If you want to go reasonable fast, most common is v.35 and rs422,
data and clock are the same differential signals but status signals
are different.
Most (old fashion out of date) T1/E1 CSU/DSU's have v.35..
Thanks for your great job with the PY router!
--P
----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Koning" <paulkoning at
comcast.net>
To: "hecnet" <hecnet at Update.UU.SE>, cctalk at
classiccmp.org
Sent: Monday, January 25, 2021 8:46:21 PM
Subject: [HECnet] DDCMP sync?
In playing with DECnet I built a DDCMP implementation
which deals with a byte
stream, normally from a UART. So that works nicely with async link DDCMP as
found in RSX and several other operating systems. But the speed is limited.
The other option would be synchronous links, which would enable connections to
DMC11 or the like at speeds up to 1 Mb/s. But synchronous comm devices that
connect to modern computers aren't so easy to find, though I have seen a few.
After playing with Arduino for LK201 keyboard emulation I started to wonder if
one could be made to be a synchronous comm link with a USB back end, with low
level things like byte framing and maybe DDCMP packet format handling in there,
but the protocol state machine in the host behind the USB interface. For
moderate speeds that seems entirely practical. For 1 Mb/s, probably not,
though perhaps one of the fast ARM based units with its built-in SPI could be
warped into that.
The alternative would be something like a BeagleBone Black (or Green) such as
David Gesswein used as the engine for his MFM hard disk emulator. That clearly
could do the job without any strain.
So I'm wondering: would there be interest in such a thing? If yes, should it be
a modem-connected one (RS232 signaling, bit clock supplied externally by a
modem or modem-eliminator)? Or should it be the "integral modem" short
distance type, the ones that used a pair of coax with 4-pin AMP connectors like
this
https://www.digikey.com/en/products/detail/te-connectivity-amp-connectors/2…
?
paul