SIMH is a free and open source, multi-platform multi-system emulator. It is maintained by Bob Supnik, a former DEC engineer and DEC vice president, and has been in development in one form or another since the 1960s.
History
SIMH was based on a much older systems emulator called MIMIC, which was written in the late 1960s at Applied Data Research.[1] SIMH was started in 1993 with the purpose of preserving minicomputer hardware and software that was fading into obscurity.[1]
In May 2022, the MIT License of SIMH version 4 on GitHub was unilaterally modified by a contributor to make it no longer free software, by adding a clause that revokes the right to use any subsequent revisions of the software containing their contributions if modifications that "influence the behaviour of the disk access activities" are made.[3] As of 27 May 2022, Supnik no longer endorses version 4 on his official website for SIMH due to these changes, only recognizing the "classic" version 3.x releases.[4]
On 3 June 2022, the last revision of SIMH not subject to this clause (licensed under BSD licenses and the MIT License) was forked by the group Open SIMH, with a new governance model and steering group that includes Supnik and others. The Open SIMH group cited that a "situation" had arisen in the project that compromised its principles.[5]
Emulated hardware
SIMH emulates hardware from the following companies.
Advanced Computer Design
- PDQ-3
AT&T
BESM
Burroughs
Control Data Corporation
Data General
Digital Equipment Corporation
GRI Corporation
Hewlett-Packard
Honeywell
- H316
- H516
Hobbyist projects
IBM
Intel
- Intel systems 8010 and 8020
Interdata
- 16-bit series
- 32-bit series
Lincoln Labs – MIT Research Lab
Manchester University
MITS
- Altair 8800 both Intel 8080 and Zilog Z80 versions
Norsk Data
Royal-Mcbee
- LGP-30
- LGP-21
Sage Computer Technology
- Sage II
Scientific Data Systems
SWTPC
Systems Engineering Laboratories
- SEL-32 both Concept-32 and PowerNode systems
Xerox Data Systems
References
- ^ a b c "Preserving Computing's Past: Restoration and Simulation" Max Burnet and Bob Supnik, Digital Technical Journal, Volume 8, Number 3, 1996.
- ^ "Release 3.12-3". 31 January 2023. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
- ^ "simh repo: Add top level COPYRIGHT and LICENSE files · simh/simh@ce2adce". GitHub. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
- ^ "SimH "Classic"". simh.trailing-edge.com. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
The V4 GitHub repository has been placed under a modified license that effectively makes it closed source. It will no longer be referenced here.
- ^ "simh@groups.io | Announcing the Open SIMH project". 2022-06-03. Retrieved 2022-06-04.
- ^ "Altair Other Operating Systems".
External links
- Official website
- Open SIMH on GitHub
- Additional VAX/MicroVAX models for SIMH
- Running VAX/VMS Under Linux Using SIMH
- Debian Package
- FreeBSD Port
- UNIX: Old School. Using SIMH to explore UNIX history - Matthew Hoskins
- SCSI tape drive emulation for the Raspberry Pi with support for SIMH tape image files