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SDS Sigma series

The SDS Sigma series is a series of third generation computers[1][2][3] that were introduced by Scientific Data Systems of the United States in 1966.[4] The first machines in the series are the 16-bit Sigma 2 and the 32-bit Sigma 7; the Sigma 7 was the first 32-bit computer released by SDS. At the time, the only competition for the Sigma 7 was the IBM 360.

Front panel of the SDS Sigma 5 computer at the Computer History Museum

Memory size increments for all SDS/XDS/Xerox computers are stated in kWords, not kBytes. For example, the Sigma 5 base memory is 16K 32-Bit words (64K Bytes). Maximum memory is limited by the length of the instruction address field of 17 bits, or 128K Words (512K Bytes). Although this is a trivial amount of memory in today's technology, Sigma systems performed their tasks exceptionally well, and few were deployed with, or needed, the maximum 128K Word memory size.

The CII 10070 computer was a rebadged Sigma 7 and served as a basis for the upgraded, yet still compatible, Iris 50 and Iris 80 computers. The Xerox 500 series computers, introduced starting in 1973, were also compatible upgrades to the Sigma systems using newer technology.

In 1975, Xerox sold its computer business to Honeywell, Inc. which continued support for the Sigma line for a time.

An XDS Sigma 9 at the Living Computer Museum, Seattle, Washington, US, 2014

The Sigma 9 may hold the record for the longest lifetime of a machine selling near the original retail price[citation needed]. Sigma 9 computers were still in service in 1993. In 2011, the Living Computer Museum in Seattle, Washington acquired a Sigma 9 from a service bureau (Applied Esoterics/George Plue Estate) and has made it operational.[5] That Sigma 9 CPU was at the University of Southern Mississippi until Nov. 1985 when Andrews University purchased it and took it to Michigan. In February 1990, Andrews University via Keith Calkins sold and delivered it to Applied Esoterics in Flagstaff, Arizona. Keith Calkins made the Sigma 9 functional for the museum in 2012/13 and brought up the CP-V operating system in Dec. 2014. The various other system components came from other user sites, such as Marquette, Samford and Xerox/Dallas.

Models edit

Source: [6]

32-bit systems edit

Model Date Floating point Decimal Byte string Memory map Max memory (kwords)
Sigma 7 1966 optional optional standard optional 128
Sigma 5 1967 optional N/A N/A N/A 128
Sigma 6 1970 optional standard standard standard 128
Sigma 9 1971 standard standard standard standard 512
Sigma 8 1972 standard N/A N/A N/A 128
Sigma 9 model 2 ? standard standard standard standard 256
Sigma 9 model 3 1973 standard N/A N/A standard 512

16-bit systems edit

Model Date Max memory (kwords)
Sigma 2 1966 64
Sigma 3 1969 64

Instruction format edit

The format for memory-reference instructions for the 32-bit Sigma systems is as follows:

 +-+--------------+--------+------+---------------------------+ |*| Op Code | R | X | Reference address | +-+--------------+--------+------+---------------------------+ bit 0 1 7 8 1 1 1 1 3 1 2 4 5 1 Bit 0 indicates indirect address. Bits 1-7 contain the operation code (opcode) Bits 8-11 encode a register operand (0:15) Bits 12-14 encode an index register (1:7). 0 indicates no indexing. Bits 16-31 encode the address of a memory word. 

For the Sigma 9, when real extended addressing is enabled, the reference address field is interpreted differently depending on whether the high-order bit is 0 or 1:

 +-+--------------+--------+------+-+-------------------------+ | | | | |0| Address in 1st 64K words| |*| Op Code | R | X +-+-------------------------+ | | | | |1| Low 16 bits of address | +-+--------------+--------+------+-+-------------------------+ bit 0 1 7 8 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 2 4 5 6 1 

If the high-order bit is 0, the lower 16 bits of the address refer to a location in the first 64K words of main memory; if the high-order bit is 1, the lower 16 bits of the address refer to a location in a 64K-word block of memory specified by the Extension Address in bits 42-47 of the Program Status Doubleword, with the Extension Address being concatenated with the lower 16 bits of the reference address to form the physical address.

