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This article is about the MIT Project MAC operating system. CTSS may also stand for the Cray Time Sharing System, a separate system developed for Cray supercomputers or the Cambridge Time Sharing System developed for IBM mainframes.

CTSS, which stood for the Compatible Time-Sharing System, was one of the first time-sharing operating systems; it was developed at MIT's Computation Center. CTSS was first demonstrated in 1961, and was operated at MIT until 1973. During part of this time, MIT's Project MAC had a second copy of CTSS, but the system did not spread beyond two sites. CTSS was described in a paper presented at the 1962 Spring Joint Computer Conference.

The "Compatible" in the name refers to compatibility with the standard batch processing OS for the 7094, the Fortran Monitor System (FMS). CTSS ran an unaltered copy of FMS, processing a standard batch stream, in a virtual 7094 provided by its background facility. Background FMS jobs could access tapes normally but could not interfere with foreground time-sharing processes or the resources used to support them.

Although CTSS was not an influential operating system in its technical detail, it was very influential in showing that time-sharing was viable, in the new applications for computers which were first instantiated there, and because of its successor, Multics, which all modern operating systems are intellectually descended from.

CTSS had one of the first computerized text formatting utilities, and one of the first inter-user electronic mail implementations.

MIT Computation Center staff member Louis Pouzin created a command called RUNCOM for CTSS, which executed a list of commands contained in a file; this facility is the direct ancestor of the Unix shell script. RUNCOM also allowed parameter substitution.

CTSS used a modified IBM 7094 mainframe computer that had two 32,768 36-bit word banks of core memory instead of the normal one. One bank was reserved for the time-sharing supervisory program, the other for user programs. It also had some special memory management hardware, a clock interrupt and the ability to trap certain instructions. Input-output hardware was mostly standard IBM peripherals. These included six data channels connecting to:

  • printers, punch card readers and punches
  • IBM 729 tape drives, an IBM 1301 disk storage, later upgraded to an IBM 1302, with 38 million word capacity
  • an IBM 7320 drum memory with 186K words that could load a 32K memory bank in one second (later upgraded to 1/4 second)
  • two custom high speed vector graphics displays
  • an IBM 7750 transmission control unit capable of supporting up to 112 teleprinter terminals, including IBM 1050 Selectrics and Model 35 Teletypes. Some of the terminals were located remotly and the system could be accessed using the public Telex and TWX networks

CTSS was compatible with the Fortran Monitor System, an older batch computing system that ran on the 7094 computer before CTSS was invented. FMS could run in the background nearly as efficiently as on a 7094 without an OS at all. Running in the background, FMS had access to some tape units and the user 32K bank of core memory.

Multics, which was also developed by Project MAC, was started in the 1960s as a successor to CTSS, for future use in multiple-access computing. Multics, infamously, was the operating system that led to the development of Unix in 1970.

ITS, the Incompatible Timesharing System, another early, revolutionary, and influential MIT time-sharing system, was produced by people who disagreed with the direction taken by Multics; the name was a hack on CTSS, as the name of Unix was later a hack on Multics.

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