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Date:      Mon, 1 May 2000 11:14:39 -0700 (PDT)
From:      "Rodney W. Grimes" <freebsd@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>
To:        dr@dursec.com (Dragos Ruiu)
Cc:        kpielorz@tdx.co.uk (Karl Pielorz), djb@ifa.au.dk, smp@csn.net (Steve Passe), smp@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: hlt instructions and temperature issues
Message-ID:  <200005011814.LAA01684@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net>
In-Reply-To: <00043018413807.18195@kyxbot.zorg> from Dragos Ruiu at "Apr 30, 2000 06:36:46 pm"

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> On Sun, 30 Apr 2000, Karl Pielorz wrote:
> > Taking it to an extreme, it would be like building a system that falls over
> > when it 'happens to be busy' one day, 'cause someone ran something
> > computationally intensive? - I know for a fact these systems do exist, but we
> > don't really want to be helping sweep the cause under the rug do we?
> > 
> 
> 
> Tell that to IBM... one of the famous stories from classic computing
> history is the mainframe they built with the HCF opcode.
> Halt and Catch Fire.  It turned out that for this model 
> you could lock up into a tight one instruction loop and
> the CPU core would overheat and literally smoke.
> 
> It's documented in the ancient back issues Mr. Neuman's
> old Risks usenet newsgroup in the early eighties.

Right along with the chain breaking/hammer bank smoking code for the
1403 printers.... basically a very specific sequence of lines with
very special character sequences could cause 1/3 of the hammer bank
to fire every 14uS or so, do that for more than 10 cycles or so and
you could litterly break the print character chain.  De-optimize it
for chain breaking and run it for 10 minutes and you would start smoking
the hammer coils....

-- 
Rod Grimes - KD7CAX @ CN85sl - (RWG25)               rgrimes@gndrsh.dnsmgr.net


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