RSX-11


RSX-11 is a discontinued family of multi-user real-time operating systems for PDP-11 computers created by Digital Equipment Corporation. In widespread use through the late 1970s and early 1980s, RSX-11 was influential in the development of later operating systems such as VMS and Windows NT. It was designed for process control, but was also popular for program development and general computing.

History

Name and origins

RSX-11 began as a port to the PDP-11 architecture of the earlier RSX-15 operating system for the PDP-15 minicomputer, first released in 1971.
The main architect for RSX-15 was Dennis “Dan” Brevik.
Commenting on the RSX acronym, Brevik says:
The porting effort first produced small paper tape based real-time executives which later gained limited support for disks. RSX-11B then evolved into the fully fledged RSX-11D disk-based operating system, which first appeared on the PDP-11/40 and PDP-11/45 in early 1973.
The project leader for RSX-11D up to version 4 was Henry Krejci.
While RSX-11D was being completed, Digital set out to adapt it for a small memory footprint
giving birth to RSX-11M, first released in 1973. From 1971 to 1976 the RSX-11M project was spearheaded by noted operating system designer Dave Cutler, then at his first project. Principles first tried in RSX-11M appear also in later designs led by Cutler, DEC's VMS and Microsoft's Windows NT.
Under the direction of Ron McLean a derivative of RSX-11M, called RSX-20F, was developed to run on the PDP-11/40 front-end processor for the KL10 PDP-10 CPU.
Meanwhile, RSX-11D saw further developments: under the direction of Garth Wolfendale the system was redesigned and saw its first commercial release. Support for the 22-bit PDP-11/70 system was added. Wolfendale, originally from the UK, also set up the team that designed and prototyped the IAS operating system in the UK; IAS was a variant of RSX-11D more suitable for time sharing. Later development and release of IAS was led by Andy Wilson, in Digital's UK facilities.

Release dates

Below are estimated release dates for RSX-11 and IAS. Data is taken from the printing date of the associated documentation. General availability date is expected to come closely after. When manuals have different printing dates, the latest date is used. RSX-11S is a proper subset of RSX-11M, so release dates are always assumed to be the same as the corresponding version of RSX-11M. On the other side, RSX-11M Plus is an enhanced version of RSX-11M, so it is expected to be later than the corresponding version of RSX-11M.
DateOScomment
March 1973RSX-11A 1.0
May 1973RSX 11D 1.0
December 1973RSX-11C 7AFinal release of RSX-11C
November 1974RSX-11M 1.0
June 1975RSX-11D 6.2Final version of RSX-11D
September 1975RSX-11M 2.0
RSX-11S 2.0
RSX-11S 1.0 never existed
December 1975IAS 1.0
April 1977RSX-11M 3.0
RSX-11S 3.0
December 1977RSX-11M 3.1
RSX-11S 3.1
bef. October 1979IAS 3.0Final major release of IAS
December 1981RSX-11M 4.0as stated by SPD 14.35.17
July 1985RSX-11M Plus 3.0
Micro/RSX 3.0
September 1987RSX-11M Plus 4.0
Micro/RSX 4.0
Final Micro/RSX version
May 1990IAS 3.4Final IAS Release
February 1993RSX-11M Plus 4.4
RSX-11M 4.7
RSX-11S 4.7
Last release from Digital Equipment
February 1999RSX-11M Plus 4.6Released by Mentec

Legal ownership, development model and availability

RSX-11 is proprietary software. Copyright is asserted in binary files, source code and documentation alike. It was entirely developed internally by Digital. Therefore, no part of it is open source. However a copy of the kernel source is present in every RSX distribution, because it was used during the system generation process. The notable exception to this rule is Micro-RSX, which came with a pre-generated autoconfiguring binary kernel. Full sources was available as a separate product to those who already had a binary license, for reference purposes.
Ownership of RSX-11S, RSX-11M, RSX-11M Plus and Micro/RSX was transferred from Digital to Mentec Inc. in March 1994 as part of a broader agreement.
Mentec Inc. was the US subsidiary of Mentec Limited, an Irish firm specializing in PDP-11 hardware and software support. In 2006 Mentec Inc. was declared bankrupt while Mentec Ltd. was acquired by Irish firm Calyx in December 2006,. The PDP-11 software, which was owned by Mentec Inc. was then bought by XX2247 LLC, which is the owner of the software today. It is unclear if new commercial licenses are possible to buy at this time. Hobbyists can run RSX-11M and RSX-11M Plus on the SIMH emulator thanks to a free license granted in May 1998 by Mentec Inc.
Legal ownership of RSX-11A, RSX-11B, RSX-11C, RSX-11D, and IAS never changed hands; therefore it passed to Compaq when it acquired Digital in 1998 and then to Hewlett-Packard in 2002. In late 2015 Hewlett-Packard split into two separate companies, so the current owner cannot be firmly established. New commercial licenses have not been issued at least since October 1979 or 1990, and no one of these operating systems was ever licensed for hobbyist use.

Versions

Main versions

In 1968, the Soviet Government decided that manufacturing copies of IBM mainframes
and DEC minicomputers, in cooperation with other COMECON countries, was more practical than pursuing original designs. Cloning of DEC designs began in 1974, under the name of SM-EVM. СМ ЭВМ is an acronym for 'Система Малых электронно-вычислительных машин' which is Russian for 'System of Small electronic computing machines'. As happened with ES EVM mainframes based on the System/360 architecture, the Russians and their allies sometimes significantly modified Western designs, and therefore not every SM-EVM machine is compatible with DEC offerings of the time.
A clone of the RSX-11M operating system ran on the Romanian-made CORAL family of computers.

Operation

RSX-11 was often used for general-purpose timeshare computing, even though this was the target market for the competing RSTS/E operating system. RSX-11 provided features to ensure better than a maximum necessary response time to peripheral device input, its original intended use. These features included the ability to lock a process into memory as part of system boot up and to assign a process a higher priority so that it would execute before any processes with a lower priority.
In order to support large programs within the PDP-11's relatively small virtual address space of 64 KB, a sophisticated semi-automatic overlay system was used; for any given program, this overlay scheme was produced by RSX's taskbuilder program. If the overlay scheme was especially complex, taskbuilding could take a rather long time.
The standard RSX prompt is ">" or "MCR>",. By contrast, the IAS light pattern was a single bar of lights that swept leftwards. Correspondingly, a jumbled light pattern is a visible indication that the computer is under load. Other PDP-11 operating systems such as RSTS/E have their own distinctive patterns in the console lights.