FYI: The sources to CDL are in the TUHS
archives.
CDL was for designing
wired circuit boards, not integrated circuits..
It was used to design the Datakit switch, the Belle
chess machine and
other hardware.
I suspect the cited IC-design tool was one that Steve
Johnson created
for use in a short course that Carver Mead taught at
Bell Labs. I am
not aware that it saw use outside of that course.
Doug
On Fri, Feb 10, 2023 at 12:37 AM Christian Dreier via
TUHS
<tuhs@tuhs.org>
wrote:
>
> Hello there,
>
> I recently watched an old Unix promotion video by
AT&T on YouTube (AT&T
> Archives: The UNIX Operating System: https://youtu.be/tc4ROCJYbm0)
and
> they mention a design tool for integrated circuits
(apparently named
> L-Gen or lgen; timestamped link: https://youtu.be/tc4ROCJYbm0?t=1284).
>
> Part of this software is a language implemented
with YACC that appears
> to describe the behavior of digital logic, like
modern hardware
> description languages, i.e. Verilog and VHDL.
>
> Does anyone have information about this, in
particular:
> - Documentation
> - Which projects were realized with this?
> - Source code, if possible
>
> I asked this question on retrocomputing.stackexchange.com
(see
> https://retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/q/26301/26615)
but so far there
> is no satisfying answer. A "Circuit Design
Language" (CDL) is mentioned
> and there is some good information about it but it
has another syntax
> (as shown in the video vs. the documentation about
CDL) and apparently
> another purpose (description of board wiring vs.
logic behavior).
>
> Best regards,
> Christian
--
Sent from a handheld expect more typos than
usual