SlideShare une entreprise Scribd logo
1  sur  43
IBM Systems and Technology Group (STG)
© Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 2011-2013.
Legacy of the IBM System/360
As presented to the NIU Student Chapter of the ACM
Dan Greiner
dgreiner@us.ibm.com
IBM z/Server Architecture
10 October 2013, 4:00 pm
2
The Legal Stuff
 Trademarks:
► The following terms are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation in the United States,
other countries, or both:
– ESA/390
– IBM
– z/Architecture
– z/OS
– z/VM
► IEEE is a trademark of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. in the United States, other
countries, or both.
► Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States, other countries or both.
► Unicode is a registered trademark of Unicode, Incorporated in the United States, other countries, or both.
► Other trademarks and registered trademarks are the properties of their respective companies.
 All information contained in this document is subject to change without notice. The products described in
this document are not intended for use in applications such as implantation, life support, or other
hazardous uses where malfunction could result in death, bodily injury or catastrophic property damage.
The information contained in this document does not affect or change IBM product specifications or
warranties. Nothing in this document shall operate as an express or implied license or indemnity under the
intellectual property rights of IBM or third parties. All information contained in this document was obtained
in specific environments, and is presented as an illustration. The results obtained in other operating
environments may vary.
 While the information contained herein is believed to be accurate, such information is preliminary, and
should not be relied upon for accuracy or completeness, and no representations or warranties of accuracy
or completeness are made.
 The information in contained in this document is provided on an “AS IS” basis. In no event will IBM be
liable for damages arising directly or indirectly from any use of the information contained in this document.
© Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 2011-2013. Permission is granted to Northern
Illinois University to record this presentation.
3
Topics du Jour:
 Data processing prior to the
System/360
 The System/360 Project
► Requirements
► Development
► Software
► Challenges
 System/360 Legacy
► 49½ years of industry-leading
information processing
IBM System/360 Model 65 Operator’s Console
4
Ancient History: 1952
 Beginning of the “computer age”:
► 8:30 p.m. EST, 4 November 1952
► Remington Rand’s Univac-I predicted U. S. General
election results
– Eisenhower – 438 electoral votes; Stephenson – 93
– With only 5% of the votes counted, Univac was within 1% of
the final results!
– CBS (Walter Cronkite’s 1st election coverage) delayed
broadcasting Univac results until after midnight because
they couldn’t believe it!
 In that era, IBM was world leader in electro-mechanical
accounting machines
► A legacy of Herman Hollerith’s 1890’s punched-card
technology
 IBM enters the “modern” computer era in late 1952
with the IBM 701 Electronic Data Processing Machine
► 19 units built and sold
IBM 701 Data-Processing Machine
5
Setting the Stage
From 1952-1960:
► IBM revenues grew almost 10x
► Earnings - $305 million; Revenue – 2.6 billion
► Employees grew from 30,000 to over 125,000
IBM computing product line in the early 1960s:
► Eight separate products
► Completely different architectures, software, & peripherals
► Migrating from one to another – or to a new product – was
difficult
6
S/360’s Ancestors
 SAGE – Early Warning Air-Defense System (late ’50s – early ’60s)
► First real-time, integrated, online system over North America
► Each system weighed >250 tons, 60,000 vacuum tubes
 NASA Projects (late ’50s & on)
► Real-time systems for Vanguard, Mercury, Gemini, & Apollo missions
► Key to developing multi-processing systems
 SABRE – Airline Reservations System (early 1960s & on)
► Initially 1,000 reservations terminals in 60 cities
► Also handled seat selection, rental car info, crew scheduling, fuel management, stand-by
lists, aircraft maintenance info
 Stretch – Supercomputer for AEC lab at Los Alamos (IBM 7030, delivered 1961)
► Advanced expertise in ferrite core memory & semiconductors
► 200 x faster than IBM 701 processors; 3 x faster than SAGE processors
► Evolved into IBM 7090 commercial system
7
1962 Environment
 Competition was nipping at IBM’s heels
► Burroughs, Control Data Corp., GE, Honeywell, NCR, RCA, & Univac
 IBM had eight separate, totally incompatible products
► Data-Systems Division (Poughkeepsie, NY):
– Systems that leased for more then $10,000 / month
– IBM 7000-series systems (proposed new 8000-series)
► General-Products Division
– Burlington, VT, Endicott, NY, Rochester, NY, & San Jose, CA
– Systems that leased for less than $10,000 / month
– IBM 1400-series systems (1st computer to sell > 10,000 units);
IBM 1600-series in development
► World-Trade Corporation
– Developing small scientific computer (SCAMP)
► Intense inter-divisional rivalry (and secrecy)
8
1962 Technology
Solid-state technology was relatively
new
► IBM’s Standard-Modular System
(SMS) contained a handful of
transistors on a 2.5” x 4.5” card
► Solid-Logic Technology (SLT)
– 3 to 6 times the density of SMS cards
– 100 times more reliable
► Integrated circuits
– 100 times the density of SMS cards
– Leading edge, very little background
available
– But … being used by RCA in
competitive products
IBM Standard-Modular-System Card
IBM Solid-Logic-Technology Module
Dual-Inline-
Package (DIP)
Integrated Circuit
9
1962 – A Momentous Decision !
Customers were fed up with incompatible systems
The SPREAD (Systems, Programming, Research,
Engineering & Development) team
► 11-member team from across divisions
SPREAD Report:
► Recommended future development on all mainframe
projects be scrapped
► New product line (NPL) would be developed:
– Initially planned on five models (ended up with six)
– Largest system to be 200x faster than smallest
– Performance range accomplished using SLT technology of
differing speed, data-path-width differences, &c.
– Each CPU to have high-speed memory using permanently-
stored control information
10
1962 – A Momentous Decision !!
SPREAD Report:
►Software will be compatible on all levels of the system
– upward and downward!
►Each processor will be economically competitive in its
own marketplace
►Standard I/O interfaces will be used across the entire
product line
– Required development of dozens of new peripherals:
disk drives, tape drives, printers, card readers, magnetic
& optical character readers, communications adapters,
and terminals
►“Since such processors must have capabilities not
now present in any IBM processor product, the new
family of products will not be compatible with our
existing processors.”
11
1962 – 1964: Development
Estimated total cost in 1962 was $675 million
Actual development cost closer to $5 billion
►~ $35 billion in 2013 dollars, adjusted for inflation
►Accustomed to “swimming in cash”, IBM came close
to not being able to meet payroll
►$750 million invested in engineering
►$4.5 billion invested in factories, equipment, and the
product itself
►Fortune called it, “IBM’s $5,000,000,000 Gamble”
12
1962 – 1964: Development
Honeywell’s H-200 computer (announced 1963):
►“Liberator” program allowed translation of IBM 1401
programs on the Honeywell platform
►IBM lost nearly 200 customers within 2 months after
announcement.
– Overall computer demand up 15% … IBM grew only 7%
– IBM head of sales: “Help, I’m being slaughtered.”
– Potential that the entire NPL would be scrapped
Emulator option:
►With relatively small microcode investment, NPL could
run existing (1401 & 7090) customer applications on
NPL faster than on existing systems
►Salvaged many customers ready to jump ship
13
System/360 – the Name
Initially plans for NPL – IBM 500
► Not particularly attractive … but we
