• FLEX Anyone?

    From jlrcapital@gmail.com@21:1/5 to John Crane on Sun Jan 27 03:03:29 2019
    On Sunday, September 26, 2010 at 4:16:39 AM UTC-5, John Crane wrote:
    Any FLEX users out there?

    -J

    This is a VERY old thread, but I would love to start this topic up again. Anyone still out there??

    =AJ

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  • From Andy Valencia@21:1/5 to jlrcapital@gmail.com on Sun Jan 27 07:34:59 2019
    jlrcapital@gmail.com writes:
    On Sunday, September 26, 2010 at 4:16:39 AM UTC-5, John Crane wrote:
    Any FLEX users out there?
    This is a VERY old thread, but I would love to start this topic up again. Anyone still out there??

    Hi! Yes, still here. No, haven't run even a virtual 6809 in a terribly
    long time.... :-(

    Andy

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  • From mightyframect@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Andy Valencia on Sun Jan 27 12:47:21 2019
    On Sunday, January 27, 2019 at 9:35:25 AM UTC-6, Andy Valencia wrote:

    On Sunday, September 26, 2010 at 4:16:39 AM UTC-5, John Crane wrote:
    Any FLEX users out there?
    This is a VERY old thread, but I would love to start this topic up again. Anyone still out there??

    Hi! Yes, still here. No, haven't run even a virtual 6809 in a terribly
    long time.... :-(

    Andy


    Thanks for replying, Andy...well, to me, the good news is, that you did work with FLEX at least once upon a time, and probably, hopefully remember a bit about it. For me, this is my first attempt ever.

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  • From idevgames@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 28 05:31:53 2019
    I've always wanted to try Flex. I have the yellow thick manual some place. Carlos

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  • From Jim@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 29 07:12:06 2019
    Actually there has been a fair amount of activity in the past few months on the flex mailing list.

    I struggled through getting flexemu working on a machine and communicating through the serial port to a real dumb terminal. A couple of people on the list got involved and one figured out a problem with the flexemu code that has been fixed.

    So while I don't yet have a 6809 machine (I started on the 6502 back in 1980), I do now have an old PC with a dumb terminal that looks for all intents and purposes like a very fast 6809-based FLEX machine.

    Thanks,
    Jim W4JBM

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  • From Geo@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 29 15:23:37 2019
    On Tue, 29 Jan 2019 07:12:06 -0800 (PST), Jim <jim30109@gmail.com>
    wrote:

    Actually there has been a fair amount of activity in the past few months on the flex mailing list.


    Def worth subscribing to the list:- http://www.flexusergroup.com/flexusergroup/fufusub.htm

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  • From cfo@21:1/5 to jlrcapital on Thu Jan 31 11:34:15 2019
    On Sun, 27 Jan 2019 03:03:29 -0800, jlrcapital wrote:

    On Sunday, September 26, 2010 at 4:16:39 AM UTC-5, John Crane wrote:
    Any FLEX users out there?

    -J

    This is a VERY old thread, but I would love to start this topic up
    again. Anyone still out there??

    =AJ

    I Ran flex back in the early 80' , and recently (2016) discovered , that
    you can build a real Flex (09) machine with a $15 FPGA board.
    A PCB and an external Ram , total cost less than 50$.

    Neal C. On Retrobrew have done a VHDL implementation of Grant S'
    multicomp , that targets a MC6809 , running Flex and/or OS/9

    Have a look here , or give Neal a "ping"

    https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org/forum/index.php?t=thread&frm_id=1&

    https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org/doku.php? id=boards:sbc:multicomp:cycloneii-c:start

    Neal is the driving force for the "Multicomp 6809" Flex & OS/9 https://www.retrobrewcomputers.org/forum/index.php? t=msg&th=346&goto=5744&#msg_5744


    Ps: Watch out for wrapped url's

    /Bingo

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  • From Dave McGuire@21:1/5 to jlrcapital@gmail.com on Tue Mar 5 23:47:28 2019
    On 1/27/19 6:03 AM, jlrcapital@gmail.com wrote:
    Any FLEX users out there?

    This is a VERY old thread, but I would love to start this topic up again. Anyone still out there??

    Strong interest here, but not enough hours in a day. I used UniFLEX
    in high school and would really like to get that running on something
    too. Bob Applegate (of Franklin Computer fame) in NJ makes and sells
    nice bare-board SS-50 bus hardware under the name Corsham Tech; I have
    some of his stuff...perhaps that would be a good place to start.