Features edit

CPU edit

Sigma systems provided a range of performance, roughly doubling from Sigma 5, the slowest, to Sigma 9 Model 3, the fastest. For example, 32-bit fixed point multiply times ranged from 7.2 to 3.8 μs; 64-bit floating point divide ranged from 30.5 to 17.4 μs.

Most Sigma systems included two or more blocks of 16 general-purpose registers. Switching blocks is accomplished by a single instruction (LPSD), providing fast context switching, since registers do not have to be saved and restored.

Memory edit

Memory in the Sigma systems can be addressed as individual bytes, halfwords, words, or doublewords.

All 32-bit Sigma systems except the Sigma 5 and Sigma 8 used a memory map to implement virtual memory. The following description applies to the Sigma 9, other models have minor differences.

The effective virtual address of a word is 17 bits wide. Virtual addresses 0 thru 15 are reserved to reference the corresponding general purpose register, and are not mapped. Otherwise, in virtual memory mode the high-order eight bits of an address, called virtual page number, are used as an index to an array of 256 13-bit memory map registers. The thirteen bits from the map register plus the remaining nine bits of the virtual address form the address used to access real memory.

Access protection is implemented using a separate array of 256 two-bit access control codes, one per virtual page (512 words), indicating a combination of read/write/execute or no access to that page.

Independently, an array of 256 2-bit access control registers for the first 128k words of real memory function as a "lock-and-key" system in conjunction with two bits in the program status doubleword. The system allows pages to be marked "unlocked", or the key to be a "master key". Otherwise the key in the PSD had to match the lock in the access register in order to reference the memory page.

Peripherals edit

Input/output is accomplished using a control unit called an IOP (Input-output processor). An IOP provides an 8-bit data path to and from memory. Systems support up to 8 IOPs, each of which can attach up to 32 device controllers.[7][8]

An IOP can be either a selector I/O processor (SIOP) or a multiplexer I/O processor (MIOP). The SIOP provides a data rate up to 1.5 megabytes per second (MBPS), but allows only one device to be active at a time. The MIOP, intended to support slow speed peripherals allows up to 32 devices to be active at any time, but provides only a .3 MBPS aggregate data rate.

Mass storage edit

 
RAD with cover open and disk pulled out for maintenance

The primary mass storage device, known as a RAD (random-access disk), contains 512 fixed heads and a large (approx 600 mm/24 in diameter) vertically mounted disk spinning at relatively low speeds. Because of the fixed head arrangement, access is quite fast. Capacities range from 1.6 to 6.0 megabytes and are used for temporary storage. Large-capacity multi-platter disks are employed for permanent storage.

Sigma mass storage devices
Device Device type Capacity [MB] Avg seek time [ms] Avg rotational delay [ms] Avg transfer rate [kB/s]
3214 RAD 2.75 N/A 8.5 647
7202 RAD .7 N/A 17 166
7203 RAD 1.4 N/A 17 166
7204 RAD 2.8 N/A 17 166
7232 RAD 6.0 N/A 17 355
3231 Cartridge disk 2.4 removable 38 12.5 246
3232 Cartridge disk 4.9 removable 38 12.5 246
3233 Cartridge disk 4.9 fixed
4.9 removable
38 12.5 246
3242 Cartridge disk 5.7 removable 38 12.5 286
3243 Cartridge disk 5.7 fixed
5.7 removable
38 12.5 286
7251 Cartridge disk 2.3 removable 38 12.5 225
7252 Cartridge disk 2.3 fixed
2.3 removable
38 12.5 225
3277 Removable disk 95 30 8.3 787
7271 Removable disk 46.8 35 12.5 245

Communications edit

The Sigma 7611 Character Oriented Communications subsystem (COC) supports one to seven Line Interface Units (LIUs). Each LIU can have one to eight line interfaces capable of operating in simplex, half-duplex, or full-duplex mode. The COC was "intended for low to medium speed character oriented data transmissions."[9]

System control unit edit

The System Control Unit (SCU) was a "microprogrammable data processor" which can interface to a Sigma CPU, and "to peripheral and analog devices, and to many kinds of line protocol."[10] The SCU executes horizontal microinstructions with a 32-bit word length. A cross-assembler running on a Sigma system can be used to create microprograms for the SCU.