needed a number
► 360 represented the number of degrees
on a compass
– Indicated the processor was suited to
any application
– Stylized compass rose chosen as an
icon
– “System” and the slash added “because
it looked nice.”
Much corporate churn about the name
► President & VP of data-products
division, VP of communications battled
it out
► System/360 won by default when some
clever entrepreneur painted it on the
nose of the corporate aircraft
14
7 April 1964
 IBM System/360 announced to the
world
► Announcement efforts planned for
over a year in advance
► Press conferences in 165 cities & 14
countries
► Estimated 100,000 customers &
prospects
► Special train from NYC to
Poughkeepsie
“A new generation of electronic
computing equipment was introduced
by the IBM Corporation
IBM Board Chairman Thomas J. Watson,
Jr. called the event the most important
announcement in the company’s
history.
The new equipment is known as the IBM
System/360”
15
Post-Announcement Reaction
Within 4 weeks of the announcement, orders for
1,000 systems were received
►Within the second 4 weeks, 1,000 more orders
T. J. Watson memoirs:
►[System/360] was the biggest, riskiest decision I ever
made, and I agonized about it for weeks, but deep
down, I believed there was nothing IBM couldn’t do.
►Within IBM there was a great feeling of celebration
because a new era was opening up, … But when I
looked at those new products, I didn’t feel as confident
as I’d have liked. Not all the equipment on display was
real; some units were just mockups made of wood …
an uncomfortable reminder to me of how far we had to
go before we could call the program a success.
16
The Next 18 Months – Major Problem #1
Technology problems with Solid
Logic Technology (SLT) modules
► Volume requirements would exceed
capacity of vendors
► Pressure for production causing
yield failures
– End of 1965 … 25% SLT failure
► In-house manufacturing facilities
developed:
– East Fishkill, NY plant SLT module
output: 1963 – ½ million; 1964 – 12
million; 1965 – 28 million; 1966 – 90
million
– Plants in Burlington, VT & Essonnes,
France – 26 million each
17
The Next 18 Months – Major Problem #2
Logistics Problems
►Component delays
– Running out of circuit breakers halted manufacturing
►Software delays
►Competitor announcements
– Marketing pressure to change System/360 to address
competition
►Personality problems
– Friction between engineering and manufacturing (led by
Dick Watson – T.J.’s younger brother) and sales led to
Dick Watson being replaced.
18
The Next 18 Months – Major Problem #3
Software Problems
► Upward- & downward-compatibility requirements.
► Multiprogramming challenges
► Developing interim products to counter competitive
challenges
► Moving target – constantly changing due to dynamic
marketing requirements
► SW-development, led by Fred Brooks, grew to over 1,000
people
– Brook’s Law: Adding manpower to a late software project
makes it later.
► Some teams working 60-hour weeks
► Initially, over 1,000,000 lines of code (LOC)
– Grew to 10,000,000 LOC
– Budgeted $30-40 million; actual ~ $500 million
19
The Next 18 Months & Onwards
By December 1966:
► Over 7,000 systems installed
► $4 billion in new revenue
– $1 billion in pre-tax profits
► IBM hired 25,000 new employees in 1966
► Added 3 million square feet of manufacturing space
► Producing 1,000 System/360 units per month
► SLT modules reached projected 33-million-hour MTBF
By 1970:
► Revenues went from $3.2 billion to $7.5 billion
► Earnings went from $431 million to over $ 1 billion
► Employees grew nearly 120,000 … to 269,000.
20
The System/360 Architectural Legacy
IBM System/360 Model 44
21
In the Beginning … System/360 (1964)
 CPU Architecture
► 32-bit arithmetic
► 16 general-purpose registers
► 24-bit addressing (16,777,216 bytes max.)
– More than a few megabytes was quite rare
► Real addressing only! No virtual memory
► Approximately 142 instructions total
► Some features were optional
– Decimal instructions (in-storage only)
– Floating point (with 4 floating-point registers)
– Direct control (specialty I/O for check sorters, &c.)
– Protection feature (i.e., storage keys)
 I/O architecture
► Maximum of 7 channels
– One byte-multiplexor channel (printers, card
readers, &c)
– Up to seven selector channels (disks, tape)
► Maximum of 256 devices per channel
► Most machines had far fewer channels &
devices
IBM System/360 Model 50
22
In the Beginning … System/360 (1964)
 Storage technology
► Ferrite core storage
– Each toroid “donut” represented one
bit
► Architectural maximum: 16 megabytes
– Reality: Most customers had no more
than 1-2 megabytes
► Increasing density … the donut-hole
test:
– New product’s core toroid fit through
the donut hole of the previous
product’s core
IBM System/360 Model 50
IBM System/360 Core-Memory Panels (approx. 32K)
23
System/360 Software
 Operating Systems
► Basic Operating System
(BOS)
► Tape Operating System (TOS)
► Disk Operating System (DOS)
► Operating System / Multiple
Fixed Tasks (OS/MFT)
► Operating System / Multiple
Variable Tasks (OS/MVT)
► SABRE (Airline Reservations)
► Time-Sharing System (TSS)
► Control Program / 67 (CP/67)
with the Cambridge Monitor
System (CMS)
 Languages
► ALGOL
► Assembler
► Basic
► COBOL
► Fortran
► PL/1
► RPG
 Online Transaction Processing
► Customer Information
Control System (CICS)
► Conversational Programming
System (CPS)
 Numerous independent-
software-vendor packages
24
System 370 (1970)
 Virtual addressing
► One or multiple 24-bit virtual spaces
► Ability to over-commit real storage
► Ability to segregate data according to
subsystem and user
 Real storage still limited to 24-bit
addressing
► Most CPUs still had (far) less than 16 M-
bytes
► Monolithic solid-state memory … no more
core
 Introduced new 16 control registers
 Introduced 13 new instructions
► Load/store control registers
► Compare / move long streams of characters
► Compare / insert / store character under
mask
 I/O subsystem expanded to (up to) 16
channels
► 32 channel option on some later machines
 Hardware-assisted debugging (PER)
IBM System/370 Model 138
25
System/370 Software
 Operating Systems
► Disk Operating System / Virtual
Storage Extended (DOS/VSE)
► Single Virtual Storage (SVS)
► Multiple Virtual Storage (MVS)
► Transaction Processing Facility
(TPF, successor to SABRE)
► Virtual Machine / 370 (VM/370)
 Database Systems
► Information Management System
(IMS)
► DB/2
► System Query Language (SQL)
IBM System/370 Model 148
26
System 370 Enhancements (1978-1982)
 26-bit real addressing (up to 64 MB)
► Single virtual address space still
limited to 24 bits (16 MB)
 Various specialty facilities
► Operating-system assist
instructions for obtaining /
releasing locks, tracing, &c.
► Mathematical assists
(transcendental functions, &c.)
► High-accuracy arithmetic
 Dual-address space
► Primary & secondary spaces
► New instructions:
– PROGRAM CALL / PROGRAM
RETURN
– INSERT / SET ADDRESS SPACE
CONTROL
– MOVE TO PRIMARY / SECONDARY
IBM 3031 Processor Complex
27
370 Extended Architecture (1983)
 31-bit virtual addressing
► Single address space providing up to 2
G-bytes
► Bimodal addressing (1 bit of the 32-bit
address stolen to designate 24- or 31-bit
addressing mode)
 31-bit real addressing (2 gigabytes max.)
► Most customers still had much less
memory
 Entirely new I/O subsystem
► Up to 256 I/O channels
► Up to 65,536 I/O devices
 New instructions for I/O, storage key
manipulation, and program linkage
 Hardware tracing
► Eliminated significant bottleneck in
multiprocessor tracing
IBM 3081 Processor Complex
28
Interpretive Execution (1984)
 Hardware virtualization
► Used by Processor Resource /
System Manager (PR/SM)
– Provides logical partitioning of
physical machine
► Used by VM/370 Operating System
► Apportions physical resources to
“guest” programs
– CPUs, I/O channels, real memory
► Allows multiple operating systems to
operate concurrently / separately
► Extremely fast context switch from
one guest to another
IBM 3084 Processor Complex
29
A Few Side Trips (1980s)
 4300-series processor models
