RDOS
DeveloperData General
OS familyData General
Working stateDiscontinued
Source modelClosed source
Initial release1970; 56ย years agoย (1970)
Latest releaseRDOS 7.5 / 1986; 40ย years agoย (1986)
Supported platformsNOVA, microNOVA, Eclipse
Kernel typeMonolithic
Default
user interface
Command-line interface
Licenserestricted, per machine

The Data General RDOS (Real-time Disk Operating System) is a real-time operating system released in 1970.[1] The software was bundled with the company's popular Nova and Eclipse minicomputers.[2]

Overview

edit

RDOS is capable of multitasking, with the ability to run up to 32 tasks (similar to the current term threads) simultaneously on each of two grounds (foreground and background) within a 64ย KB memory space. Later versions of RDOS are compatible with Data General's 16-bit Eclipse minicomputer line.[3]

A cut-down version of RDOS, without real-time background and foreground capability but still capable of running multiple threads and multi-user Data General Business Basic, is called Data General Diskette Operating System[4] (DG-DOS or nowโ€”somewhat confusinglyโ€”simply DOS); another related operating system is RTOS, a Real-Time Operating System for diskless environments. RDOS on microNOVA-based "Micro Products" micro-minicomputers is sometimes called DG/RDOS.[5]

RDOS was superseded in the early 1980s by Data General's AOS family of operating systems, including AOS/VS and MP/AOS (MP/OS on smaller systems).

Commands

edit

The following list of commands are supported by the RDOS/DOS CLI.[6]

  • ALGOL
  • APPEND
  • ASM
  • BASIC
  • BATCH
  • BOOT
  • BPUNCH
  • BUILD
  • CCONT
  • CDIR
  • CHAIN
  • CHATR
  • CHLAT
  • CLEAR
  • CLG
  • COPY
  • CPART
  • CRAND
  • CREATE
  • DEB
  • DELETE
  • DIR
  • DISK
  • DUMP
  • EDIT
  • ENDLOG
  • ENPAT
  • EQUIV
  • EXFG
  • FDUMP
  • FGND
  • FILCOM
  • FLOAD
  • FORT
  • FORTRAN
  • FPRINT
  • GDIR
  • GMEM
  • GSYS
  • GTOD
  • INIT
  • LDIR
  • LFE
  • LINK
  • LIST
  • LOAD
  • LOG
  • MAC
  • MCABOOT
  • MDIR
  • MEDIT
  • MESSAGE
  • MKABS
  • MKSAVE
  • MOVE
  • NSPEED
  • OEDIT
  • OVLDR
  • PATCH
  • POP
  • PRINT
  • PUNCH
  • RDOSSORT
  • RELEASE
  • RENAME
  • REPLACE
  • REV
  • RLDR
  • SAVE
  • SDAY
  • SEDIT
  • SMEM
  • SPDIS
  • SPEBL
  • SPEED
  • SPKILL
  • STOD
  • SYSGEN
  • TPRINT
  • TUOFF
  • TUON
  • TYPE
  • VFU
  • XFER

Antitrust lawsuit

edit

In the late 1970s, Data General was sued (under the Sherman and Clayton antitrust acts)[7] by competitors for their practice of bundling RDOS with the Data General Nova or Eclipse minicomputer.[8] When Data General introduced the Data General Nova, a company called Digidyne wanted to use its RDOS operating system on its own hardware clone. Data General refused to license their software and claimed their "bundling rights". In 1985, courts including the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled against Data General in a case called Digidyne v. Data General. The Supreme Court of the United States declined to hear Data General's appeal, although Justices White and Blackmun would have heard it. The precedent set by the lower courts eventually forced Data General to license the operating system because restricting the software to only Data General's hardware was an illegal tying arrangement.[9]

In 1999, Data General was taken over by EMC Corporation.[10]

References

edit
  1. ^ The Electronic Engineer: EE. Chilton Company. 1969.
  2. ^ Computer Law Reporter. Computer Law Reporter Incorporated. 1986.
  3. ^ Sidney W. Frost; James C. Dunlap (1983). Automated law office systems: a survey of today's tools and techniques. West Pub. Co.
  4. ^ "Data General Adds Diskette System". Computerworld. IDG Enterprise: 18โ€“. 9 July 1975. ISSNย 0010-4841.
  5. ^ Trade Cases. Commerce Clearing House. 1987.
  6. ^ RDOS/DOS Command Line Interpreter User's Manual
  7. ^ Santa Clara computer and high-technology law journal. 1986.
  8. ^ "In Re Data General Corp. Antitrust Litigation, 529 F. Supp. 801 (N.D. Cal. 1981)". Justia. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  9. ^ Myers, Gary (November 1985). "Tying Arrangements and the Computer Industry: Digidyne Corp. vs. Data General". Duke Law Journal. 1985 (5): 1027โ€“1056. doi:10.2307/1372482. JSTORย 1372482.
  10. ^ InfoWorld Media Group, Inc. (16 August 1999). "InfoWorld". InfoWorld: The Newspaper for the Microcomputing Community. InfoWorld Media Group, Inc.: 12โ€“. ISSNย 0199-6649.
edit

๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Data General

more reliable in the field. Combined with Data General RDOS (DG/RDOS) and programming languages like Data General Business Basic, Novas provided a multi-user

Symbolic link

in minicomputer operating systems from DEC,[citation needed] and Data General's RDOS. Symbolic links may be implemented in a context-dependent or variable

Data General AOS

10:12:07 **** * LIST FILE EMPTY, WILL NOT BE PRINTED **** Data General RDOS CEO (Data General) "Dgย :: Softwareย :: Aosย :: 093-000198-01 AOS Library File

Data General Nova

designed to run under RDOS and prints the string โ€œHello, world.โ€ on the console. ; a "hello, world" program for Nova running RDOS ; uses PCHAR system call

RDOS

RDOS may refer to: Regional District of Okanagan-Similkameen, a regional district of British Columbia Data General RDOS, a real-time operating system

List of command-line interpreters

on the MCP operating system Conversational Monitor System (VM/CMS) Data General RDOS and AOS CLI DIGITAL Command Language (OpenVMS, various PDP-11 O/Ses

Data General Eclipse

at boot time. Once booted, it acted as a status and control console via RDOS station software. The PDP-11 included an almost identical Commercial Instruction

Command-line interface

abbreviations are valid. Keyword values are inside parentheses. Data General's CLI under their RDOS, AOS, etc. operating systems, as well as the version of CLI