Carnegie Mellon Sigma 5 edit

The Sigma 5 computer owned by Carnegie Mellon University was donated to the Computer History Museum in 2002. The system consists of five full-size cabinets with a monitor, control panel and a printer. It is possibly the last surviving Sigma 5 that is still operational.[11]

The Sigma 5 sold for US$300,000 with 16 kilowords of random-access magnetic-core memory, with an optional memory upgrade to 32 kW for an additional $50,000. The hard disk drive had a capacity of 3 megabytes.[12]

32-bit software edit

Operating systems edit

Sigma 5 and 8 systems lack the memory map feature, The Sigma 5 is supported by the Basic Control Monitor (BCM) and the Batch Processing Monitor (BPM). The Sigma 8 can run the Real-time Batch Monitor (RBM) as well as BPM/BTM.

The remaining models initially ran the Batch Processing Monitor (BPM), later augmented with a timesharing option (BTM); the combined system was usually referred to as BPM/BTM. The Universal Time-Sharing System (UTS) became available in 1971, supporting much enhanced time-sharing facilities. A compatible upgrade (or renaming) of UTS, Control Program V (CP-V) became available starting in 1973 and added real-time, remote batch, and transaction processing. A dedicated real-time OS, Control Program for Real-Time (CP-R) was also available for Sigma 9 systems. The Xerox Operating System (XOS), intended as an IBM DOS/360 replacement (not to be confused with PC DOS of a latter era), also runs on Sigma 6/7/9 systems, but never gained real popularity.

Third party operating systems edit

Some third party operating systems were available for Sigma Machines. One was named GEM (for Generalized Environmental Monitor), and was said to be "rather UNIX-like".[13] A second was named JANUS, from Michigan State University.[14][15]

Applications software edit

The Xerox software, called processors, available for CP-V in 1978 included:[16]

  • Terminal Executive Language (TEL) command language
  • Control Command Interpreter (CCI) batch counterpart of TEL
  • File system management processors — backup/restore (fill, fsave and fres)
  • EASY — online Interactive Debugging Environment for Fortran and BASIC
  • Extended FORTRAN IV
  • Meta-Symbol macro assembler
  • AP assembler
  • BASIC
  • FLAG —FORTRAN Load and Go
  • ANS COBOL
  • APL
  • TEXT - word processing
  • RPG
  • Simulation Language (SL-l) 
  • LINK one-pass linking loader
  • LOAD two-pass overlay loader
  • LYNX simplified syntax front-end for LOAD
  • GENMD load module editor
  • DELTA machine language debugger
  • FORTRAN Debug Package (FDP)
  • COBOL On-line Debugger
  • EDIT — text editor mostly for language source or data files.
  • Peripheral Conversion Language (PCL) — pronounced "pickle" — data move/convert utility
  • Other service processors such as SYSGEN, ANLZ dump analyzer, library maintenance
  • Sort/Merge
  • EDMS database management 
  • GPDS General Purpose Discrete Simulator 
  • CIRC circuit analysis,
  • MANAGE —generalized file management and report generation system 

Program product, chargeable

16-bit software edit

Operating systems edit

The Basic Control Monitor (BCM) for the Sigma 2 and 3 provided "Full real-time capability with some provision for batch processing in the background."[17] The Sigma 3 could also run RBM.

Clones edit

After Honeywell discontinued production of Sigma hardware — Xerox had sold most of the rights to Honeywell in July, 1975 — several companies produced or announced clone systems. The Telefile T-85, introduced in 1979, was an upward compatible drop-in replacement for 32-bit Sigmas. Ilene Industries Data Systems announced the MOD 9000, a Sigma 9 clone with an incompatible I/O architecture. Realtime Computer Equipment, Inc. designed the RCE-9, an upward compatible drop-in replacement that could also use IBM peripherals.[4] The Modutest Mod 9 was redesigned and built by Gene Zeitler (President), Lothar Mueller (Senior VP) and Ed Drapell, is 100% hardware and software compatibility with the Sigma 9. It was manufactured and sold to Telefile, Utah Power and Light, Minnesota Power, Taiwan Power and Ohio College Library Center (OCLC).[18][19] The French company CII produced Sigma 7 clones, the CII 10070, Iris 50, and the Iris 80.