► Three models of mid-sized, lower-
cost processors for department-
level or small business
applications
► Same CPU architecture and I/O
capabilities
 Vector facility
► Single-engine multiple-data (SIMD)
instruction extension
► Intended for large-array analytics:
oil research, weather prediction,
fluid-dynamics modeling
IBM 3090 Processor Complex
IBM 4381 Processor Complex
30
Enterprise Systems Architecture / 370 (1989)
 Introduced access-register translation
(ART)
► Provided the means by which a
program could access multiple
address spaces with minimum
overhead
► Up to 2,048 31-bit (2 G-byte) address
spaces (i.e., up to 4 T-bytes)
► New nonprivileged instructions for
manipulation of ARs
 Introduced the home address space
► Location for principal task (process)
control structures
► Where to go (i.e., who to blame) when
a task abnormally ends
 Introduced the linkage stack
► Push-down stack for semi-authorized
tasks
► New instructions for manipulation of
linkage stack.
IBM System 390
31
Enterprise Systems Architecture / 390 (1990-1999)
 Numerous new facilities:
► Arithmetic instructions with 16-bit
immediate operands
► Branch instructions with 16-bit
relative-branch location
► Binary-floating-point instructions
(IEEE standard)
– 95 new instructions and floating-
point control register
► Compression facility
► Check-sum instruction (for TCP/IP
& others)
► Extended-translation instructions
(Unicode™ conversion)
► Sorting-assist instructions
► String-manipulation instructions
 Enhancements to dual-address-
space facilities
IBM Enterprise Server 9000
32
Mainframe Perceptions in the 1990s
 Reports of the death of the
mainframe were premature
► “I predict that the last
mainframe will be unplugged on
March 15, 1996.”
– Stewart Alsop, March 1991
► “It’s clear that corporate
customers still like to have
centrally controlled, very
predictable, reliable computing
systems—exactly the kind of
systems that IBM specializes
in.”
– Stewart Alsop, February 2002
Stuart Alsop (from IBM 2001 Annual Report)
33
z/Architecture & the zSeries z900 & z800 (2000)
 General registers grew to 64 bits
► Existing 32-bit instructions retained
– Used rightmost 32 bits of the 64-bit
registers
► Large suite of 64-bit analogues added
► 163 new instructions (139 general, 11
control, 12 floating point)
 Provides 64-bit virtual address space
► Up to 16 exabytes in a single space
– 18,446,744,073,709,551,616 bytes
► With access-register translation, up to
2,048 spaces (275 bytes)
– 37,778,931,862,957,161,709,568 bytes
► Trimodal (24-, 31-, or 64-bit)
addressing
– Ability to dynamically switch between
addressing modes
 64-bit real storage addressing
► Current models offer up to six
terabytes of real storage
IBM eServer zSeries 900
34
zSeries 64-Bit Operating Systems
 z/OS
► Successor to MFT, MVT, SVS, MVS, OS/390
► “Western civilization runs on z/OS” – Bob Rogers, IBM DE Emeritus
 z/VM
► Successor to CP/67, VM/370 and follow-on systems
► Gold standard of virtualization
 z/TPF
► Continuing support of large-scale transaction processing used by
airlines, hotels, car-rentals, &c
 zLinux
► Mainframe-class server software with attitude
35
Facilities Added to to the z900 & z800
Extended-translation facilities
► Provides for translating, comparing, and moving single- and
double-byte character representations
Multiply and add / subtract instructions
► Enhancements to classic hexadecimal floating point
► Key to advanced math & crypto operations
Long-displacement facility
► Provides significant register-constraint relief
► Increases displacement in storage-accessing instructions
from 4K to 1M
36
Facilities Added in the zSeries z990 & z890 (2002)
 Message-Security Assist
► Five general instructions that
perform wide variety of HW
cryptographic operations
► DEA-64, -128, 192; SHA-1
 More extended-translation facility
enhancements
► Instructions to perform
Unicode™ conversions
 Functional enhancements to
cross-memory linkage operations
IBM eServer zSeries 990
37
Facilities Added in the z9-109 (2005)
 Decimal floating point facility
► 54 new instructions based on the emerging
DFP standard
 Additional instructions with extended (32-
bit) immediate operands
► Relieves register constraints & cache
accesses
 Improved timing-facility instructions
► Allows synchronization of TOD clocks to
within nanoseconds across great distances
 Unnormalized extensions for classic
hexadecimal floating point (useful for crypto
operations)
 Message-security-assist enhancements #1
► SHA-256, AES-128, & PRNG
IBM eServer zSeries z9-109
38
Facilities Added in the System z10 (2008)
 Instructions to provide better indication of
machine topology
► Cache cognizance / prefetching of
operands
 New compare-and-branch / compare-and-
trap combo instructions
 Additional instructions with long immediate
operands
 Additional instructions with relative
addresses
 Rotate-then-***-selected bits instructions
 Instructions to facilitate text parsing
 Message-security-assist enhancements # 2
► AES-192, AES-256, & SHA-512
 “Large page” dynamic address translation
 CPU measurement facility
IBM Enterprise Class z10
39
Facilities Added in the z196 (2010)
 High-word facility
► Effectively provides 16 additional 32-bit general registers
 Interlocked-access facility
► Improved multiprocessor serialized access to storage
 Load / store-on-condition facility
► Conditional execution of an instruction based on CC
► Significant code performance improvement
 Distinct-operands facility
 BFP and DFP floating-point enhancements
 Message-security-assist enhancements #3 & 4
► Provides hardware-secured encrypted keys for existing
functions
► CFB-, OFB-, CMAC-, CC-, GC-, and XTS-modes of
encryption
 Numerous other performance enhancements.
 BladeCenter – direct attachment of blade-technology
servers of other architectures.
IBM zEnterprise z196
40
Facilities Added in the zEC12 (2012)
 DFP zoned-conversion facility
► Allows efficient calculation of packed / zoned values, with
minimum storage accesses
 Enhanced-DAT Facility 2
► 2 G-byte storage frame
 Interlocked-access facility 2
► Simplifies multi-programming
 Optimizations for Java
► Load-and-trap facility
► Execution-hint & branch-prediction facilities
► Miscellaneous general instruction enhancements
► Run-time instrumentation facility
– Dynamically monitor and alter workloads
 Transactional-execution facility
► First generally-available processor to provide transactional
memory implementation.
► Potential for significant multiprocessing improvements
► Lock elision
► Speculative execution
IBM zEnterprise EC12
41
S/360 Legacy Systems – Instruction Growth
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2010
0
200
400
600
800
1000
YEAR
INSTRUCTIONS
System/360 – ESA/390
z/Architecture
??
42
Summary (1)
 System/360 was the evolutionary outgrowth of the IBM products
of the early 1960s
► An amalgam of existing hardware technology
► A completely new CPU architecture
 Significant corporate gamble
► Costs greatly exceeded expectations … but
► Results were successful beyond all expectations
 CPU architecture that is robust and enduring
► Upwards and downwards software compatibility across all product
models
► Application programs from 1964 can still successfully execute on
the latest z/Architecture processors
► Architectural legacy that continues to grow
43
Summary (2)
 S/360 architecture has evolved to provide numerous
enhancements:
► Additional addressing (24  31  64-bit addresses)
► Larger binary data (32  64-bit registers)
► Two additional floating-point representations (HFP + BFP & DFP)
► Advanced program-linkage operations
► Ability to access multiple address spaces simultaneously
► Much broader I/O capacity
– Over 1,000 I/O channels using fibre-channel, Ethernet, PCI, &c
► Additional instructions for compiler efficiency
– Register constraint relief
– Cache optimization
– General performance benefit
– z/Architecture now includes over 1,000 instructions !!
 All while retaining application-program compatibility with the
original S/360 instruction set

