I worked on the DG-UX software porting device drivers to it.
It wasn’t a Unix port, it was a complete re-write from the ground up.
The interfaces to the drivers was different and the internal locking mechanisms
were unique to the OS. I’d never seen anything like it before, or after.
David
On Nov 12, 2022, at 8:52 AM, arnold(a)skeeve.com wrote:
I'm pretty sure that DG never ported DG-UX to the Nova. There was
a native port to the Eclipse (32 bit). There was also a Eunice-style
Unix environment that sat on top of their native OS, whatever it was
called.
When I was working there, DG gave the Georgia Tech School of Information
and Computer Science an Eclipse running their native OS in the early
mid-80s. I didn't do much with it, and I suspect that nobody else there
did either.
I'm bcc-ing Scott Lee, who was the admin for that machine at the time;
maybe he remembers more.
There was a guy who worked at DG and contributed a lot of the Motorola
88000 code to GCC whose name I don't remember, although I met him
at a USENIX. If someone else remembers who this is, maybe he can
be tracked down for more info.
DG-UX was a pretty generic SVR3 (and later SVR4) system, IIRC.
In any case, DG-UX on the Eclipse preceded it on the 88000.
I hope this helps,
Arnold
P.S. For the youngsters here who've never heard of it, I highly
recommend Tracy Kidder's "The Soul of a New Machine" about the
development of the Eclipse.
(
https://www.amazon.com/Soul-New-Machine-Tracy-Kidder/dp/0316491977/ref=sr_1…)
It was originally written in 1982 - 40 years ago!
Clem Cole <clemc(a)ccc.com> wrote:
> This recent activity on the simh mailing list WRT to DG Nova and
> Ecpilse got me wondering. At Locus in the 80s and 90s, we did a lot of
> work with DG and DG-UX with their later MP-based ports using commercially
> available microprocessors (which I have reported was a very nicely done
> system, easy to work on, the locks tended to scale well, e*tc*.).
>
> But I am trying to remember if C or UNIX was on a Nova or an Eclipse. This
> could be my failed memory, given that so many people ported V7 in the late
> 1970s (the infamous 'NUIX' bug from the Series/1 port probably being my
> favorite tale). So to the hive mind, did anyone (DG themselves or a
> University) ever build 16 or 32-bit tools for the DG architectures and do a
> UNIX port, and if so, does anyone know what became of those efforts? Is
> this something that needs to be in the TUHS archives also?
>
> Clem
> ???