G'day AJ -

Briefly...

The tape contains a disk/tape backup/restore utility that is somewhat representative of those used with Point 4, and other 3rd-party DG lookalike systems. It is a stand-alone utility that is bootable if it exists as the first record of the first file of a mag tape or cartridge.

The usual procedure is to bootstrap the tape using the Nova APL function (or just toggling in simple 2-instruction 'fat-finger' program). Once the program is read into memory, it starts execution and displays its introductory message. At this point another tape/cartridge may be loaded onto the tape drive for backup or restore purposes.

I used our reNOVAte software for doing my investigations rather than SimH due to convenience, and was able to run the program and exercise its various functions. (Screen shots are attached.)

This particular utility is very specific regarding the type of disk drive and IRIS logical units it supports.

The utility assumes two devices exist: a tape controller using device code <022> and a disk controller using device code <027>. The tape controller may or may not perform QIC to DG-style file handling emulation since the original tape is not available to me. The disk controller appears to use the standard DG "Zebra" controller (Model 6060/6061/6067) programming model. However, it assumes a non-standard disk geometry of 16 cylinders, 5 heads, and 32 sectors.

The tape file itself needs to be created in the SimH tape if it is to be used with the default SimH tape driver. The QIC format may exist as a single large data record of 16,384 bytes, or of multiple 512-byte records followed by a file mark. (I can not tell its original format given only the .bin file to work with.)

The utility also makes assumptions about tape read timing and CPU instruction execution speed. Horrible programming technique, but unfortunately not uncommon practice. Any such timing dependencies must be found and compensated for in the device driver or instruction emulation.

Since there is no disk backup tape to load onto the disk, I used dummy disk data for testing the disk-to-tape and tape-to-disk functions. Real backup tape(s) would obviously be needed to restore the original system.


Bruce



On 11/14/2015 3:35 PM, Microtech Dart wrote:
Thank you, Dell, and Sandy Strain, both of your responses were EXTREMELY
helpful to me, and these all worked!

Do either of you have any additional thoughts about how I could make
what I believe to be a bootable file (extracted from a Microtech/Point4
QIC tape) into a bootable device for the Nova?

I'll start with the Minicom Disk To Tape Utility:

http://microtechm1.blogspot.com/2015/09/minicom-disk-to-tape-copy-utility.html

I've attached a .zip of the binary file that I extracted from this tape
for reference.  It's very small, so I zipped it up only so that the
emailing process didn't interfere with or reject it.

Thanks, all!

-AJ

On Sat, Nov 14, 2015 at 7:23 AM, Dell Setzer <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    It's actually pretty easy. After booting RDOS, press ^E to return to
    the sim> prompt. Then, attach a host file to the MTA0 unit. If you
    give a host filename that doesn't yet exist, SIMH will create an
    empty tape file and attach it to MTA0:

    sim> attach mta0 testtape.tap
    MTA: creating new file
    sim>

    Then, give the simh G command to return to RDOS and init/f the MT0
    tape unit. Note that at the sim> prompt, the unit is called "MTA0"
    (or MTA1, MTA2, etc), while in RDOS the unit is called "MT0" (or
    MT1, MT2, etc):

    sim> g
    <presss return to get the RDOS prompt again>
    R
    init/f mt0
    CONFIRM? <press Y to confirm>
    R

    Now you can dump or copy files to the MT0 device:
    dump/v mt0:0 -.sr
    LITMACS.SR <http://LITMACS.SR>
    OSID.SR <http://OSID.SR>
    NSID.SR <http://NSID.SR>
    PARS.SR <http://PARS.SR>
    ALMSPD.SR <http://ALMSPD.SR>
       <etc.>
    R
    dump/v mt0:1 -.sv
    BURST.SV <http://BURST.SV>
    INITIALIZE.SV <http://INITIALIZE.SV>
    SEDIT.SV <http://SEDIT.SV>
    MACXR.SV <http://MACXR.SV>
    EDIT.SV <http://EDIT.SV>
       <etc.>
    R
    release mt0
    R

    After releaseing the tape, press ^E again to get to the sim> prompt
    and detach the tape file:
    ^E
    sim> detach mta0
    sim>
    Now you can inspect the testtape.tap tape image.

    Attaching an existing tape file is similar, except that at the RDOS
    prompt you'd do INIT rather than INIT/F:

    sim> attach mta0 testtape.tap
    sim> g
    R
    init mt0
    R
    load/n mt0:0
    LITMACS.SR <http://LITMACS.SR>            10/20/83
    OSID.SR <http://OSID.SR>               01/10/84
    NSID.SR <http://NSID.SR>               10/20/83
    PARS.SR <http://PARS.SR>               01/31/85
       <etc>
    R
    load/n mt0:1
    BURST.SV <http://BURST.SV>              05/09/85
    INITIALIZE.SV <http://INITIALIZE.SV>         05/02/85
    SEDIT.SV <http://SEDIT.SV>              05/02/85
       <etc>
    R
    release mt0
    R

    Hope this helps,
    ...dell

    On Sat, 14 Nov 2015, Microtech Dart wrote:

        Hi, I am completely new here, although I recognize the names of
        several who
        post here.

        I am trying to resurrect an extinct Microtech machine from 1982,
        which
        likely used the Point 4 processor, and the SimH DG Nova
        simulator *should*
        be compatible with the Point 4.

        I'm running the NOVA simulator now, with:

        NOVA simulator V4.0-0 Beta        git commit id: 3be5125d
        sim> ATTACH DKP0 *rdos_d31.dsk*
        sim> set tti dasher
        sim> boot DKP0

        I'm teaching myself RDOS now with the
        RDOS_Command_Line_Interpreter Manual.
        
<http://www.mirrorservice.org/sites/www.bitsavers.org/pdf/dg/software/rdos/093-000109-01_RDOS_Command_Line_Interpreter.pdf>

        Would anybody here be able to suggest some methods by which I could
        *create* a magnetic tape device on this SimH Nova simulator, and
        how I
        might write some files to that?

        I think that would be an excellent experiment for me to
        attempt.  Then I
        can inspect the binary file in a hex editor, and see what it
        looks like,
        then compare to the binaries I've pulled off my Microtech/Point
        4 tapes.

        --

        Thanks,
        -AJ
        http://MicrotechM1.blogspot.com




--

Thanks,
-AJ
http://MicrotechM1.blogspot.com


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