ND-Butterfly workstation
ND-Butterfly is an Ericsson PC with a ND-110 CPU inside, plugged into an ISA slot.[1]
BUTTERFLY-110 (also called OWS-110) is a complete system, comprising a version of the ND-110CX computer (called the ND-110PCX), fitted into the enclosure of an IBM-compatible PC-AT computer.[2] Information in Butterfly-110 is freely interchangeable between the PC and ND operating systems, i.e. data created under the PC system may then be used by the ND system and vice versa. a centronics parallel printer port is available as standard. Options include a 4-port serial communications controller, which may be used to connect ND-compatible terminals to the ND-110PCX part of the workstation, making a Butterfly Teamstation environment.
System components
Standard hardware
The system unit has a floppy disk and a 40 MByte hard disk, one rs-232 port and one parallel port. The Colour Display Unit uses EGA graphics. The Butterfly keyboard is NOTIS and PC compatible. A mouse is included.
PC features
Features of the PC include:
- Intel 80286 microprocessor
- eight I/O slots
- 512 kbytes memory (normally expanded to 640 kbytes, by donating 128 kbytes of ND-memory to PC-DOS)
- one RS-232 serial port
- one Centronics-compatible parallel printer port
- one 40-45 Mb Winchester disk with fast access time
- one 1.2Mb / 360 Kb floppy disk
- a keyswitch
ND-110PCX
The ND-110PCX computer comprises a two-board assembly (CPU board and Local Bus board) which plug into one slot in the PC expansion card cage.
CPU board
- processor
- memory management
- microprogram control
- console port
Local Bus Board
- Input / Output control (program I/O)
- 1 Mbyte dynamic random access memory, with option to extend by a further 1 Mbyte.
- Real-time clock
- HDLC, up to 153.6 kbaud
- Interrupt system
- PC bus interface
Display Unit
The colour display unit offers full 16-colour from a palette of 64 colours, on a 12-inch or 14-inch crt. The display area provides 25 lines of 80 characters per line. Graphic resolution may be 640x350 pixels or 320x200 pixels.
Keyboard
The keyboard combines functionality of a standard IBM-PC keyboard with that of a ND-NOTIS keyboard. It provides "soft" PUSH-keys, programmable by the user to hold multi-key sequences. It includes a mouse interface/port, and a bar code reader interface / port, for connection of a wand (pen unit).
Operating system software
MS-DOS for the PC
Additional Butterfly-110 programs run under the PC's MS-DOS to handle communication between the PC's 80286 microprocessor and the ND-110PCX, and to accommodate the System Manager and associated software which enables the PC and ND-110PCX to share the same display, keyboard, disk storage, printer, etc.
SINTRAN III/VSX for the ND-110PCX
This is extended to handle the integration of the ND-110PCX with the PC environment, particularly with regard to its method of communication with the PC (IOX simulation), and provision of new Servers for handling tasks between the ND's SINTRAN and PC's MS-DOS operating systems.
Basic PC software
- Tutorial: a "getting started" self-teach aid
- PC-Diagnostics for Butterfly-110
- Display controller (EGA) utilities
ND applications software
- NOTIS-WP
- User Environment for Butterfly-110
- DO system for Butterfly-110
- COSMOS (with server for asynchronous line)
- Telefix files
- Backup-System
- File-Manager
- NOTIS-DS/ID for Butterfly-110
- ND-Diagnostics for Butterfly-110
Hardware options
Communications Controller board
The InterQuadram Communications Controller board (QuadPort-AT) extends the Butterfly-110 with up to four more terminals. The card itself has one serial port and one parallel port on it. A four-port serial connection box is connected via a cable to this board, providing four more serial ports. The ports are used as follows:
- Serial port 1 (native to the PC) is the "COM1" port in DOS. It is taken away from DOS by the Butterfly software which runs on the PC, and used for ND's COSMOS asynchronous communication facility.
- Serial port 2 (on the QuadPort-AT board) is redirected by the Butterfly software to "COM2" in DOS.
- Parallel port 1 (native to the PC) is the "LPT1" port in DOS. The print-spooling software shares this port between the PC's DOS and ND's SINTRAN operating systems.
- Parallel port 2 (on the QuadPort-AT board) is the "LPT2" port in DOS. It can only be used by DOS.
- serial ports on connection box. Any serial device supported by the software running on the ND-110PCX may be connected to these ports - ND-compatible terminals, or serial printer.
extra 1 Mbyte RAM
Gives a total of 2 Mbytes RAM.
HDLC communications
up to 153.6 kbaud.
Software options
ND software
- Accounting system
- Job execution control
- Symbolic debugger
- BRF linker
- Subsystem package
- Subsystem package II
References and sources
- ↑ Norsk Data Document ND–30.094 OWS System Reference Guide
- ↑ Norsk Data Library, Hardware - Butterfly-110, Technical Reference Manual