library routines for managing these object files. These likewise persist in 5.0, SysV, and
beyond as COFF-related tools.
> >
> > So this puts the backstop of what would become COFF at at least '81.
> >
> > - Matt G.
>
> The surviving source code for SysV R2 supports this timeline:
> - The header files (start from
https://github.com/ryanwoodsmall/oldsysv/blob/master/sysvr2-vax/src/head/a.…) have
dates of late ’82, early ’83.
> - The source for exec() has a comment that refers to the 4xx magic formats as “pre
5.0 stuff”.
> - The COFF format headers are #ifdef’ed for the 3B series.
>
> Interestingly, the lowest magic numbers in the 5xx series are not for the 3B, but
for the “Basic-16” and for the “x86”. That led me to this paper:
>
>
https://www.bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/otherports/newp.pdf
>
> It seems that the roots of COFF go back to the initial portability effort for V7 and
in particular the 8086 port (which was done in 1978 according to the paper).