As of 2023 the SIMH emulator can emulate a Sigma 5, 6, or 7 system.[20] A copy of CP-V version F00 is available to run on the simulator.[21]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Nelson, Richard R.; New York University Graduate School of Business Administration Center for Science and Technology Policy (1982). Government and technical progress: a cross-industry analysis. Pergamon Press. p. 208. ISBN 9780080288376. In 1965-67, SDS introduced its third-generational Sigma Series (...).
  2. ^ Krickx, Guido Armand Marie Jules (1988). Historical evidence on the evolution of vertical exchange mechanisms: examples from the computer systems industry. UCLA. pp. 167, 416.
  3. ^ "IC DIGITAL LOGIC MODULES. T Series. Description and Specifications" (PDF) (Revision 5 ed.). September 1969. THE SDS APPROACH TO MODULES, p. -1 (3). Retrieved 2019-03-19.
  4. ^ a b "Computers that will not die – The SDS Sigma 7".
  5. ^ "Computer Room Exhibits". The Living Computer Museum. Retrieved September 4, 2014.
  6. ^ "sigmaCPUs.txt at bitsavers.org". Retrieved 2011-10-22.
  7. ^ Scientific Data Systems (1966). Sigma Series Input Output Processors (PDF). Beverly Hills, CA.: Scientific Data Systems.
  8. ^ Mendelson, Myron J.; England, A. W. (November 7–10, 1966). The SDS Sigma 7: A Real-Time Time-Sharing Computer (PDF). 1966 Fall Joint Computer Conference. AFIPS Conference Proceedings. Vol. 29. San Francisco, California: American Federation of Information Processing Societies. Retrieved 2022-07-02.
  9. ^ Xerox Data Systems (1969). Character Oriented Communications Equipment Model 7611 (PDF). p. 143.
  10. ^ Xerox Data Systems (1973). System Control Unit (SCU) Reference Manual (Preliminary) (PDF). p. 147.
  11. ^ "Carnegie Mellon's Sigma-5 Retires After 30 Years of Service". Carnegie Mellon University. June 2002. Retrieved 2007-08-15.
  12. ^ Spice, Byron (October 1, 2001). "Saying goodbye to the Sigma 5". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2007-08-15.
  13. ^ Kirkpatrick, Jim. "The Sigma Era". Retrieved August 29, 2013.
  14. ^ Keith G. Calkins (June 1984). "The Computer That Will Not Die: The SDS SIGMA 7". Retrieved 29 August 2013.
  15. ^ Kopf, J. O.; Plauger, P. J. (1968). "JANUS: a flexible approach to realtime timesharing". Proceeding AFIPS '68 (Fall, Part II) Proceedings of the December 9–11, 1968, Fall Joint Computer Conference, Part II. Fall Joint Computer Conference. pp. 1033–1042. doi:10.1145/1476706.1476722. S2CID 15577630.
  16. ^ Honeywell Information Systems Inc. (1978). Xerox Control Program-Five (CP-V) Xerox 560 and Sigma 5/6/7/9 Computers System Management Reference Manual (PDF).
  17. ^ Scientific Data Systems (1969). SDS Sigma 2/3 Basic Control Monitor Reference Manual (PDF). El Segundo, CA.: Scientific Data Systems/a Xerox Company.
  18. ^ Modutest Systems President, Gene Zeitler
  19. ^ Shoor, Rita (June 16, 1980). "Modutest CPU emulates Xerox Sigma 9". Computerworld. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
  20. ^ "SIMH v4.0 - 19-01 Current". GitHub. Sigma 5, 6 & 7 simulator from Bob Supnik.
  21. ^ Rector, Ken. "sigma-cpv-kit". github. Retrieved June 1, 2023.

