Dynamic Debugging Technique, or DDT, was the name of several debugger programs originally developed for DEC hardware, initially known as DEC Debugging Tape because it was distributed on paper tape. The name is a pun on the insecticide (i.e. bug-killer) DDT.
The first version of DDT was developed at MIT for the PDP-1 computer in 1961, but newer versions on newer platforms continued to use the same name. After being ported to other vendor's platforms and changing media, the name was changed to the less DEC-centric version.
DDT is closely related to ODT. Both names were used for several different debuggers, but generally debuggers with the ODT name had more limited capabilities than DDT debuggers.
As with other DEC tools, early CP/M kept the DEC name DDT for its debugger. DDT was later superseded by SID.
In addition to its normal function as a debugger, DDT was also used as a top-level command shell for the MIT ITS operating system; on some more recent ITS systems, it is replaced with a "PWORD" which implements a restricted subset of DDT's functionality. DDT could run and debug up to eight processes (called "jobs" on ITS) at a time, such as several sessions of TECO, and DDT could be run recursively - that is, some or all of those jobs could themselves be DDTs (which could then run another eight jobs, and so on). These eight jobs were all given unique names, and the usual name for the original and top-most DDT was "HACTRN" ("hack-tran"); thus Guy L. Steele's famous filk poem parody of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven," The HACTRN.
Famous quotes containing the words dynamic and/or technique:
“Imagination is always the fabric of social life and the dynamic of history. The influence of real needs and compulsions, of real interests and materials, is indirect because the crowd is never conscious of it.”
—Simone Weil (19091943)
“Irony in writing is a technique for increasing reader self- approval.”
—Jessamyn West (19071984)