Contenu connexe

Similaire à Dan GreinerIBMTarihçe.ppt

Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09
Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09
Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09Nickbarker
 
March 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cieMarch 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cieShailesh Dubey
 
March 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cieMarch 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cieShailesh Dubey
 
ICT assignment.pptx
ICT assignment.pptxICT assignment.pptx
ICT assignment.pptxSourabYadav1
 
Computer Fundamentals
Computer FundamentalsComputer Fundamentals
Computer FundamentalsMudit Khetan
 
Computer generation and language translator
Computer generation and language translatorComputer generation and language translator
Computer generation and language translatorShruti Pendharkar
 
SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop
SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop
SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop Splunk
 
Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)
Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)
Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)Abbott
 
IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015
IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015
IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015Aron Kondoro
 
Fourth Generation Computers.pptx
Fourth Generation Computers.pptxFourth Generation Computers.pptx
Fourth Generation Computers.pptxAbi Abi
 
A brief look at ibm mainframe history
A brief look at ibm mainframe historyA brief look at ibm mainframe history
A brief look at ibm mainframe historysivaprasanth rentala
 
IS 139 Lecture 1
IS 139 Lecture 1IS 139 Lecture 1
IS 139 Lecture 1wajanga
 

Similaire à Dan GreinerIBMTarihçe.ppt (20)

Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09
Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09
Past & Future Of The Cloud Nott Tues Nov 09
 
1. computers introduction
1. computers introduction1. computers introduction
1. computers introduction
 
Ibm
IbmIbm
Ibm
 
Ibm
IbmIbm
Ibm
 
March 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cieMarch 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cie
 
March 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cieMarch 3 2004 for the ai cie
March 3 2004 for the ai cie
 
ICT assignment.pptx
ICT assignment.pptxICT assignment.pptx
ICT assignment.pptx
 
Computer Fundamentals
Computer FundamentalsComputer Fundamentals
Computer Fundamentals
 
Computer generation and language translator
Computer generation and language translatorComputer generation and language translator
Computer generation and language translator
 
SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop
SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop
SplunkSummit 2015 - ES Hands On Workshop
 
Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)
Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)
Chap003 MIS (Management Information System)
 
2018-11-05 Intro to AI
2018-11-05 Intro to AI2018-11-05 Intro to AI
2018-11-05 Intro to AI
 
IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015
IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015
IS 139 Lecture 1 - 2015
 
Unit i
Unit iUnit i
Unit i
 
Personal Computers
Personal ComputersPersonal Computers
Personal Computers
 
Fourth Generation Computers.pptx
Fourth Generation Computers.pptxFourth Generation Computers.pptx
Fourth Generation Computers.pptx
 
A brief look at ibm mainframe history
A brief look at ibm mainframe historyA brief look at ibm mainframe history
A brief look at ibm mainframe history
 
IS 139 Lecture 1
IS 139 Lecture 1IS 139 Lecture 1
IS 139 Lecture 1
 
Z13 update
Z13 updateZ13 update
Z13 update
 
Ita unit i
Ita unit iIta unit i
Ita unit i
 

Dernier

SensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving Cars
SensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving CarsSensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving Cars
SensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving CarsChristian Birchler
 
Salesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZ
Salesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZSalesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZ
Salesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZABSYZ Inc
 
英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作
英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作
英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作qr0udbr0
 
Folding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a series
Folding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a seriesFolding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a series
Folding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a seriesPhilip Schwarz
 
UI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptx
UI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptxUI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptx
UI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptxAndreas Kunz
 
How to submit a standout Adobe Champion Application
How to submit a standout Adobe Champion ApplicationHow to submit a standout Adobe Champion Application
How to submit a standout Adobe Champion ApplicationBradBedford3
 
