Commit graph

4 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Mark Pizzolato
36a732b26f H316: Update error and warning messages to properly use SCP APIs 2020-02-16 17:30:20 -08:00
Mark Pizzolato
6c425cc790 H316: Expose RTC INTERVAL and QUANTUM values in registers update testrtc.cmd
testrtc.cmd updated with dynamically computed timing information
2018-05-24 13:39:28 -07:00
Mark Pizzolato
5531ccb175 ALL: Massive 'const' cleanup
These changes facilitate more robust parameter type checking and helps
to identify unexpected coding errors.

Most simulators can now also be compiled with a C++ compiler without
warnings.

Additionally, these changes have also been configured to facilitate easier
backporting of simulator and device simulation modules to run under the
simh v3.9+ SCP framework.
2016-05-15 15:25:33 -07:00
Mark Pizzolato
65402fbaa1 H316: Resurrecting the ARPAnet IMP (from Bob Armstrong)
This summer a group of us worked together to resurrect the original ARPAnet IMP software, and I’m now happy to say that the IMP lives again in simulation.    It’s possible to run the original IMP software on a modified version of the H316 simh and to set up a virtual network of simulated IMPs talking to each other.   IMP to IMP connections, which would have originally been carried over leased telephone lines, are tunneled over IP.  As far as we can tell, everything works pretty much as it did in the early 1970s.  IMPs are able to exchange routing information, console to console communications, network statistics, and they would carry host traffic if there were hosts on the network.  The hooks are in there to allow simh to support the IMP side of the 1822 host interface, and the next step would be to recover the OS for an ARPAnet era host and then extend the corresponding simulator to talk to the IMP simulation.
2013-11-23 08:40:26 -08:00