Intersil 6100

from The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
Intersil 6100
IMS 6100

   <programming> (IMS 6100) A single chip design of the {DEC}
   {PDP-8} {minicomputer}.  The old PDP-8 design was very
   strange, and if it hadn't been popular, an awkward {CPU} like
   the 6100 would never been designed.

   The 6100 was a 12-bit processor, which had three {registers}:
   the {PC}, AC (accumulator), and MQ.  All 2-operand
   instructions read AC and MQ and wrote back to AC.  It had a
   12-bit {address bus}, limiting {RAM} to only 4K.  Memory
   references were 7-bit, offset either from address 0, or from
   the PC page base address (PC AND 7600 oct).

   It had no {stack}.  Subroutines stored the {PC} in the first
   word of the subroutine code itself, so {recursion} required
   fancy programming.

   4K RAM was pretty much hopeless for general purpose use.  The
   6102 support chip (included in the 6120) added 3 address
   lines, expanding memory to 32K the same way that the PDP-8/E
   expanded the PDP-8.  Two registers, IFR and DFR, held the page
   for instructions and data respectively (IFR was always used
   until a data address was detected).  At the top of the 4K
   page, the PC wrapped back to 0, so the last instruction on a
   page had to load a new value into the IFR if execution was to
   continue.

   (2003-04-04)
    

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