Developer | Silicon Graphics |
---|---|
Type | Computer terminal, workstation |
Release date | November 1983
ContentsOctober 1988 (Power IRIS/PowerSeries and Personal IRIS) | (IRIS 1000/1200)
Discontinued | 1992 |
Operating system | IRIX |
CPU | Motorola 68000 (IRIS 1000-3000) MIPS (IRIS 4D) |
Successor | SGI Indigo SGI Indy SGI Indigo² |
The SGI IRIS series of terminals and workstations from Silicon Graphics was produced in the 1980s and 1990s. IRIS is an acronym for Integrated Raster Imaging System.
Silicon Graphics Computer Systems' first product, shipped in November 1983, was the IRIS 1000, a terminal with hardware-accelerated 3D graphics based on the Geometry Engine developed by Jim Clark and Marc Hannah at Stanford University. As a terminal, it was not intended for standalone use, and was instead attached to a VAX-11 running VAX/VMS or Unix. It was soon followed by the IRIS 1200, another terminal with a larger backplane, [1] before the IRIS 1400 emerged as SGCS's first standalone workstation in 1984. [2] The processor used in these early systems, the 'PM1', was a variant of the SUN (Stanford UNiversity) processor, and sported a Motorola 68000 (or 68010) clocked at 8 MHz. With the IRIS 2000 series (released in 1985) came SGCS's first internally-designed processor, with a Motorola 68010 running at 10 MHz. The final Motorola 68000-based series, the 3000s released in 1986, were built around a 68020 running at 16 MHz. [3] These systems ran the GL1, then GL2 operating system, a predecessor of the IRIX operating system, which is based on UniSoft UniPlus System V Unix. [4] GL2 uses a proprietary (and highly rudimentary) windowing system named mex (Multiple EXposure). [5]
Beginning in 1987, SGCS began selling workstations with MIPS RISC processors rather than the Motorola 680x0. These new systems adopted a different numbering scheme, with the prefix '4D/' followed by a two-to-three digit number. The first of these systems was the 4D/60 'Professional IRIS', sporting a MIPS R2300 clocked at 8 MHz in a unique 'twin-tower' case, with the cardcage being within the larger tower on the left, and the power supply and drives being kept within the smaller tower on the right. The right tower could come in different heights to support larger quantities of storage. Like the IRIS 1000 series which preceded it, the 4D/60 did not use an internally designed processor board, instead using a generic MIPS systems board (likewise, the earliest versions of the new operating system for the MIPS-based workstations, dubbed '4D1', was largely derived from MIPS' own RISC/OS).
In 1988, SGCS superseded the Professional IRIS line with the higher-end Power IRIS line (specializing in Symmetric Multi-Processing, and so-named for its proprietary POWERpath architecture), and the lower-end Personal IRIS line. The Power IRIS systems (later dubbed "PowerSeries") came in a number of configurations, with anywhere between 1 and 8 processors and coming in either a twin-tower chassis akin to the Professional IRIS, a mini-fridge sized desk-side chassis (code-named 'Diehard'), or a full rack-sized chassis (code-named 'Predator'). One could determine the processor count of a Power IRIS system from its model number - the second digit would directly indicate the number of CPUs, so a 4D/210 would have one processor, a 4D/340 would have 4 processors, etc. The Power IRIS series was ultimately eclipsed, first by the 64-bit MIPS R4000-based IRIS Crimson, and then by the POWERpath-2 based Onyx and Challenge series. [6]
The Personal IRIS line consisted of four main models - the 4D/20, /25, /30, and /35. The /20 and /25 were both released in 1988, with the /30 and /35 debuting in 1990. With an entry price of £10,300, the Personal IRIS was Silicon Graphics' cheapest workstation. [7] The 4D/35 would later be cost-reduced into the IRIS Indigo, released in 1991, which was so architecturally similar to the 4D/35 that it shared the same Internal Processor ID (IP12) in software. [8]
Beginning in late 1992 with the release of the Indigo² and Challenge, the 'IRIS' prefix would be dropped from the names of all future systems, as well as the '4D/' model numbers. The '4D1' operating system, which from version 4D1-3 onwards was officially referred to as IRIX 4D1 (IRIX being a portmanteau of 'IRIS' and 'UNIX), would be re-branded as simply 'IRIX' beginning in version 5, as well. However, all future MIPS-based systems released by Silicon Graphics would still use 'IRIS' as the default hostname, ending with the Tezro in 2003.