Further reading edit

  • Scientific Data Systems (1968). Sigma 5 Computer Reference Manual (PDF). El Segundo, Calif.: Scientific Data Systems. p. 113.
  • Honeywell Information Systems (1971). Xerox Sigma 6 Computer Reference Manual (PDF). Waltham, Mass.: Honeywell Information Systems. p. 137.
  • Honeywell Information Systems (1973). Xerox Sigma 7 Computer Reference Manual (PDF). Waltham, Mass.: Honeywell Information Systems. p. 135.
  • Xerox Data Systems (1971). Xerox Sigma 8 Computer Reference Manual (PDF). El Segundo, Calif.: Xerox Data Systems. p. 151.
  • Xerox Data Systems (1974). Xerox Sigma 9 Computers Reference Manual (PDF). El Segundo, Calif.: Xerox Data Systems. p. 188.

External links edit

  • Online systems at Living Computers: Museum + Labs, a portal into the Paul Allen collection of timesharing and interactive computers, including a Xerox Sigma 9 running CP-V.

sigma, series, series, third, generation, computers, that, were, introduced, scientific, data, systems, united, states, 1966, first, machines, series, sigma, sigma, sigma, first, computer, released, time, only, competition, sigma, front, panel, sigma, computer. The SDS Sigma series is a series of third generation computers 1 2 3 that were introduced by Scientific Data Systems of the United States in 1966 4 The first machines in the series are the 16 bit Sigma 2 and the 32 bit Sigma 7 the Sigma 7 was the first 32 bit computer released by SDS At the time the only competition for the Sigma 7 was the IBM 360 Front panel of the SDS Sigma 5 computer at the Computer History MuseumMemory size increments for all SDS XDS Xerox computers are stated in kWords not kBytes For example the Sigma 5 base memory is 16K 32 Bit words 64K Bytes Maximum memory is limited by the length of the instruction address field of 17 bits or 128K Words 512K Bytes Although this is a trivial amount of memory in today s technology Sigma systems performed their tasks exceptionally well and few were deployed with or needed the maximum 128K Word memory size The CII 10070 computer was a rebadged Sigma 7 and served as a basis for the upgraded yet still compatible Iris 50 and Iris 80 computers The Xerox 500 series computers introduced starting in 1973 were also compatible upgrades to the Sigma systems using newer technology In 1975 Xerox sold its computer business to Honeywell Inc which continued support for the Sigma line for a time An XDS Sigma 9 at the Living Computer Museum Seattle Washington US 2014The Sigma 9 may hold the record for the longest lifetime of a machine selling near the original retail price citation needed Sigma 9 computers were still in service in 1993 In 2011 the Living Computer Museum in Seattle Washington acquired a Sigma 9 from a service bureau Applied Esoterics George Plue Estate and has made it operational 5 That Sigma 9 CPU was at the University of Southern Mississippi until Nov 1985 when Andrews University purchased it and took it to Michigan In February 1990 Andrews University via Keith Calkins sold and delivered it to Applied Esoterics in Flagstaff Arizona Keith Calkins made the Sigma 9 functional for the museum in 2012 13 and brought up the CP V operating system in Dec 2014 The various other system components came from other user sites such as Marquette Samford and Xerox Dallas Contents 1 Models 1 1 32 bit systems 1 2 16 bit systems 2 Instruction format 3 Features 3 1 CPU 3 2 Memory 3 3 Peripherals 3 3 1 Mass storage 3 3 2 Communications 3 3 3 System control unit 3 4 Carnegie Mellon Sigma 5 4 32 bit software 4 1 Operating systems 4 1 1 Third party operating systems 4 2 Applications software 5 16 bit software 5 1 Operating systems 6 Clones 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksModels editSource 6 32 bit systems edit Model Date Floating point Decimal Byte string Memory map Max memory kwords Sigma 7 1966 optional optional standard optional 128Sigma 5 1967 optional N A N A N A 128Sigma 6 1970 optional standard standard standard 128Sigma 9 1971 standard standard standard standard 512Sigma 8 1972 standard N A N A N A 128Sigma 9 model 2 standard standard standard standard 256Sigma 9 model 3 1973 standard N A N A standard 51216 bit systems edit Model Date Max memory kwords Sigma 2 1966 64Sigma 3 1969 64Instruction format editThe format for memory reference instructions for the 32 bit Sigma