PiDP-8/I Software

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Example Programs

What's Provided

The examples directory holds short example programs for your PiDP-8/I, plus a number of subroutines you may find helpful in writing your own programs:

Example What It Does
add.pal 2 + 3 = 5 The simplest program here; used below as a meta-example
hello.pal writes "HELLO, WORLD!" to the console; tests PRINTS subroutine
pep001* Project Euler Problem #1 solutions, various languages
routines/decprt prints an unsigned 12-bit decimal integer to the console
routines/prints prints an ASCIIZ string stored as a series of 8-bit bytes to the console

The pep001.* files are a case study series in solving a simple problem, which lets you compare the solutions along several axes. Some are much longer than others, but some will run faster and/or take less memory. It is interesting to compare them. There are writeups on each of these:

How to Use the BASIC Examples

Here's one way to run the pep001.ba program mentioned above:

.R BASIC
NEW OR OLD--NEW
FILE NAME--PEP001.BA

READY
10 FOR I = 1 TO 999
10 FOR I = 1 TO 999
20 A = I / 3 \ B = I / 5
30 IF INT(A) = A GOTO 60
40 IF INT(B) = B GOTO 60
50 GOTO 70
60 T = T + I
70 NEXT I
80 PRINT "TOTAL: "; T
90 END
SAVE

READY
RUN

PEP001  BA    5A

TOTAL:  xxxxxxx

READY
BYE

While you could simply type all of that, if you're SSH'd into the PiDP-8/I, you could instead just copy-and-paste the bulk of the text above into OS/8 BASIC from the examples/pep001.ba file on the host side. This and several more useful methods are given in the companion article Getting Text In.

Other methods given in that article let you create the PEP001.BA file on the OS/8 disk first, allowing you to load it up within OS/8 BASIC like so:

.R BASIC
NEW OR OLD--old pep001.ba

Notice that you can give the file name with the NEW or OLD command above, rather than wait for OS/8 BASIC to prompt you for it separately. Also notice that our version of OS/8 BASIC has a patch applied to it by default which allows it to tolerate lowercase input. (This patch may be disabled by giving the --lowercase option to the configure script.)

I obscured the output in the first terminal transcript above on purpose, since I don't want this page to be a spoiler for the Project Euler site.

If you get a 2-letter code from BASIC in response to your RUN command, it means you have an error in the program. See the BASIC section of the OS/8 Handbook for a decoding guide.

How to Use the Assembly Language Examples

For each PAL8 assembly program in src/asm/*.pal or examples/*.pal, the build process produces several output files:

Extension Meaning
*.pal the PAL8 assembly source code for the program; input to the process
obj/*.lst the human-readable assembler output
bin/*-pal.pt the machine-readable assembler output (RIM format)
boot/*.script a SIMH-readable version of the assembled code

Each of those files has a corresponding way of getting the example running in the simulator:

  1. Transcribe the assembly program text to a file within a PDP-8 operating system and assemble it inside the simulator.

  2. Toggle the machine code for the program in from the front panel. I can recommend this method only for very short programs.

  3. Attach the *-pal.pt file to the simulator and read the assembly language text in, such as via the PiDP-8/I automatic media mounting feature.

  4. Boot SIMH with the example in core, running the program immediately.

I cover each of these options below, in the same order as the list above.

Option 1: Transcribing the Assembly Code into an OS/8 Session

Perhaps the most period-correct of the options given here is to transcribe examples/add.pal into the OS/8 simulation on a PiDP-8/I using the OS/8 EDIT program:

.R EDIT
*ADD.PA<

#A                          ← append to ADD.PA
*0200   CLA CLL
MAIN,   TAD A
        TAD B
        DCA C
        HLT
A,      2
B,      3
C,
                            ← hit Ctrl-L to leave text edit mode
#E                          ← saves program text to disk

.PAL ADD-LS
ERRORS DETECTED: 0
LINKS GENERATED: 0

.DIR ADD.* /A

ADD   .PA   1             ADD   .BN   1             ADD   .LS    1

 399 FREE BLOCKS

If you see some cryptic line from the assembler like DE C instead of the ERRORS DETECTED: 0 bit, an error has occurred. Table 3-3 in my copy the OS/8 Handbook explains these. You will also have an ADD.ER file explaining what happened.

You can instead say EXE ADD to assemble and execute that program in a single step, but beware that because the program halts the processor, your OS/8 session also halts. If you take the opportunity as intended to examine memory location C — 0207 — pressing Start to resume will cause the processor to try executing the instruction at 0210, and who knows what that will do? Even if you pass up the opportunity to examine C, pressing Start immediately after the halt will do the same, except that we know what it will do: it will try to execute the 0002 value stored at A as an instruction! (I believe it means AND the accumulator with memory location 2.)

