All;
I’m making steady progress on rehabilitating my MDS-230. All the Kings horses and all the Kings men are hard at work :->.
Looking ahead a bit, what approaches are people using to transfer software from the fufu archive to their ISIS-based equipment?
Is there any how-to documentation that can guide me in setting up such a path once I have ISIS II operational (along with some serial ports)?
Thank you,
paul
Hi Paul,
If you have no boot floppies at all use my utility IMG2MDS see here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XonRevJNwek&t=1129s
all is under MartynV/img2mds on the Google Drive if you want everything.
To transfer the files I’d suggest using Jack’s USBJ utilities again on the Google Drive under Jack/USB Utilities
You can compile Kermit, but it’s quite slow unfortunately and only the earliest version is practical to use speed wise.
The other option is to collect all the files together and use Mark’s utilities to create a disk image of those files using MKIDSK
I’ve been experimenting with Greaseweazle, following on from Jon’s earlier experiments and it works really well and can successfully produce M2FM floppies very quickly. The source flux files need to be created from working M2FM floppies however. I’m probably going to create a library of working .scp images for Greaseweazle and will make these available. If you are using 3.5” floppies only the very cheap F1 “Blue Pill” Greaseweazle is required and I can supply any images you may require.
Bye
Martyn.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "intel-devsys" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to
intel-devsys...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/1dd401d73e6e%24746b6940%245d423bc0%24%40gmail.com.
Hi Mark,
That’s interesting I tried FTRANS over Christmas after your suggestion and it’s really quick between the MDS-800 and the iPDS.
I was thinking of creating a Windows FTRANS with Python maybe and then putting an FTRANS front end on IMG2MDS.
If you’ve got any code I can help you test would be happy to give it a go.
Thanks
Martyn.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/VI1PR02MB409312C776694E5E072F01EBFC5D9%40VI1PR02MB4093.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com.
Hi Mark,
The scp file that Greaseweazle creates from M2FM floppies are fine for disk duplication, however the header is screwed up and nothing currently I can find will extract the files even after modifying the header.
You can however take a iPDS or MDS-IV floppy in .imd format and convert to .scp with HxC and produce a viable bootable floppy.
If you want some .scp files let me know.
Bye
Martyn.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/VI1PR02MB409315B2DA70978C7E23E3A5FC5D9%40VI1PR02MB4093.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com.
Thank you Martyn. Nice video. Maybe I’ll be your MDS II tester later this year.
Where are Jacks’ USB utilities documented? These depend on the Hobbytronics board, correct?
WRT “collect all the files together”, what archives would contain such?
I am planning for 3.5” drives for primary-use so the Greaseweazle approach sounds interesting.
Apologies for the fufu reference; relates to an entirely different topic!
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/DB8PR01MB5659116697B71FA80DFB0C1CC15D9%40DB8PR01MB5659.eurprd01.prod.exchangelabs.com.
Mark,
What does that buy us?
Bill
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/VI1PR02MB409315B2DA70978C7E23E3A5FC5D9%40VI1PR02MB4093.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com.
Bill;
If I understand correctly, that buys us the ability to directly generate 3.5” floppy disks (using Greaseweazle and a conventional 1.44 MB 3.5” FDD) that can be used by the MDS 202 DD disk controller (via the S800 adapter, or equivalent) in lieu of 8” FDD. IMO that’s a good idea from the standpoint of 8” media (and drive) preservation. Not that I don’t love both from BITD, but I am a bit concerned about depending on them long-term as my daily-driver. Given the M2FM format we don’t really have any other practical media/drive choice with the 202 controller, do we?
Mark has my support for enhancing the MDS “media management” ecosystem :-}! Thank you.
-----
paul
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/e40bb040-9aff-16ed-ae21-c26260e04441%40nj7p.info.
Isn’t then your (legacy) procedure equivalent to the img2mds procedure developed/documented by Martyn?
See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XonRevJNwek
He uses TeraTerm: https://deramp.com/downloads/teraterm.zip
Where can I acquire a compiled copy of Kermit for ISIS II? I do find these resources:
http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/c/mdsmit.bwr
http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ftp/c/mdsker.doc
And then at http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/archive.html I found these:
| |||||||||
ISIS Kermit |
| 1985/11/01 | P/LM | Intel MDS 80 | |||||
ISIS Kermit | 3 | 1987/04/06 | P/LM-86 | Intel Series II, III, IV computers with ISIS | |||||
I’d need to figure out how to compile that. And I wonder just how compatible that v3 implementation would be with a more recent PC-side implementation.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/608dbfe8.1c69fb81.df121.618dSMTPIN_ADDED_MISSING%40gmr-mx.google.com.
All,
It might be worth pointing out that IMG2MDS creates a bootable disk with no need for anything other than a serial cable. After keying in a simple bootloader to down load a full hex loader both baud rate configuration and IMG2MDS itself can be downloaded. Once IMG2MDS is run it can format a blank disk and then generate a bootable disk by transferring the disk image via Xmodem. All very simple hopefuly. I’ve had reports back from several viewers of my Youtube channel that the process has been successful and I use IMG2MDS frequently to create floppies from Mark’s archive.
Paul,
I can probably supply a working Kermit in a disk image perhaps along with the USB Utilities, this would get you going fairly quickly. I should have access to an MDS II in a month or so and this will make things easier for me to support MDS II/III users.