systems is as follows Op Code R X Reference address bit 0 1 7 8 1 1 1 1 3 1 2 4 5 1 Bit 0 indicates indirect address Bits 1 7 contain the operation code opcode Bits 8 11 encode a register operand 0 15 Bits 12 14 encode an index register 1 7 0 indicates no indexing Bits 16 31 encode the address of a memory word For the Sigma 9 when real extended addressing is enabled the reference address field is interpreted differently depending on whether the high order bit is 0 or 1 0 Address in 1st 64K words Op Code R X 1 Low 16 bits of address bit 0 1 7 8 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 2 4 5 6 1 If the high order bit is 0 the lower 16 bits of the address refer to a location in the first 64K words of main memory if the high order bit is 1 the lower 16 bits of the address refer to a location in a 64K word block of memory specified by the Extension Address in bits 42 47 of the Program Status Doubleword with the Extension Address being concatenated with the lower 16 bits of the reference address to form the physical address Features editCPU edit Sigma systems provided a range of performance roughly doubling from Sigma 5 the slowest to Sigma 9 Model 3 the fastest For example 32 bit fixed point multiply times ranged from 7 2 to 3 8 ms 64 bit floating point divide ranged from 30 5 to 17 4 ms Most Sigma systems included two or more blocks of 16 general purpose registers Switching blocks is accomplished by a single instruction LPSD providing fast context switching since registers do not have to be saved and restored Memory edit Memory in the Sigma systems can be addressed as individual bytes halfwords words or doublewords All 32 bit Sigma systems except the Sigma 5 and Sigma 8 used a memory map to implement virtual memory The following description applies to the Sigma 9 other models have minor differences The effective virtual address of a word is 17 bits wide Virtual addresses 0 thru 15 are reserved to reference the corresponding general purpose register and are not mapped Otherwise in virtual memory mode the high order eight bits of an address called virtual page number are used as an index to an array of 256 13 bit memory map registers The thirteen bits from the map register plus the remaining nine bits of the virtual address form the address used to access real memory Access protection is implemented using a separate array of 256 two bit access control codes one per virtual page 512 words indicating a combination of read write execute or no access to that page Independently an array of 256 2 bit access control registers for the first 128k words of real memory function as a lock and key system in conjunction with two bits in the program status doubleword The system allows pages to be marked unlocked or the key to be a master key Otherwise the key in the PSD had to match the lock in the access register in order to reference the memory page Peripherals edit Input output is accomplished using a control unit called an IOP Input output processor An IOP provides an 8 bit data path to and from memory Systems support up to 8 IOPs each of which can attach up to 32 device controllers 7 8 An IOP can be either a selector I O processor SIOP or a multiplexer I O processor MIOP The SIOP provides a data rate up to 1 5 megabytes per second MBPS but allows only one device to be active at a time The MIOP intended to support slow speed peripherals allows up to 32 devices to be active at any time but provides only a 3 MBPS aggregate data rate Mass storage edit nbsp RAD with cover open and disk pulled out for maintenanceThe primary mass storage device known as a RAD random access disk contains 512 fixed heads and a large approx 600 mm 24 in diameter vertically mounted disk spinning at relatively low speeds Because of the fixed head arrangement access is quite fast Capacities range from 1 6 to 6 0 megabytes and are used for temporary storage Large capacity multi platter disks are employed for permanent storage Sigma mass storage devices Device Device type Capacity MB Avg seek time ms Avg rotational delay ms Avg transfer rate kB s 3214 RAD 2 75 N A 8 5 6477202 RAD 7 N A 17 1667203 RAD 1 4 N A 17 1667204 RAD 2 8 N A 17 1667232 RAD 6 0 N A 17 3553231 Cartridge disk 2 4 removable 38 12 5 2463232 Cartridge disk 4 9 removable 38 12 5 2463233 Cartridge disk 4 9 fixed4 9 removable 38 12 5 