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Full Discussion: CTIX Anyone?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? CTIX Anyone? Post 302901043 by MightyFrame on Sunday 11th of May 2014 04:10:09 AM
Old 05-11-2014
Computer CTIX Anyone?

Does anyone here know anything about CTIX, a Convergent Technologies branded version of UNIX from the mid-late 1980s?

Please see attached Photo (courtesy Michael Herzog)

I am working on a project to get a Convergent MightyFrame from 1987 operational (see our blog at MightyFrame.com ), and to read data off a vintage MFM Maxtor XT-2190 hard drive that was installed in one of these machines back in the day. I'm about 9 months into this, and have just scratched the surface, but I love it.

the MightyFrame's OS was CTIX. The closest more common machine to this monstrosity was the AT&T 7300 / 3B1 system from 1985+, also built by Convergent Technologies, but is only similar, and by no means a match. It ran straight UNIX.

I'd be very excited to get ahold of one of these vintage tapes, or even a copy of them. So far, I've heard that there existed CTIX [RAW], CTIX DIAGNOSTICS, and CTIX MAINTENANCE. Does anyone know of others?

I'm pursuing contact with as many of the guys from an old comp.sys.3b1 newsgroup that I can track down. There is one thread there in particular that gives the most information I can find online about this system:

bit.ly/1i8DTiY

Do any of the contributors to that thread post here on this forum?

I appreciate any info that anyone might offer.

Thanks!
-AJ
CTIX Anyone?-ctix-tapejpg
 
SDL_LockSurface(3)						 SDL API Reference						SDL_LockSurface(3)

NAME
SDL_LockSurface- Lock a surface for directly access. SYNOPSIS
#include "SDL.h" int SDL_LockSurface(SDL_Surface *surface); DESCRIPTION
SDL_LockSurface sets up a surface for directly accessing the pixels. Between calls to SDL_LockSurface and SDL_UnlockSurface, you can write to and read from surface->pixels, using the pixel format stored in surface->format. Once you are done accessing the surface, you should use SDL_UnlockSurface to release it. Not all surfaces require locking. If SDL_MUSTLOCK(surface) evaluates to 0, then you can read and write to the surface at any time, and the pixel format of the surface will not change. No operating system or library calls should be made between lock/unlock pairs, as critical system locks may be held during this time. It should be noted, that since SDL 1.1.8 surface locks are recursive. This means that you can lock a surface multiple times, but each lock must have a match unlock. . . SDL_LockSurface( surface ); . /* Surface is locked */ /* Direct pixel access on surface here */ . SDL_LockSurface( surface ); . /* More direct pixel access on surface */ . SDL_UnlockSurface( surface ); /* Surface is still locked */ /* Note: Is versions < 1.1.8, the surface would have been */ /* no longer locked at this stage */ . SDL_UnlockSurface( surface ); /* Surface is now unlocked */ . . RETURN VALUE
SDL_LockSurface returns 0, or -1 if the surface couldn't be locked. SEE ALSO
SDL_UnlockSurface SDL
Tue 11 Sep 2001, 23:01 SDL_LockSurface(3)
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