Powering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data Streams
Powering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data StreamsPowering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data Streams
Powering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data StreamsSafe Software
 
Unveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML Diagrams
Unveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML DiagramsUnveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML Diagrams
Unveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML DiagramsAhmed Mohamed
 
PREDICTING RIVER WATER QUALITY ppt presentation
PREDICTING  RIVER  WATER QUALITY  ppt presentationPREDICTING  RIVER  WATER QUALITY  ppt presentation
PREDICTING RIVER WATER QUALITY ppt presentationvaddepallysandeep122
 
Precise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive Goal
Precise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive GoalPrecise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive Goal
Precise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive GoalLionel Briand
 
Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...
Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...
Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...Cizo Technology Services
 
Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...
Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...
Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...Natan Silnitsky
 
How To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTRO
How To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTROHow To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTRO
How To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTROmotivationalword821
 
Xen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdf
Xen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdfXen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdf
Xen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdfStefano Stabellini
 
Unveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New Features
Unveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New FeaturesUnveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New Features
Unveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New FeaturesŁukasz Chruściel
 
Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)
Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)
Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)Hr365.us smith
 
Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...
Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...
Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...OnePlan Solutions
 
Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...
Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...
Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...confluent
 
20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...
20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...
20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...Akihiro Suda
 

Dernier (20)

SensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving Cars
SensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving CarsSensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving Cars
SensoDat: Simulation-based Sensor Dataset of Self-driving Cars
 
Salesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZ
Salesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZSalesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZ
Salesforce Implementation Services PPT By ABSYZ
 
Hot Sexy call girls in Patel Nagar🔝 9953056974 🔝 escort Service
Hot Sexy call girls in Patel Nagar🔝 9953056974 🔝 escort ServiceHot Sexy call girls in Patel Nagar🔝 9953056974 🔝 escort Service
Hot Sexy call girls in Patel Nagar🔝 9953056974 🔝 escort Service
 
英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作
英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作
英国UN学位证,北安普顿大学毕业证书1:1制作
 
Folding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a series
Folding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a seriesFolding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a series
Folding Cheat Sheet #4 - fourth in a series
 
UI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptx
UI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptxUI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptx
UI5ers live - Custom Controls wrapping 3rd-party libs.pptx
 
How to submit a standout Adobe Champion Application
How to submit a standout Adobe Champion ApplicationHow to submit a standout Adobe Champion Application
How to submit a standout Adobe Champion Application
 
Powering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data Streams
Powering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data StreamsPowering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data Streams
Powering Real-Time Decisions with Continuous Data Streams
 
Unveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML Diagrams
Unveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML DiagramsUnveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML Diagrams
Unveiling Design Patterns: A Visual Guide with UML Diagrams
 
PREDICTING RIVER WATER QUALITY ppt presentation
PREDICTING  RIVER  WATER QUALITY  ppt presentationPREDICTING  RIVER  WATER QUALITY  ppt presentation
PREDICTING RIVER WATER QUALITY ppt presentation
 
Precise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive Goal
Precise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive GoalPrecise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive Goal
Precise and Complete Requirements? An Elusive Goal
 
Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...
Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...
Global Identity Enrolment and Verification Pro Solution - Cizo Technology Ser...
 
Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...
Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...
Taming Distributed Systems: Key Insights from Wix's Large-Scale Experience - ...
 
How To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTRO
How To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTROHow To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTRO
How To Manage Restaurant Staff -BTRESTRO
 
Xen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdf
Xen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdfXen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdf
Xen Safety Embedded OSS Summit April 2024 v4.pdf
 
Unveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New Features
Unveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New FeaturesUnveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New Features
Unveiling the Future: Sylius 2.0 New Features
 
Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)
Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)
Recruitment Management Software Benefits (Infographic)
 
Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...
Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...
Maximizing Efficiency and Profitability with OnePlan’s Professional Service A...
 
Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...
Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...
Catch the Wave: SAP Event-Driven and Data Streaming for the Intelligence Ente...
 
20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...
20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...
20240415 [Container Plumbing Days] Usernetes Gen2 - Kubernetes in Rootless Do...
 

