The Computer History Simulation Project
The Computer History Simulation Project is a loose Internet-based collective
of people interested in restoring historically significant computer hardware
and software systems by simulation. The goal of the project is to create
highly portable system simulators and to publish them as freeware on the
Internet, with freely available copies of significant or representative software.
V3.9 (and bug fixes to it) is the last release of SimH that will be hosted
at this web site. All future versions can be found in a
public source repository.
SIMH is a highly portable, multi-system simulator.
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Download the latest sources
for SIMH (V3.9-0) updated
03-May-2012. The change history can be found in the sim_rev.h header
file.
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Download sources to beta simulators
- simulators that have not been finished.
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Download a zip file containing Windows
executables for all the SIMH simulators. The VAX and PDP-11 are
compiled without Ethernet support.
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Download PDF copies of the documentation
here.
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Download the Word masters of the documentation
here.
SIMH implements simulators for:
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Data General Nova, Eclipse
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Digital Equipment Corporation PDP-1, PDP-4, PDP-7, PDP-8, PDP-9, PDP-10,
PDP-11, PDP-15, VAX
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GRI Corporation GRI-909, GRI-99
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IBM 1401, 1620, 1130, 7090/7094, System 3
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Interdata (Perkin-Elmer) 16b and 32b systems
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Hewlett-Packard 2114, 2115, 2116, 2100, 21MX, 1000
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Honeywell H316/H516
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MITS Altair 8800, with both 8080 and Z80
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Royal-Mcbee LGP-30, LGP-21
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Scientific Data Systems SDS 940
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SWTP 6800
The beta kit includes simulators for:
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SiCortex SC-1 processor
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XDS Sigma 32b processors
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Digital Equipment Corporation EV-5 processor
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SAGE 68K
Also available is a collection of tools
for manipulating simulator file formats and for cross-assembling code for
the PDP-1, PDP-7, PDP-8, and PDP-11.
Papers on Simulation and Historic Hardware
Links to Computer History and Simulation Resources
Updated 03-May-2012 by Bob Supnik (simh AT trailing-edge DOT com
- anti-spam encoded)