A unifying feature across all IRISes – 68K, Professional, Personal, PowerSeries, Indigo, Crimson, and Onyx – is a proprietary serial-based keyboard/mouse protocol. Earlier machines use either a DE-15 (68K, Professional, PowerSeries) or DE-9 (4D/20, /25) connector, with the later machines (4D/30, /35, Indigo, Crimson, Onyx) using a mini DIN-6 which is easy to confuse with a standard PS/2 connector. One must take care not to insert an IRIS keyboard into a PS/2 port or vice versa, as the voltage levels used in the two protocols are incompatible and may result in damage to the keyboard, computer, or both. An easy method to determine if a Silicon Graphics keyboard is PS/2 or not is to check whether or not the mouse plugs in to the keyboard - the IRIS protocol, similar to Apple's Apple Desktop Bus and Sun's own serial keyboard/mouse protocol, daisy-chains the mouse and keyboard together. [9]
.iris
IRIX is a discontinued operating system developed by Silicon Graphics (SGI) to run on the company's proprietary MIPS workstations and servers. It is based on UNIX System V with BSD extensions. In IRIX, SGI originated the XFS file system and the industry-standard OpenGL graphics API.
Silicon Graphics, Inc. was an American high-performance computing manufacturer, producing computer hardware and software. Founded in Mountain View, California, in November 1981 by James Clark, its initial market was 3D graphics computer workstations, but its products, strategies and market positions developed significantly over time.
A workstation is a special computer designed for technical or scientific applications. Intended primarily to be used by a single user, they are commonly connected to a local area network and run multi-user operating systems. The term workstation has been used loosely to refer to everything from a mainframe computer terminal to a PC connected to a network, but the most common form refers to the class of hardware offered by several current and defunct companies such as Sun Microsystems, Silicon Graphics, Apollo Computer, DEC, HP, NeXT, and IBM which powered the 3D computer graphics revolution of the late 1990s.
The SGI Indigo2 and the SGI Challenge M are Unix workstations which were designed and sold by SGI from 1992 to 1997.
The Indy, code-named "Guinness", is a low-end multimedia workstation introduced on July 12, 1993 by Silicon Graphics Incorporated (SGI). SGI developed, manufactured, and marketed Indy as the lowest end of its product line, for computer-aided design (CAD), desktop publishing, and multimedia markets. It competed with Intel x86 computers, and with Windows and Macintosh, including using their files and running their applications via software emulation. It is the first computer to come standard with a video camera, called IndyCam.
The SGI Fuel is a mid-range workstation developed and manufactured by Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI). It was introduced in January 2002, with a list price of US$11,495. Together with the entire MIPS platform, general availability for the Fuel ended on December 29, 2006. An equivalent product for the same market segment was not provided until 2008, when the Virtu product line was introduced, based on x86 microprocessors and Nvidia graphics.
The SGI Tezro is a series of high-end computer workstations sold by SGI from 2003 until 2006. Using MIPS CPUs and running IRIX, it is the immediate successor to the SGI Octane line. The systems were produced in both rack-mount and tower versions, and the series was released in June 2003 with a list price of US$20,500. The Tezro was released alongside the SGI Onyx4 and rack-mountable Tezros share many components with it, including plastic skins. The rack-mounted Tezros are functionally very similar to an Infinite Performance-equipped SGI Onyx350. Tezro marked the return of the original cube logo to SGI machines.
The Advanced Computing Environment (ACE) was defined by an industry consortium in the early 1990s to be the next generation commodity computing platform, the successor to personal computers based on Intel's 32-bit instruction set architecture. The effort found little support in the market and dissolved due to infighting within the group and a lack of sales.
