Mail Archives: djgpp/1995/06/15/09:18:16
Xref: news-dnh.mv.net comp.os.msdos.djgpp:374
From: egdorf AT zaphod DOT lanl DOT gov (Skip Egdorf)
Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp
Date: 13 Jun 1995 16:48:02 GMT
Organization: Los Alamos National Laboratory
References: <DA45p3 DOT CMy AT jade DOT mv DOT net>
In article <DA45p3 DOT CMy AT jade DOT mv DOT net> kagel AT quasar DOT bloomberg DOT com writes:
For those not familiar with memory mapped I/O: I believe the facility first
appeared on DEC10 and DEC20 systems under TOPS10/20.
Ahhh, the nit-pick of the day. This was (as with so much in so many
systems) inspired by Multics, where memory mapping was the
norm. Segments (files on multics) were just parts of your virtual
memory that could be made visible by mapping them. Lots of systems
have lifted memory mapping because it is such a "right thing" for so
many problems. Multics just did it in a more complete way because it
was a basic concept from the beginning.
Skip Egdorf
hwe AT lanl DOT gov
Thanks Skip. I had a nagging suspicion when I wrote that response that Multics
was the original source of mapped I/O, but I was only certain of the DEC 10
implementation as preceeding UNIX and VMS implementations, hence the "I
believe" hedge there.
--
Art S. Kagel, kagel AT ts1 DOT bloomberg DOT com
Variety is the soul of pleasure. -- Aphra Behn
- Raw text -