    -Dave

    --
    Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
    New Kensington, PA

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  • From idevgames@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 6 05:24:21 2019
    I'd like to build grant Searle's 6809 SBC and run Flex. http://searle.hostei.com/grant/Multicomp/

    Carlos

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  • From idevgames@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Wed Mar 6 05:25:30 2019
    If I recall, OS9 came out after Flex. Is that right? Any advantages that Flex might have over OS9, even if it was released before OS9?

    Thanks
    Carlos

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  • From Jim@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 11 06:55:59 2019
    I have Grant's multicomp and have the same thing on my to do list Carlos.

    I have the card holder and the VGA socket ready to wire up (my original build has the serial port, composite video, and the PS/2 keyboard--I've been using it as an OSI C1P with some modification to the software Grant has for the FPGA
    UK101).

    From what I've seen, FLEX seems like a fairly straight forward and stable OS. My impression is that OS/9 adds a lot of capability but also a lot of complexity. NitrOS is still being actively developed but the documentation seems sparse and there are a
    lot of things that users seem to put up with.

    I enjoy most of my "work in progress" things, but getting wrapped up in things others are working on can be frustrating. :-)

    So far on the emulator I'm using, FLEX just works.

    Thanks,
    Jim W4JBM

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  • From kslinux@gmail.com@21:1/5 to idev...@gmail.com on Thu Mar 14 11:59:44 2019
    On Wednesday, March 6, 2019 at 2:25:31 PM UTC+1, idev...@gmail.com wrote:
    If I recall, OS9 came out after Flex. Is that right? Any advantages that Flex might have over OS9, even if it was released before OS9?

    Thanks
    Carlos

    Hi Carlos. Both have their special characteristics. OS9 is somewhat more Unix like in its design. FLEX came first, it is very straightforward and robust. I believe, if you want to work more to the bare metal, FLEX is the better choice. I am not sure
    about the memory layout of OS9. (It exist as OS9 level 1 and OS9 level 2). FLEX resides from about $c000 to about $cfff for the DOS part and from $d000 to $dfff for the FMS part. Higher up you find IO, mostly in the $exxx page and finally $fxxx for the
    special hardware and ROM.

    Personally, I have a huge lot of hours spend with UniFLEX :-)

    best regards,

    Kees

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  • From kslinux@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Dave McGuire on Thu Mar 14 12:15:35 2019
    On Wednesday, March 6, 2019 at 6:05:02 AM UTC+1, Dave McGuire wrote:
    On 1/27/19 6:03 AM, jlrcapital@gmail.com wrote:
    Any FLEX users out there?

    This is a VERY old thread, but I would love to start this topic up again. Anyone still out there??

    Strong interest here, but not enough hours in a day. I used UniFLEX
    in high school and would really like to get that running on something
    too. Bob Applegate (of Franklin Computer fame) in NJ makes and sells
    nice bare-board SS-50 bus hardware under the name Corsham Tech; I have
    some of his stuff...perhaps that would be a good place to start.

    -Dave

    --
    Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
    New Kensington, PA


    Hello Dave,

    It may be coincidence but a couple of friends and myself are reviving their 6809 UniFLEX systems. :-). In the 80's I designed hardware that would run UniFLEX on Eurocards and is used by some others. A few of those systems still exist today. I have one :-)
    . A friend, now is retired to Thailand, is also busy getting his system back on. The hardware was _very_ reliable, the only weak point were the hard-disks in those years. With 24x7 operation the system failed _only_ after about a year because the hard
    disk (or Xebec controller) gave problems.

    I am busy to re-design my boards, with better memory mapping and system protection. 1MB memory (dynamic ram) took a whole eurocard, now it is one or two components. I am designing an IDE interface card as well. (Further plans: IO processor, Network
    interface).

    I plan to place everything, when working, on my Github repository. That includes board designs, schematics and software.

    TSC was really good in elegant and efficient programming. We ported a _lot_ of Unix utilities to Uniflex 6809.

    best regards,

    Kees Schoenmakers

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  • From idevgames@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Fri Mar 15 14:42:47 2019
    Carlos Camacho <idevgames@gmail.com>
    5:35 PM (6 minutes ago)
    to comp.sys.m6809

    I'm keen to learn more about UniFlex. Anything more than WikiPedia available?

