On Wed, 4 May 2016, Gottfried Specht wrote:

I'm not sure whether it qualifies for your full list, but the HP2100A (that came out in 
1971) had a "Memory Protect" hardware that

Hi Gottfried,

thanks for the excellent answer - yes I think this is exactly what matches my specification! Thanks.
It is really astonishing how many people know a lot on various machines
which is really great. I suspected that HP had something, too.

Fence Register: Set under program control; memory below fence is protected.

This is a clever and somewhat outstanding feature - most others use
protection on basis of blocks ar abuse the virtual memory for the
purpose  ;-)

   Best regards,

      Erik.

-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] Im Auftrag von Erik Baigar
Gesendet: Dienstag, 3. Mai 2016 17:53
An: cctalk@classiccmp.org
Betreff: When did Memory- and IO Protection Emerge (Esp. in Minis)?


Dear Experts,

during discussing the Rolms I came accross the following question:
What was the first (Minicomputer) architecture which offered
memory- and IO protection? I'd define the minimum requirements as:

  - Existence of a superuser mode (Rolm calls this Executive mode)
  - Existence of a user mode (With at least two users, Rolm offers 4)
  - In superuser mode, IO and memory protection for each user can be
    set up individually.
  - Any access violation is trapped and handeled by superuser code.
  - Of course commands for mode switching and setting up the
    memory and IO ranges must exist.

I have got a real machine (Rolm 1602) having this implemented and dating from 1975. A 
document on this "Access Protection Module" as Rolm calls it also is dated 
1975. It consists of a microcode module which realizes an extension of the 16 bit Nova 
instruction set and an additinoal CPU module, taking care of the new modes and 
supervising the IO- and memory accesses.

My question is not regarding virtual memory memory, but regarding protection 
(IO and memory) to ensure capsulation of indivitual processes - not necessarily 
for multi user environments but e.g.
for safety critical applications...

Probably OS/2 in 1987 was one of the first home computer OSes to support memory 
protection (how about IO protection?), BSD on some Digital PDP-* was earlier 
(1977?) but still after the 1602.

Any hints out there on other "Mini" architectures of that era having someting 
similar?

    Erik.

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