The O2 is an entry-level Unix workstation introduced in 1996 by Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI) to replace their earlier Indy series. Like the Indy, the O2 uses a single MIPS microprocessor and was intended to be used mainly for multimedia. Its larger counterpart is the SGI Octane. The O2 was SGI's last attempt at a low-end workstation.
mex is a windowing system created by Silicon Graphics, used on 68k-based IRIS systems and early IRIS 4D systems. Mex was originally loaded over a network through the utilization of GL1 routines kept on a remote host machine, usually a VAX. When the IRIS 1400 workstation and GL2-W (IRIX) were introduced, mex was allowed to run locally. Mex was used in IRIX from the GL2-W2.1.0 release to the 4D1-2.3 release.
Advanced RISC Computing (ARC) is a specification promulgated by a defunct consortium of computer manufacturers, setting forth a standard MIPS RISC-based computer hardware and firmware environment. The firmware on Alpha machines that are compatible with ARC is known as AlphaBIOS, non-ARC firmware on Alpha is known as SRM.
SGI Visual Workstation is a series of workstation computers that are designed and manufactured by SGI. Unlike its other product lines, which used the 64-bit MIPS RISC architecture, the line used Intel Pentium II and III processors and shipped with Windows NT 4.0 or Windows 2000 as its operating system instead of IRIX. However, the Visual Workstation 320 and 540 models deviated from the architecture of IBM-compatible PCs by using SGI's ARCS firmware instead of a traditional BIOS, internal components adapted from its MIPS-based products, and other proprietary components that made them incompatible with internal hardware designed for standard PCs and hence unable to run other versions of Microsoft Windows, especially Windows 9x. By contrast, the remaining models in the line are standard PCs, using VIA Technologies chipsets, Nvidia video cards, and standard components.
The Indigo, introduced as the IRIS Indigo, is a line of workstation computers developed and manufactured by Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI). SGI first announced the system in July 1991.
IRIX Interactive Desktop is a discontinued desktop environment normally used as the default desktop on Silicon Graphics workstations running IRIX. The IRIX Interactive Desktop uses the Motif widget toolkit on top of the X Window System found on most Unix systems. The default window manager on the IRIX Interactive Desktop is 4Dwm.
The IRIS Crimson is a Silicon Graphics (SGI) computer released in 1992. It is the world's first 64-bit workstation.
The IRIS WorkSpace was a graphically organized iconic desktop environment that allowed access to the IRIX file system, along with simplified system administration via the system manager. The IRIS WorkSpace was used by Silicon Graphics from 4D1-3.0 - IRIX 5.0. It was succeeded in 1993 by the Indigo Magic Desktop introduced with IRIX 5.1 and the Indy workstation.
Dogfight is a demonstration program initially written by Gary Tarolli at Silicon Graphics, Inc in the summer of 1983. It represents landmarks in two key areas of Internet development: games and multicasting, and notable advancement in creating rendered virtual environments.
IrisVision is an expansion card developed by Silicon Graphics for IBM compatible PCs in 1991 and is one of the first 3D accelerator cards available for the high end PC market. IrisVision is an adaptation of the graphics pipeline from the Personal IRIS workstation to the Micro Channel architecture and consumer ISA buses of most modern PCs of the day. It has the first variant of IRIS GL ported to the PC, predating OpenGL.
The R2000 is a 32-bit microprocessor chip set developed by MIPS Computer Systems that implemented the MIPS I instruction set architecture (ISA). Introduced in January 1986, it was, by a few months, the first commercial implementation of the RISC architecture. The R2000 competed with Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) VAX minicomputers and with Motorola 68000 and Intel Corporation 80386 microprocessors. R2000 users included Ardent Computer, DEC, Silicon Graphics, Northern Telecom and MIPS's own Unix workstations.
Since 1985, many processors implementing some version of the MIPS architecture have been designed and used widely.