2463242 Cartridge disk 5 7 removable 38 12 5 2863243 Cartridge disk 5 7 fixed5 7 removable 38 12 5 2867251 Cartridge disk 2 3 removable 38 12 5 2257252 Cartridge disk 2 3 fixed2 3 removable 38 12 5 2253277 Removable disk 95 30 8 3 7877271 Removable disk 46 8 35 12 5 245Communications edit The Sigma 7611 Character Oriented Communications subsystem COC supports one to seven Line Interface Units LIUs Each LIU can have one to eight line interfaces capable of operating in simplex half duplex or full duplex mode The COC was intended for low to medium speed character oriented data transmissions 9 System control unit edit The System Control Unit SCU was a microprogrammable data processor which can interface to a Sigma CPU and to peripheral and analog devices and to many kinds of line protocol 10 The SCU executes horizontal microinstructions with a 32 bit word length A cross assembler running on a Sigma system can be used to create microprograms for the SCU Carnegie Mellon Sigma 5 edit The Sigma 5 computer owned by Carnegie Mellon University was donated to the Computer History Museum in 2002 The system consists of five full size cabinets with a monitor control panel and a printer It is possibly the last surviving Sigma 5 that is still operational 11 The Sigma 5 sold for US 300 000 with 16 kilowords of random access magnetic core memory with an optional memory upgrade to 32 kW for an additional 50 000 The hard disk drive had a capacity of 3 megabytes 12 32 bit software editOperating systems edit Sigma 5 and 8 systems lack the memory map feature The Sigma 5 is supported by the Basic Control Monitor BCM and the Batch Processing Monitor BPM The Sigma 8 can run the Real time Batch Monitor RBM as well as BPM BTM The remaining models initially ran the Batch Processing Monitor BPM later augmented with a timesharing option BTM the combined system was usually referred to as BPM BTM The Universal Time Sharing System UTS became available in 1971 supporting much enhanced time sharing facilities A compatible upgrade or renaming of UTS Control Program V CP V became available starting in 1973 and added real time remote batch and transaction processing A dedicated real time OS Control Program for Real Time CP R was also available for Sigma 9 systems The Xerox Operating System XOS intended as an IBM DOS 360 replacement not to be confused with PC DOS of a latter era also runs on Sigma 6 7 9 systems but never gained real popularity Third party operating systems edit Some third party operating systems were available for Sigma Machines One was named GEM for Generalized Environmental Monitor and was said to be rather UNIX like 13 A second was named JANUS from Michigan State University 14 15 Applications software edit The Xerox software called processors available for CP V in 1978 included 16 Terminal Executive Language TEL command language Control Command Interpreter CCI batch counterpart of TEL File system management processors backup restore fill fsave and fres EASY online Interactive Debugging Environment for Fortran and BASIC Extended FORTRAN IV Meta Symbol macro assembler AP assembler BASIC FLAG FORTRAN Load and Go ANS COBOL APL TEXT word processing RPG Simulation Language SL l LINK one pass linking loader LOAD two pass overlay loader LYNX simplified syntax front end for LOAD GENMD load module editor DELTA machine language debugger FORTRAN Debug Package FDP COBOL On line Debugger EDIT text editor mostly for language source or data files Peripheral Conversion Language PCL pronounced pickle data move convert utility Other service processors such as SYSGEN ANLZ dump analyzer library maintenance Sort Merge EDMS database management GPDS General Purpose Discrete Simulator CIRC circuit analysis MANAGE generalized file management and report generation system Program product chargeable16 bit software editOperating systems edit The Basic Control Monitor BCM for the Sigma 2 and 3 provided Full real time capability with some provision for batch processing in the background 17 The Sigma 3 could also run RBM Clones editAfter Honeywell discontinued production of Sigma hardware Xerox had sold most of the rights to Honeywell in July 1975 several companies produced or announced clone systems The Telefile T 85 introduced in 1979 was an upward compatible drop in replacement for 32 bit Sigmas Ilene Industries Data