Dan GreinerIBMTarihçe.ppt

  • 1. IBM Systems and Technology Group (STG) © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 2011-2013. Legacy of the IBM System/360 As presented to the NIU Student Chapter of the ACM Dan Greiner dgreiner@us.ibm.com IBM z/Server Architecture 10 October 2013, 4:00 pm
  • 2. 2 The Legal Stuff  Trademarks: ► The following terms are trademarks of the International Business Machines Corporation in the United States, other countries, or both: – ESA/390 – IBM – z/Architecture – z/OS – z/VM ► IEEE is a trademark of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. in the United States, other countries, or both. ► Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the United States, other countries or both. ► Unicode is a registered trademark of Unicode, Incorporated in the United States, other countries, or both. ► Other trademarks and registered trademarks are the properties of their respective companies.  All information contained in this document is subject to change without notice. The products described in this document are not intended for use in applications such as implantation, life support, or other hazardous uses where malfunction could result in death, bodily injury or catastrophic property damage. The information contained in this document does not affect or change IBM product specifications or warranties. Nothing in this document shall operate as an express or implied license or indemnity under the intellectual property rights of IBM or third parties. All information contained in this document was obtained in specific environments, and is presented as an illustration. The results obtained in other operating environments may vary.  While the information contained herein is believed to be accurate, such information is preliminary, and should not be relied upon for accuracy or completeness, and no representations or warranties of accuracy or completeness are made.  The information in contained in this document is provided on an “AS IS” basis. In no event will IBM be liable for damages arising directly or indirectly from any use of the information contained in this document. © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 2011-2013. Permission is granted to Northern Illinois University to record this presentation.
  • 3. 3 Topics du Jour:  Data processing prior to the System/360  The System/360 Project ► Requirements ► Development ► Software ► Challenges  System/360 Legacy ► 49½ years of industry-leading information processing IBM System/360 Model 65 Operator’s Console
  • 4. 4 Ancient History: 1952  Beginning of the “computer age”: ► 8:30 p.m. EST, 4 November 1952 ► Remington Rand’s Univac-I predicted U. S. General election results – Eisenhower – 438 electoral votes; Stephenson – 93 – With only 5% of the votes counted, Univac was within 1% of the final results! – CBS (Walter Cronkite’s 1st election coverage) delayed broadcasting Univac results until after midnight because they couldn’t believe it!  In that era, IBM was world leader in electro-mechanical accounting machines ► A legacy of Herman Hollerith’s 1890’s punched-card technology  IBM enters the “modern” computer era in late 1952 with the IBM 701 Electronic Data Processing Machine ► 19 units built and sold IBM 701 Data-Processing Machine
  • 5. 5 Setting the Stage From 1952-1960: ► IBM revenues grew almost 10x ► Earnings - $305 million; Revenue – 2.6 billion ► Employees grew from 30,000 to over 125,000 IBM computing product line in the early 1960s: ► Eight separate products ► Completely different architectures, software, & peripherals ► Migrating from one to another – or to a new product – was difficult
  • 6. 6 S/360’s Ancestors  SAGE – Early Warning Air-Defense System (late ’50s – early ’60s) ► First real-time, integrated, online system over North America ► Each system weighed >250 tons, 60,000 vacuum tubes  NASA Projects (late ’50s & on) ► Real-time systems for Vanguard, Mercury, Gemini, & Apollo missions ► Key to developing multi-processing systems  SABRE – Airline Reservations System (early 1960s & on) ► Initially 1,000 reservations terminals in 60 cities ► Also handled seat selection, rental car info, crew scheduling, fuel management, stand-by lists, aircraft maintenance info  Stretch – Supercomputer for AEC lab at Los Alamos (IBM 7030, delivered 1961) ► Advanced expertise in ferrite core memory & semiconductors ► 200 x faster than IBM 701 processors; 3 x faster than SAGE processors ► Evolved into IBM 7090 commercial system
  • 7. 7 1962 Environment  Competition was nipping at IBM’s heels ► Burroughs, Control Data Corp., GE, Honeywell, NCR, RCA, & Univac  IBM had eight separate, totally incompatible products ► Data-Systems Division (Poughkeepsie, NY): – Systems that leased for more then $10,000 / month – IBM 7000-series systems (proposed new 8000-series) ► General-Products Division – Burlington, VT, Endicott, NY, Rochester, NY, & San Jose, CA – Systems that leased for less than $10,000 / month – IBM 1400-series systems (1st computer to sell > 10,000 units); IBM 1600-series in development ► World-Trade Corporation – Developing small scientific computer (SCAMP) ► Intense inter-divisional rivalry (and secrecy)
  • 8. 8 1962 Technology Solid-state technology was relatively new ► IBM’s Standard-Modular System (SMS) contained a handful of transistors on a 2.5” x 4.5” card ► Solid-Logic Technology (SLT) – 3 to 6 times the density of SMS cards – 100 times more reliable ► Integrated circuits – 100 times the density of SMS cards – Leading edge, very little background available – But … being used by RCA in competitive products IBM Standard-Modular-System Card IBM Solid-Logic-Technology Module Dual-Inline- Package (DIP) Integrated Circuit
  • 9. 9 1962 – A Momentous Decision ! Customers were fed up with incompatible systems The SPREAD (Systems, Programming, Research, Engineering & Development) team ► 11-member team from across divisions SPREAD Report: ► Recommended future development on all mainframe projects be scrapped ► New product line (NPL) would be developed: – Initially planned on five models (ended up with six) – Largest system to be 200x faster than smallest – Performance range accomplished using SLT technology of differing speed, data-path-width differences, &c. – Each CPU to have high-speed memory using permanently- stored control information
  • 10. 10 1962 – A Momentous Decision !! SPREAD Report: ►Software will be compatible on all levels of the system – upward and downward! ►Each processor will be economically competitive in its own marketplace ►Standard I/O interfaces will be used across the entire product line – Required development of dozens of new peripherals: disk drives, tape drives, printers, card readers, magnetic & optical character readers, communications adapters, and terminals ►“Since such processors must have capabilities not now present in any IBM processor product, the new family of products will not be compatible with our existing processors.”
  • 11. 11 1962 – 1964: Development Estimated total cost in 1962 was $675 million Actual development cost closer to $5 billion ►~ $35 billion in 2013 dollars, adjusted for inflation ►Accustomed to “swimming in cash”, IBM came close to not being able to meet payroll ►$750 million invested in engineering ►$4.5 billion invested in factories, equipment, and the product itself ►Fortune called it, “IBM’s $5,000,000,000 Gamble”
  • 12. 12 1962 – 1964: Development Honeywell’s H-200 computer (announced 1963): ►“Liberator” program allowed translation of IBM 1401 programs on the Honeywell platform ►IBM lost nearly 200 customers within 2 months after announcement. – Overall computer demand up 15% … IBM grew only 7% – IBM head of sales: “Help, I’m being slaughtered.” – Potential that the entire NPL would be scrapped Emulator option: ►With relatively small microcode investment, NPL could run existing (1401 & 7090) customer applications on NPL faster than on existing systems ►Salvaged many customers ready to jump ship