Bye
Martyn.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/608e57cc.1c69fb81.42c77.d336SMTPIN_ADDED_MISSING%40gmr-mx.google.com.
Hi Paul,
When you run any of the USBJ utilities they spit out a helpful usage message. You can see these in the source code of course.
Yes, you need the Hobbytronics board with the USB Flash Drive Firmware.
Greaseweazle is by far the simplest approach as nothing is needed other than your choice of Greaseweazel as I said before the F1 model is the cheapest to build, but there’s plenty of versions available quite cheaply just have a look at the Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/greaseweazle
and PM Keir with your chosen model.
I can generate any SCP image you want quite quickly and within 2 mins you’ll have a bootable floppy ready to go.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/1e8501d73ea6%24a86bf6a0%24f943e3e0%24%40gmail.com.
Paul,
All my real systems use 3.5- or 8-inch disks. Been doing that since 2014. Not sure why we need greasweazel in the mix. Guess I am just old and confused...
Bill
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/1f7c01d73f1a%247d6b69d0%2478423d70%24%40gmail.com.
Martyn
Firstly sorry my ipad changed your name last time.
Looking at IMG2MDS, is there any reason you don’t use the inbuilt R (read hex file command) in the MDS monitor. You would need to assign the READER logical device to match the same physical port as the CONSOLE logical device, but it should read in a hex file directly.
As IMG2MDS is reasonably short (4k) you should be able to load it directly.
Mark
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/VI1PR02MB409346632CBB262809045940FC5C9%40VI1PR02MB4093.eurprd02.prod.outlook.com.
Hi Mark,
I have used the R command in the monitor, unfortunately however it has a couple of draw backs in that you need two serial ports to use it on an MDS-800 which in standard form it doesn’t have (second serial is TTY 110 Baud Current Loop ) and it expects to receive data immediately otherwise it exits. The only way to get it to work is to pad the front of the Hex file with nulls and then start sending the file before entering the R command, which is a bit fiddly having to swap quickly between to serial terminal screens. Obviously if used as intended it starts the paper tape device automatically and then all would work smoothly.
Thanks for you optimisation hints, definitely worth considering. I think the biggest hold up is the third hand implementation of Xmodem as you suggested before using the FTRANS protocol would be way quicker.
As you point out the sector skew isn’t correct as at the time I couldn’t find the skew layout information, so I just experimented to get the fastest transfer of data. Oddly enough the floppies created with IMG2MDS actually boot faster than a regular ISIS skewed floppy. Of course this doesn’t mean they read or write faster over the entire surface as I’ve never attempted to check that and I’m sure Intel knew what they were doing !
Currently IMG2MDS can’t handle SD disks, you have to pad out the IMG file before sending them. Once I’ve got a single density controller I may well add support but I’m not sure how useful this would be.
Bye
Martyn.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/002801d74003%24664a1690%2432de43b0%24%40btinternet.com.
Hi Bill,
Greaseweazle doesn’t emulate a floppy drive it just allows you to create and restore disk images.
The main advantages are:
1) It’s dirt cheap and well supported
2) If you are producing non M2FM floppies you can convert your IMD file to SCP (with HxC) and then create your bootable floppy directly using Greaseweazle and a suitable floppy drive. This obviously avoids the need for an old PC with an unobtanium floppy controller with the support you require.
3) M2FM bootable floppies can be created very quickly (2 min’s or so) from an SCP file prepared from a floppy prepared on a working MDS system.
I find it useful to backup floppies I create with Greaseweazle as then if I wreck them I can very quickly recreate them saving all the time and effort in creating the original.
As an example if both you and Roger had a Greaseweazle, Roger could create your CP/M 1.4 image in 4 minutes or so upload it to the google drive and you could download it and recreate and exact copy in around 2 minutes. Does that not sound attractive ?
Bye
Martyn.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/da410599-227b-d218-67fd-64320c2fb2f3%40nj7p.info.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "intel-devsys" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to intel-devsys...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/9845eb3b-4156-790e-6162-0db9bc48111d%40retrotechnology.com.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "intel-devsys" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to intel-devsys+unsub...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/intel-devsys/80ad746a-353b-514a-458f-cdda430a5b85%40retrotechnology.com.
-----Original Message-----
From: intel-...@googlegroups.com [mailto:intel-...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Bill Beech (NJ7P)
Sent: 03 May 2021 22:41
To: intel-...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: {SPAM?} Re: intel-devsys ISIS II file transfer utilities
Oops! I meant "shot". I have ordered all the parts I need to build one.
Bill
On 5/3/2021 2:24 PM, Bill Beech (NJ7P) wrote:
> Martyn, Herb,
>
> This appears to be a modern Catweasle replacement. I suffer the same
> afflictions as Herb, but I am intrigued by this board. What bothers
> me is finding a real "Blue Pill" amoungst all the CHICOM clones. I
> am giving it a shit!
>
> Bill
>
> On 5/3/2021 12:36 PM, Herb Johnson wrote:
>> Martyn, I find myself, these Greaseweazels are just "UN-attractive"
>> to me, nothing personal to you. They are to me, modern technology
>> that my old-person vintage computing skills, and shaky hands and weak
>> eyes, are of no help to deploy. No old person likes to say such
>> things, but it's a consideration that modern younger people don't
>> often have in mind.
>>
>> I can't find a site to buy one of these puppies "cold", ready to go.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "intel-devsys" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to intel-devsys...@googlegroups.com.