The solution to these problems is simple:

.EDIT ADD                   ← don't need "R" because file exists
#R                          ← read first page in; isn't automatic!
#4D                         ← get rid of that pesky DCA line
#5I                         ← insert above "A" def'n, now on line 5
        JMP 7600            ← Ctrl-L again to exit edit mode
#E                          ← save and exit

.EXE ADD

As before, the processor stops, but this time because we didn't move the result from the accumulator to memory location C, we can see the answer on the accumulator line on the front panel. Pressing Start this time continues to the next instruction which re-enters OS/8. Much nicer!

This option is the most educational, as it matches the working experience of PDP-8 assembly language programmers back in the day. The tools may differ — the user may prefer TECO over EDIT or MACREL over PAL8 — but the idea is the same regardless.

There are many more methods for getting program text into the simulator than simply transcribing it into an EDIT or TECO session.

Option 2: Toggling Programs in Via the Front Panel

One of the automatic steps in building the PiDP-8/I software is that each of the examples/*.pal and src/asm/*.pal files are assembled by palbart which writes out a human-readable listing file to obj/*.lst, each named after the source file.

Take obj/add.lst as an example, in which you will find three columns of numbers on the code-bearing lines:

10 00200 7300
11 00201 1205
12 00202 1206
13 00203 3207
14 00204 7402
16 00205 0002
17 00206 0003

The first number refers to the corresponding line number in add.pal, the second is a PDP-8 memory address, and the third is the value stored at that address.

To toggle the add program in, press Stop to halt the processor, then twiddle the switches like so:

Set SR Switches To... Then Toggle... Because...
000 010 000 000 Load Add 000010000000 is binary for octal 0200, the program's start address
111 011 000 000 Dep the first instruction, 7300 octal, is 111011000000 in binary
001 010 000 101 Dep 1205 octal in binary
001 010 000 110 Dep etc, etc.
011 010 000 111 Dep
111 100 000 010 Dep
000 000 000 010 Dep
000 000 000 011 Dep

To run it, repeat the first step in the table above, loading the program's starting address (0200) first into the switch register (SR) and then into the PDP-8's program counter (PC) via Load Add. Then toggle Start to run the program.

If you then toggle 000 010 000 111 into SR, press Load Add followed by Exam, you should see 000 000 000 101 in the fourth row of lights — the Accumulator — that being the bit pattern for "five" at memory location 0207, the correct answer for "2 + 3", the purpose of add.pal. You could load that address back up again and Dep a different value into that location, then start the program over again at 0200 to observe that this memory location does, indeed, get overwritten with 0005.

We only need one Load Add operation in the table above because all of the memory addresses in this program are sequential; there are no jumps in the values in the second column. Not all programs are that way, so pay attention!

Beware that this program does not contain an explicit value for memory location 0207 at the start, but it does overwrite this location with the answer, since location C is defined as having the address just after the last value you entered via SR above, 0206. That is the source of the "07" in the lower two digits of the fourth instruction, 3207.

Option 3: Loading a Program from Paper Tape

The palbart assembly process described above also produces paper tape output files in RIM format in bin/*-pal.pt.

One way to load these assembly examples into your PiDP-8/I is to copy each such file to a USB stick, one file per stick. Then, use the automatic USB media mounting feature of the PiDP-8/I to attach it to the simulator.

The following is distilled from the How to Use the PiDP-8/I section of the PiDP-8/I documentation:

  1. Set the IF switches (first white group) to 001, and toggle Sing Step to reboot the simulator into the high-speed RIM loader. If the simulator wasn't already running, restarting the simulator with IF=1 will achieve the same end as toggling Sing Step while it's running. Reset the IF switches to 0.

  2. Insert the USB stick containing the *-pal.pt file you want to load into the Pi.

  3. Set the DF switches (first brown group) to 001, then toggle Sing Step again. This attaches the tape to the high-speed paper tape reader peripheral within the PDP-8 simulator. Set DF back to 0.

  4. Set the switch register (SR) to 7756 (111 111 101 110) then press Load Add, then Start.

  5. Hit Stop, then reset SR to 0200 (000 010 000 000), that being the starting location of these example programs. Press Load Add, then Start to run the program.

There is an SVG template for USB stick labels in the distribution under the labels/ directory, for use if you find yourself creating long-lived USB sticks. See labels/README.md for more information.

This USB method is most convenient for often-reused binary media images.

Option 4: Booting SIMH with the Example in Core

Another step in the PiDP-8/I software build process produces a boot/*.script file for each obj/*.lst file produced. These files are direct translations of the machine code from the assembler's listing file into SIMH deposit commands, populating the simulated PDP-8's core memory with the program's machine code. Each script ends with a jump to the start of the program.

You can thus load and run each example at the Linux command line with a command like this:

$ bin/pidp8i-sim boot/add.script

That runs the examples/add.pal program's assembled binary code under the simulator, just as if you'd loaded it there with option #3 above.

License

Copyright © 2016-2018 by Warren Young. This document is licensed under the terms of the SIMH license.