  • 13. 13 System/360 – the Name Initially plans for NPL – IBM 500 ► Not particularly attractive … but we needed a number ► 360 represented the number of degrees on a compass – Indicated the processor was suited to any application – Stylized compass rose chosen as an icon – “System” and the slash added “because it looked nice.” Much corporate churn about the name ► President & VP of data-products division, VP of communications battled it out ► System/360 won by default when some clever entrepreneur painted it on the nose of the corporate aircraft
  • 14. 14 7 April 1964  IBM System/360 announced to the world ► Announcement efforts planned for over a year in advance ► Press conferences in 165 cities & 14 countries ► Estimated 100,000 customers & prospects ► Special train from NYC to Poughkeepsie “A new generation of electronic computing equipment was introduced by the IBM Corporation IBM Board Chairman Thomas J. Watson, Jr. called the event the most important announcement in the company’s history. The new equipment is known as the IBM System/360”
  • 15. 15 Post-Announcement Reaction Within 4 weeks of the announcement, orders for 1,000 systems were received ►Within the second 4 weeks, 1,000 more orders T. J. Watson memoirs: ►[System/360] was the biggest, riskiest decision I ever made, and I agonized about it for weeks, but deep down, I believed there was nothing IBM couldn’t do. ►Within IBM there was a great feeling of celebration because a new era was opening up, … But when I looked at those new products, I didn’t feel as confident as I’d have liked. Not all the equipment on display was real; some units were just mockups made of wood … an uncomfortable reminder to me of how far we had to go before we could call the program a success.
  • 16. 16 The Next 18 Months – Major Problem #1 Technology problems with Solid Logic Technology (SLT) modules ► Volume requirements would exceed capacity of vendors ► Pressure for production causing yield failures – End of 1965 … 25% SLT failure ► In-house manufacturing facilities developed: – East Fishkill, NY plant SLT module output: 1963 – ½ million; 1964 – 12 million; 1965 – 28 million; 1966 – 90 million – Plants in Burlington, VT & Essonnes, France – 26 million each
  • 17. 17 The Next 18 Months – Major Problem #2 Logistics Problems ►Component delays – Running out of circuit breakers halted manufacturing ►Software delays ►Competitor announcements – Marketing pressure to change System/360 to address competition ►Personality problems – Friction between engineering and manufacturing (led by Dick Watson – T.J.’s younger brother) and sales led to Dick Watson being replaced.
  • 18. 18 The Next 18 Months – Major Problem #3 Software Problems ► Upward- & downward-compatibility requirements. ► Multiprogramming challenges ► Developing interim products to counter competitive challenges ► Moving target – constantly changing due to dynamic marketing requirements ► SW-development, led by Fred Brooks, grew to over 1,000 people – Brook’s Law: Adding manpower to a late software project makes it later. ► Some teams working 60-hour weeks ► Initially, over 1,000,000 lines of code (LOC) – Grew to 10,000,000 LOC – Budgeted $30-40 million; actual ~ $500 million
  • 19. 19 The Next 18 Months & Onwards By December 1966: ► Over 7,000 systems installed ► $4 billion in new revenue – $1 billion in pre-tax profits ► IBM hired 25,000 new employees in 1966 ► Added 3 million square feet of manufacturing space ► Producing 1,000 System/360 units per month ► SLT modules reached projected 33-million-hour MTBF By 1970: ► Revenues went from $3.2 billion to $7.5 billion ► Earnings went from $431 million to over $ 1 billion ► Employees grew nearly 120,000 … to 269,000.
  • 20. 20 The System/360 Architectural Legacy IBM System/360 Model 44
  • 21. 21 In the Beginning … System/360 (1964)  CPU Architecture ► 32-bit arithmetic ► 16 general-purpose registers ► 24-bit addressing (16,777,216 bytes max.) – More than a few megabytes was quite rare ► Real addressing only! No virtual memory ► Approximately 142 instructions total ► Some features were optional – Decimal instructions (in-storage only) – Floating point (with 4 floating-point registers) – Direct control (specialty I/O for check sorters, &c.) – Protection feature (i.e., storage keys)  I/O architecture ► Maximum of 7 channels – One byte-multiplexor channel (printers, card readers, &c) – Up to seven selector channels (disks, tape) ► Maximum of 256 devices per channel ► Most machines had far fewer channels & devices IBM System/360 Model 50
  • 22. 22 In the Beginning … System/360 (1964)  Storage technology ► Ferrite core storage – Each toroid “donut” represented one bit ► Architectural maximum: 16 megabytes – Reality: Most customers had no more than 1-2 megabytes ► Increasing density … the donut-hole test: – New product’s core toroid fit through the donut hole of the previous product’s core IBM System/360 Model 50 IBM System/360 Core-Memory Panels (approx. 32K)
  • 23. 23 System/360 Software  Operating Systems ► Basic Operating System (BOS) ► Tape Operating System (TOS) ► Disk Operating System (DOS) ► Operating System / Multiple Fixed Tasks (OS/MFT) ► Operating System / Multiple Variable Tasks (OS/MVT) ► SABRE (Airline Reservations) ► Time-Sharing System (TSS) ► Control Program / 67 (CP/67) with the Cambridge Monitor System (CMS)  Languages ► ALGOL ► Assembler ► Basic ► COBOL ► Fortran ► PL/1 ► RPG  Online Transaction Processing ► Customer Information Control System (CICS) ► Conversational Programming System (CPS)  Numerous independent- software-vendor packages
  • 24. 24 System 370 (1970)  Virtual addressing ► One or multiple 24-bit virtual spaces ► Ability to over-commit real storage ► Ability to segregate data according to subsystem and user  Real storage still limited to 24-bit addressing ► Most CPUs still had (far) less than 16 M- bytes ► Monolithic solid-state memory … no more core  Introduced new 16 control registers  Introduced 13 new instructions ► Load/store control registers ► Compare / move long streams of characters ► Compare / insert / store character under mask  I/O subsystem expanded to (up to) 16 channels ► 32 channel option on some later machines  Hardware-assisted debugging (PER) IBM System/370 Model 138
  • 25. 25 System/370 Software  Operating Systems ► Disk Operating System / Virtual Storage Extended (DOS/VSE) ► Single Virtual Storage (SVS) ► Multiple Virtual Storage (MVS) ► Transaction Processing Facility (TPF, successor to SABRE) ► Virtual Machine / 370 (VM/370)  Database Systems ► Information Management System (IMS) ► DB/2 ► System Query Language (SQL) IBM System/370 Model 148
  • 26. 26 System 370 Enhancements (1978-1982)  26-bit real addressing (up to 64 MB) ► Single virtual address space still limited to 24 bits (16 MB)  Various specialty facilities ► Operating-system assist instructions for obtaining / releasing locks, tracing, &c. ► Mathematical assists (transcendental functions, &c.) ► High-accuracy arithmetic  Dual-address space ► Primary & secondary spaces ► New instructions: – PROGRAM CALL / PROGRAM RETURN – INSERT / SET ADDRESS SPACE CONTROL – MOVE TO PRIMARY / SECONDARY IBM 3031 Processor Complex
  • 27. 27 370 Extended Architecture (1983)  31-bit virtual addressing ► Single address space providing up to 2 G-bytes ► Bimodal addressing (1 bit of the 32-bit address stolen to designate 24- or 31-bit addressing mode)  31-bit real addressing (2 gigabytes max.) ► Most customers still had much less memory  Entirely new I/O subsystem ► Up to 256 I/O channels ► Up to 65,536 I/O devices  New instructions for I/O, storage key manipulation, and program linkage  Hardware tracing ► Eliminated significant bottleneck in multiprocessor tracing IBM 3081 Processor Complex
  • 28. 28 Interpretive Execution (1984)  Hardware virtualization ► Used by Processor Resource / System Manager (PR/SM) – Provides logical partitioning of physical machine ► Used by VM/370 Operating System ► Apportions physical resources to “guest” programs – CPUs, I/O channels, real memory ► Allows multiple operating systems to operate concurrently / separately ► Extremely fast context switch from one guest to another IBM 3084 Processor Complex