    With Flex, was it 100% character based or did some develop a graphical interface like multiview on OS9 II?

    I have a reference to two files on my local drive:
    FloppyMaint (???)
    TSC (name???)

    What could those two be?

    I have a CoCo to run Flex on... has anyone ever burned Flex to an Eprom to have the OS running immediately...like Radio Shack DOS? Can that be done?

    Last question... is there a complete list of companies/tools for development?

    I have the following on a local drive and wanted to check if I am missing any to check out..

    Assembly
    CRASMB
    TSC Assembler
    Windrush

    BASIC
    TSC BASIC
    SWTPC

    C
    Dyna C
    Introl C
    McCosh C
    Small C

    Cobol
    Cobol-Compiler

    Forth
    X-Forth
    CC Forth

    Fortran
    Fortran 77
    TSC Fortran

    Pascal
    Dynasoft Pascal
    Lucidata Pascal
    Omegasoft Pascal
    TSC Pascal

    Thanks
    Carlos

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  • From kslinux@gmail.com@21:1/5 to idev...@gmail.com on Sat Mar 16 02:15:22 2019
    Hello Carlos,

    I'll try to answer to my best knowledge

    On Friday, March 15, 2019 at 10:42:48 PM UTC+1, idev...@gmail.com wrote:
    Carlos Camacho <idevgames@gmail.com>
    5:35 PM (6 minutes ago)
    to comp.sys.m6809

    I'm keen to learn more about UniFlex. Anything more than WikiPedia available?


    http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/tsc/uniflex_68xxx/The_UniFLEX_Operating_System_1980.pdf

    With Flex, was it 100% character based or did some develop a graphical interface like multiview on OS9 II?

    All known hardware was indeed character based. Some had even a dedicated IO processor to handle the character IO for the OS.
    But nothing prevents _us_ with the modern hardware components to implement
    some form of graphical interface.


    I have a reference to two files on my local drive:
    FloppyMaint (???)
    TSC (name???)


    Does not ring a bell....

    What could those two be?

    I have a CoCo to run Flex on... has anyone ever burned Flex to an Eprom to have the OS running immediately...like Radio Shack DOS? Can that be done?

    As far as I know the FLEX code has also tables and such in it. That would prevent putting it in ROM, (to be honest, the booting time from disk is minimal)


    Last question... is there a complete list of companies/tools for development?

    I have the following on a local drive and wanted to check if I am missing any to check out..

    Assembly
    CRASMB
    TSC Assembler
    Windrush

    BASIC
    TSC BASIC
    SWTPC

    C
    Dyna C
    Introl C
    McCosh C
    Small C

    Cobol
    Cobol-Compiler

    Forth
    X-Forth
    CC Forth

    Fortran
    Fortran 77
    TSC Fortran

    Pascal
    Dynasoft Pascal
    Lucidata Pascal
    Omegasoft Pascal
    TSC Pascal

    Thanks
    Carlos

    Comes to mind: dynamite, debug, .
    I had most under UniFLEX as well, even running OS9 level1 as a task :-)
    Same for Motorola MDOS (exorcisor DOS).
    Some guy ported C-kermit and others ported a lot of Unix utilities to UniFLEX. I myself ported the FLEX debug to UniFLEX and it helped me a lot in those days.

    Probably a lot more pops up after closing this message :-)

    best regards

    Kees

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  • From kslinux@gmail.com@21:1/5 to ksl...@gmail.com on Sat Mar 16 02:19:03 2019
    On Saturday, March 16, 2019 at 10:15:23 AM UTC+1, ksl...@gmail.com wrote:
    Hello Carlos,

    I'll try to answer to my best knowledge

    On Friday, March 15, 2019 at 10:42:48 PM UTC+1, idev...@gmail.com wrote:
    Carlos Camacho <idevgames@gmail.com>
    5:35 PM (6 minutes ago)
    to comp.sys.m6809

    I'm keen to learn more about UniFlex. Anything more than WikiPedia available?


    http://www.bitsavers.org/pdf/tsc/uniflex_68xxx/The_UniFLEX_Operating_System_1980.pdf

    With Flex, was it 100% character based or did some develop a graphical interface like multiview on OS9 II?

