There is a User Manual Reconstruction as a set of HTML pages. This has all of the text reconstructed as a modern document from which you can copy and paste. | There is a set of User Manual Facsimile pages, containing images of each page of the original work, cleaned up and squared up. | |||
There is a User Manual Reconstruction (6.97MB, 41 minutes) as a PDF document. This has all of the text reconstructed as a modern document from which you can copy and paste. | There is a complete User Manual Facsimile (8.69MB, 51 minutes) as a single PDF document. By printing this document on a printer capable of two-sided printing you will have a faithfull (if slightly enlarged) facsimile of the original work. | |||
(You can download a free PDF reader from www.adobe.com, called Acrobat Reader.) | You can get a scanned version of the II.0 User Manual from the website of Hans Otten, http://www.hansotten.com/, in the section Pascal Compilers. On this website the original page images, scanned by Hans from the original manual, on which this reconstruction is based, are available. | |||
There is an I/O Manual Reconstruction as a set of HTML pages. This has all of the text reconstructed as a modern document from which you can copy and paste. | There is a set of I/O Manual Facsimile pages, containing images of each page of the original work, cleaned up and squared up. | |||
There is an I/O Manual Reconstruction (330kB, 2 minutes) as a PDF document. This has all of the text reconstructed as a modern document from which you can copy and paste. | There is a complete I/O Manual Facsimile (2.55MB, 15 minutes) as a single PDF document. By printing this document on a printer capable of two-sided printing you will have a faithfull (if slightly enlarged) facsimile of the original work. | |||
You can get a scanned photocopy of the II.0 I/O manual from BitSavers.org. This PDF file contains the original page images on which this reconstruction is based. | ||||
You are allowed to download (73.8MB, 7 hours 10 minutes) and burn a copy the CD-Rom. See the How To page for instructions for some popular CD-Rom burning programs. | UCSD p-System Cross Compiler: You can cross compile your UCSD Pascal code on Unix to create p-Machine object code. By using a cross compiler you can boot-strap a native system by first cross compiling, and then re-compiling with the native compiler. | |||
UCSD p-System File System: These tools allow you to create and manipulate UCSD p-System disk images. You can add files to, and extract files from, UCSD p-System disk images. You can even mount UCSD p-System disk images as Linux file systems, with automatic transparent text format conversion in both directions. | ||||
UCSD p-System Virtual Machine: You can use this virtual machine (p-code interpreter) to run your UCSD p-code files on Linux or Unix. It has broad support for opcodes not present in all implementations. It even emulates Turtle Graphics using X11. | ||||
This project is managed using Aegis. The Aegis repository for this project is available. | The UCSD p-System Operating System project contains the II.0 source files (and some bug fixes) plus a Makefile that uses the cross compiler to build the sources, and the file system tools to build working disk images that can be executed using the virtual machine. |