  • 29. 29 A Few Side Trips (1980s)  4300-series processor models ► Three models of mid-sized, lower- cost processors for department- level or small business applications ► Same CPU architecture and I/O capabilities  Vector facility ► Single-engine multiple-data (SIMD) instruction extension ► Intended for large-array analytics: oil research, weather prediction, fluid-dynamics modeling IBM 3090 Processor Complex IBM 4381 Processor Complex
  • 30. 30 Enterprise Systems Architecture / 370 (1989)  Introduced access-register translation (ART) ► Provided the means by which a program could access multiple address spaces with minimum overhead ► Up to 2,048 31-bit (2 G-byte) address spaces (i.e., up to 4 T-bytes) ► New nonprivileged instructions for manipulation of ARs  Introduced the home address space ► Location for principal task (process) control structures ► Where to go (i.e., who to blame) when a task abnormally ends  Introduced the linkage stack ► Push-down stack for semi-authorized tasks ► New instructions for manipulation of linkage stack. IBM System 390
  • 31. 31 Enterprise Systems Architecture / 390 (1990-1999)  Numerous new facilities: ► Arithmetic instructions with 16-bit immediate operands ► Branch instructions with 16-bit relative-branch location ► Binary-floating-point instructions (IEEE standard) – 95 new instructions and floating- point control register ► Compression facility ► Check-sum instruction (for TCP/IP & others) ► Extended-translation instructions (Unicode™ conversion) ► Sorting-assist instructions ► String-manipulation instructions  Enhancements to dual-address- space facilities IBM Enterprise Server 9000
  • 32. 32 Mainframe Perceptions in the 1990s  Reports of the death of the mainframe were premature ► “I predict that the last mainframe will be unplugged on March 15, 1996.” – Stewart Alsop, March 1991 ► “It’s clear that corporate customers still like to have centrally controlled, very predictable, reliable computing systems—exactly the kind of systems that IBM specializes in.” – Stewart Alsop, February 2002 Stuart Alsop (from IBM 2001 Annual Report)
  • 33. 33 z/Architecture & the zSeries z900 & z800 (2000)  General registers grew to 64 bits ► Existing 32-bit instructions retained – Used rightmost 32 bits of the 64-bit registers ► Large suite of 64-bit analogues added ► 163 new instructions (139 general, 11 control, 12 floating point)  Provides 64-bit virtual address space ► Up to 16 exabytes in a single space – 18,446,744,073,709,551,616 bytes ► With access-register translation, up to 2,048 spaces (275 bytes) – 37,778,931,862,957,161,709,568 bytes ► Trimodal (24-, 31-, or 64-bit) addressing – Ability to dynamically switch between addressing modes  64-bit real storage addressing ► Current models offer up to six terabytes of real storage IBM eServer zSeries 900
  • 34. 34 zSeries 64-Bit Operating Systems  z/OS ► Successor to MFT, MVT, SVS, MVS, OS/390 ► “Western civilization runs on z/OS” – Bob Rogers, IBM DE Emeritus  z/VM ► Successor to CP/67, VM/370 and follow-on systems ► Gold standard of virtualization  z/TPF ► Continuing support of large-scale transaction processing used by airlines, hotels, car-rentals, &c  zLinux ► Mainframe-class server software with attitude
  • 35. 35 Facilities Added to to the z900 & z800 Extended-translation facilities ► Provides for translating, comparing, and moving single- and double-byte character representations Multiply and add / subtract instructions ► Enhancements to classic hexadecimal floating point ► Key to advanced math & crypto operations Long-displacement facility ► Provides significant register-constraint relief ► Increases displacement in storage-accessing instructions from 4K to 1M
  • 36. 36 Facilities Added in the zSeries z990 & z890 (2002)  Message-Security Assist ► Five general instructions that perform wide variety of HW cryptographic operations ► DEA-64, -128, 192; SHA-1  More extended-translation facility enhancements ► Instructions to perform Unicode™ conversions  Functional enhancements to cross-memory linkage operations IBM eServer zSeries 990
  • 37. 37 Facilities Added in the z9-109 (2005)  Decimal floating point facility ► 54 new instructions based on the emerging DFP standard  Additional instructions with extended (32- bit) immediate operands ► Relieves register constraints & cache accesses  Improved timing-facility instructions ► Allows synchronization of TOD clocks to within nanoseconds across great distances  Unnormalized extensions for classic hexadecimal floating point (useful for crypto operations)  Message-security-assist enhancements #1 ► SHA-256, AES-128, & PRNG IBM eServer zSeries z9-109
  • 38. 38 Facilities Added in the System z10 (2008)  Instructions to provide better indication of machine topology ► Cache cognizance / prefetching of operands  New compare-and-branch / compare-and- trap combo instructions  Additional instructions with long immediate operands  Additional instructions with relative addresses  Rotate-then-***-selected bits instructions  Instructions to facilitate text parsing  Message-security-assist enhancements # 2 ► AES-192, AES-256, & SHA-512  “Large page” dynamic address translation  CPU measurement facility IBM Enterprise Class z10
  • 39. 39 Facilities Added in the z196 (2010)  High-word facility ► Effectively provides 16 additional 32-bit general registers  Interlocked-access facility ► Improved multiprocessor serialized access to storage  Load / store-on-condition facility ► Conditional execution of an instruction based on CC ► Significant code performance improvement  Distinct-operands facility  BFP and DFP floating-point enhancements  Message-security-assist enhancements #3 & 4 ► Provides hardware-secured encrypted keys for existing functions ► CFB-, OFB-, CMAC-, CC-, GC-, and XTS-modes of encryption  Numerous other performance enhancements.  BladeCenter – direct attachment of blade-technology servers of other architectures. IBM zEnterprise z196
  • 40. 40 Facilities Added in the zEC12 (2012)  DFP zoned-conversion facility ► Allows efficient calculation of packed / zoned values, with minimum storage accesses  Enhanced-DAT Facility 2 ► 2 G-byte storage frame  Interlocked-access facility 2 ► Simplifies multi-programming  Optimizations for Java ► Load-and-trap facility ► Execution-hint & branch-prediction facilities ► Miscellaneous general instruction enhancements ► Run-time instrumentation facility – Dynamically monitor and alter workloads  Transactional-execution facility ► First generally-available processor to provide transactional memory implementation. ► Potential for significant multiprocessing improvements ► Lock elision ► Speculative execution IBM zEnterprise EC12
  • 41. 41 S/360 Legacy Systems – Instruction Growth 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2010 0 200 400 600 800 1000 YEAR INSTRUCTIONS System/360 – ESA/390 z/Architecture ??
  • 42. 42 Summary (1)  System/360 was the evolutionary outgrowth of the IBM products of the early 1960s ► An amalgam of existing hardware technology ► A completely new CPU architecture  Significant corporate gamble ► Costs greatly exceeded expectations … but ► Results were successful beyond all expectations  CPU architecture that is robust and enduring ► Upwards and downwards software compatibility across all product models ► Application programs from 1964 can still successfully execute on the latest z/Architecture processors ► Architectural legacy that continues to grow
  • 43. 43 Summary (2)  S/360 architecture has evolved to provide numerous enhancements: ► Additional addressing (24  31  64-bit addresses) ► Larger binary data (32  64-bit registers) ► Two additional floating-point representations (HFP + BFP & DFP) ► Advanced program-linkage operations ► Ability to access multiple address spaces simultaneously ► Much broader I/O capacity – Over 1,000 I/O channels using fibre-channel, Ethernet, PCI, &c ► Additional instructions for compiler efficiency – Register constraint relief – Cache optimization – General performance benefit – z/Architecture now includes over 1,000 instructions !!  All while retaining application-program compatibility with the original S/360 instruction set