Systems announced the MOD 9000 a Sigma 9 clone with an incompatible I O architecture Realtime Computer Equipment Inc designed the RCE 9 an upward compatible drop in replacement that could also use IBM peripherals 4 The Modutest Mod 9 was redesigned and built by Gene Zeitler President Lothar Mueller Senior VP and Ed Drapell is 100 hardware and software compatibility with the Sigma 9 It was manufactured and sold to Telefile Utah Power and Light Minnesota Power Taiwan Power and Ohio College Library Center OCLC 18 19 The French company CII produced Sigma 7 clones the CII 10070 Iris 50 and the Iris 80 As of 2023 the SIMH emulator can emulate a Sigma 5 6 or 7 system 20 A copy of CP V version F00 is available to run on the simulator 21 See also editSDS 940References edit Nelson Richard R New York University Graduate School of Business Administration Center for Science and Technology Policy 1982 Government and technical progress a cross industry analysis Pergamon Press p 208 ISBN 9780080288376 In 1965 67 SDS introduced its third generational Sigma Series Krickx Guido Armand Marie Jules 1988 Historical evidence on the evolution of vertical exchange mechanisms examples from the computer systems industry UCLA pp 167 416 IC DIGITAL LOGIC MODULES T Series Description and Specifications PDF Revision 5 ed September 1969 THE SDS APPROACH TO MODULES p 1 3 Retrieved 2019 03 19 a b Computers that will not die The SDS Sigma 7 Computer Room Exhibits The Living Computer Museum Retrieved September 4 2014 sigmaCPUs txt at bitsavers org Retrieved 2011 10 22 Scientific Data Systems 1966 Sigma Series Input Output Processors PDF Beverly Hills CA Scientific Data Systems Mendelson Myron J England A W November 7 10 1966 The SDS Sigma 7 A Real Time Time Sharing Computer PDF 1966 Fall Joint Computer Conference AFIPS Conference Proceedings Vol 29 San Francisco California American Federation of Information Processing Societies Retrieved 2022 07 02 Xerox Data Systems 1969 Character Oriented Communications Equipment Model 7611 PDF p 143 Xerox Data Systems 1973 System Control Unit SCU Reference Manual Preliminary PDF p 147 Carnegie Mellon s Sigma 5 Retires After 30 Years of Service Carnegie Mellon University June 2002 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Spice Byron October 1 2001 Saying goodbye to the Sigma 5 Pittsburgh Post Gazette Retrieved 2007 08 15 Kirkpatrick Jim The Sigma Era Retrieved August 29 2013 Keith G Calkins June 1984 The Computer That Will Not Die The SDS SIGMA 7 Retrieved 29 August 2013 Kopf J O Plauger P J 1968 JANUS a flexible approach to realtime timesharing Proceeding AFIPS 68 Fall Part II Proceedings of the December 9 11 1968 Fall Joint Computer Conference Part II Fall Joint Computer Conference pp 1033 1042 doi 10 1145 1476706 1476722 S2CID 15577630 Honeywell Information Systems Inc 1978 Xerox Control Program Five CP V Xerox 560 and Sigma 5 6 7 9 Computers System Management Reference Manual PDF Scientific Data Systems 1969 SDS Sigma 2 3 Basic Control Monitor Reference Manual PDF El Segundo CA Scientific Data Systems a Xerox Company Modutest Systems President Gene Zeitler Shoor Rita June 16 1980 Modutest CPU emulates Xerox Sigma 9 Computerworld Retrieved August 20 2012 SIMH v4 0 19 01 Current GitHub Sigma 5 6 amp 7 simulator from Bob Supnik Rector Ken sigma cpv kit github Retrieved June 1 2023 Further reading editScientific Data Systems 1968 Sigma 5 Computer Reference Manual PDF El Segundo Calif Scientific Data Systems p 113 Honeywell Information Systems 1971 Xerox Sigma 6 Computer Reference Manual PDF Waltham Mass Honeywell Information Systems p 137 Honeywell Information Systems 1973 Xerox Sigma 7 Computer Reference Manual PDF Waltham Mass Honeywell Information Systems p 135 Xerox Data Systems 1971 Xerox Sigma 8 Computer Reference Manual PDF El Segundo Calif Xerox Data Systems p 151 Xerox Data Systems 1974 Xerox Sigma 9 Computers Reference Manual PDF El Segundo Calif Xerox Data Systems p 188 External links editOnline systems at Living Computers Museum Labs a portal into the Paul Allen collection of timesharing and interactive computers including a Xerox Sigma 9 running CP V Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SDS Sigma series amp oldid 1170712320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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