    All known hardware was indeed character based. Some had even a dedicated IO processor to handle the character IO for the OS.
    But nothing prevents _us_ with the modern hardware components to implement some form of graphical interface.


    I have a reference to two files on my local drive:
    FloppyMaint (???)
    TSC (name???)


    Does not ring a bell....

    What could those two be?

    I have a CoCo to run Flex on... has anyone ever burned Flex to an Eprom to have the OS running immediately...like Radio Shack DOS? Can that be done?

    As far as I know the FLEX code has also tables and such in it. That would prevent putting it in ROM, (to be honest, the booting time from disk is minimal)


    Last question... is there a complete list of companies/tools for development?

    I have the following on a local drive and wanted to check if I am missing any to check out..

    Assembly
    CRASMB
    TSC Assembler
    Windrush

    BASIC
    TSC BASIC
    SWTPC

    C
    Dyna C
    Introl C
    McCosh C
    Small C

    Cobol
    Cobol-Compiler

    Forth
    X-Forth
    CC Forth

    Fortran
    Fortran 77
    TSC Fortran

    Pascal
    Dynasoft Pascal
    Lucidata Pascal
    Omegasoft Pascal
    TSC Pascal

    Thanks
    Carlos

    Comes to mind: dynamite, debug, .
    I had most under UniFLEX as well, even running OS9 level1 as a task :-)
    Same for Motorola MDOS (exorcisor DOS).
    Some guy ported C-kermit and others ported a lot of Unix utilities to UniFLEX.
    I myself ported the FLEX debug to UniFLEX and it helped me a lot in those days.

    Probably a lot more pops up after closing this message :-)

    best regards

    Kees

    O yeah, I tried Flexemu https://aladur.neocities.org/flexemu/ and
    I am very satisfied with it and the author is very helpful to answer questions and adding features.

    Kees

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  • From idevgames@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Sat Mar 16 06:40:31 2019
    Oops left some crucial bits out...

    I have a folder called 'Flex Windowing'
    In it, I have these subfolders...
    FloppyMaint (???)
    TSC (name???)

    TSC is a software company. So perhaps these two are utilities of some sort for windowing? I can zip it and email them.

    Thanks for info.

    Perhaps I should join the Flex mailing list.

    Carlos

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  • From Dave McGuire@21:1/5 to kslinux@gmail.com on Tue Mar 19 17:36:10 2019
    On 3/14/19 3:15 PM, kslinux@gmail.com wrote:
    Strong interest here, but not enough hours in a day. I used UniFLEX
    in high school and would really like to get that running on something
    too. Bob Applegate (of Franklin Computer fame) in NJ makes and sells
    nice bare-board SS-50 bus hardware under the name Corsham Tech; I have
    some of his stuff...perhaps that would be a good place to start.

    Hello Dave,

    It may be coincidence but a couple of friends and myself are reviving their 6809 UniFLEX systems. :-). In the 80's I designed hardware that would run UniFLEX on Eurocards and is used by some others. A few of those systems still exist today. I have one :
    -). A friend, now is retired to Thailand, is also busy getting his system back on. The hardware was _very_ reliable, the only weak point were the hard-disks in those years. With 24x7 operation the system failed _only_ after about a year because the hard
    disk (or Xebec controller) gave problems.

    Wow!!

    I am busy to re-design my boards, with better memory mapping and system protection. 1MB memory (dynamic ram) took a whole eurocard, now it is one or two components. I am designing an IDE interface card as well. (Further plans: IO processor, Network
    interface).

    I plan to place everything, when working, on my Github repository. That includes board designs, schematics and software.

    TSC was really good in elegant and efficient programming. We ported a _lot_ of Unix utilities to Uniflex 6809.

    Hello Kees, I am very excited to hear about your project! I will
    definitely build one (or two!) when your design is available.

    I would love to have such as system here just for me, but I'd also
    like to have one running at the Large Scale Systems Museum/Museum of
    Applied Computing Technology, which I run here in Pittsburgh.

    Good luck with your project, and please let me/us/the newsgroup/etc
    know when you post your files on Github. Thank you for working on this!

