You would likely have never seen a DTE on a KS
processor ?
The DTEs plugged into dedicated slots on the KL. There's no way you could have ever
seen one on another model CPU - it's physically not possible. The KL could hold up to
four DTEs, and the first one was "special" in that it could poke around in the
KLs microstore and internal datapaths. The 11/40 CFE was connected to that one and
that's how the KL was started up. All the microcode was stored in RAM and immediately
after a power on the KL was little more than a big heater. The other three DTEs were more
general purpose and were used for communications interfaces.
There was, however, a DL10 for the KI that interfaced up to four PDP-11s to the I/O and
memory busses. Conceptually the DL10 was similar to the DTE, although I don't know
how close they were programmatically. Of course there was no equivalent to the CFE on the
KI and all four -11 ports on the DL10 were identical. And where as every KL had at least
one DTE for the CFE, the DL10 was strictly optional.
It's a similar story for the RH20s - they were dedicated options for the KL only. A
KL could have a maximum of 4 RH20s and every one needed at least two - one for disk and
one for tape. Although I believe on TOPS10 you could mix disk and tape on the same
MASSBUS - maybe, I'm not sure about that.
And likewise there was an RH10 MASSBUS controller for the KI which was similar to, but
not the same as, the RH20.
Bob