[apologies for lack of context, been away from cctalk a long time and 
insufficient recall of how this cctalk thing works... yet somehow still 
remember IAS on an 11/70 from the 1980s]


Pick an RSX layered product and lots of fundamental stuff would probably be 
compatible between 11M, 11D, and IAS (and/or 11M+). Find the RSX version and 
see if IAS is mentioned as supported in the SPD or other documentation. It 
often was, and even if it wasn't, lots of non-priv stuff would just work.


More IAS background from someone (not me) who was there in the IAS development 
team in DEC Reading:

https://www.john-a-harper.com/ias.html

"This page is dedicated to the best of the many PDP-11 operating systems - IAS

I couldn't find anything else on the Web about IAS… but it deserves better than 
to fall completely into obscurity.

DEC's approach to operating systems for the PDP-11 was anything but 
disciplined. New ones got invented every time some engineer or marketing person 
blinked. In the early days, there was a real-time kernel called RSX-11A, 
designed for memory-resident applications in what we now call embedded 
processors. Features got added to this rapidly - code bloat is nothing new. By 
the time it got to RSX-11D it had a complete disk-based file system, a program 
development environment, and support for every peripheral in the Small Computer 
Handbook (and there were plenty of them - peripherals on the PDP-11 obeyed the 
same strategic imperatives as operating systems - see above). At this time, a 
bright young engineer called Dave Cutler decided that enough was enough, and 
set out to create a small system that would do the same, which he called 
RSX-11M. We all know what happened to him - and he no longer even has the 
excuse of youthful excess.

(continues...)"

Hth.


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