    -Dave

    --
    Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
    New Kensington, PA

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  • From kslinux@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Dave McGuire on Wed Mar 20 06:40:52 2019
    On Tuesday, March 19, 2019 at 11:05:03 PM UTC+1, Dave McGuire wrote:
    On 3/14/19 3:15 PM, kslinux@gmail.com wrote:
    Strong interest here, but not enough hours in a day. I used UniFLEX
    in high school and would really like to get that running on something
    too. Bob Applegate (of Franklin Computer fame) in NJ makes and sells
    nice bare-board SS-50 bus hardware under the name Corsham Tech; I have
    some of his stuff...perhaps that would be a good place to start.

    Hello Dave,

    It may be coincidence but a couple of friends and myself are reviving their 6809 UniFLEX systems. :-). In the 80's I designed hardware that would run UniFLEX on Eurocards and is used by some others. A few of those systems still exist today. I have
    one :-). A friend, now is retired to Thailand, is also busy getting his system back on. The hardware was _very_ reliable, the only weak point were the hard-disks in those years. With 24x7 operation the system failed _only_ after about a year because the
    hard disk (or Xebec controller) gave problems.

    Wow!!

    I am busy to re-design my boards, with better memory mapping and system protection. 1MB memory (dynamic ram) took a whole eurocard, now it is one or two components. I am designing an IDE interface card as well. (Further plans: IO processor, Network
    interface).

    I plan to place everything, when working, on my Github repository. That includes board designs, schematics and software.

    TSC was really good in elegant and efficient programming. We ported a _lot_ of Unix utilities to Uniflex 6809.

    Hello Kees, I am very excited to hear about your project! I will definitely build one (or two!) when your design is available.

    I would love to have such as system here just for me, but I'd also
    like to have one running at the Large Scale Systems Museum/Museum of
    Applied Computing Technology, which I run here in Pittsburgh.

    Good luck with your project, and please let me/us/the newsgroup/etc
    know when you post your files on Github. Thank you for working on this!

    -Dave

    --
    Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
    New Kensington, PA

    Hi Dave,

    I reported you already in PM, but yes the CPU and the MON-itor boards are starting to work. I did a quick check and found that the HD63C09 CPU and the MC68B50 ACIA's work very well @ 4MHz.....
    I have a simple (MikBug alike) monitor program in use so that I can test all the hardware functions in a simple fashion. Until now they work as designed.

    Next is populating the IDE interface board and see if we can access the Harddrive. I let you know.

    best regards

    Kees

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  • From Dave McGuire@21:1/5 to kslinux@gmail.com on Fri Dec 13 08:21:20 2019
    On 3/20/19 9:40 AM, kslinux@gmail.com wrote:
    It may be coincidence but a couple of friends and myself are reviving their 6809 UniFLEX systems. :-). In the 80's I designed hardware that would run UniFLEX on Eurocards and is used by some others. A few of those systems still exist today. I have
    one :-). A friend, now is retired to Thailand, is also busy getting his system back on. The hardware was _very_ reliable, the only weak point were the hard-disks in those years. With 24x7 operation the system failed _only_ after about a year because the
    hard disk (or Xebec controller) gave problems.

    Wow!!

    I am busy to re-design my boards, with better memory mapping and system protection. 1MB memory (dynamic ram) took a whole eurocard, now it is one or two components. I am designing an IDE interface card as well. (Further plans: IO processor, Network
    interface).

    I plan to place everything, when working, on my Github repository. That includes board designs, schematics and software.

    TSC was really good in elegant and efficient programming. We ported a _lot_ of Unix utilities to Uniflex 6809.

    Hello Kees, I am very excited to hear about your project! I will
    definitely build one (or two!) when your design is available.

    I would love to have such as system here just for me, but I'd also
    like to have one running at the Large Scale Systems Museum/Museum of
    Applied Computing Technology, which I run here in Pittsburgh.

    Good luck with your project, and please let me/us/the newsgroup/etc
    know when you post your files on Github. Thank you for working on this!

    I reported you already in PM, but yes the CPU and the MON-itor boards are starting to work. I did a quick check and found that the HD63C09 CPU and the MC68B50 ACIA's work very well @ 4MHz.....
    I have a simple (MikBug alike) monitor program in use so that I can test all the hardware functions in a simple fashion. Until now they work as designed.

    Next is populating the IDE interface board and see if we can access the Harddrive. I let you know.

    Reviving an old thread, I'm wondering how this is going, I expect
    other people here are curious as well.

    -Dave

    --
    Dave McGuire, AK4HZ
    New Kensington, PA

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