IBM System/370
History of IBM mainframes, 1952–present |
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Market name |
Architecture |
The IBM System/370 (often: S/370) was a model range of IBM mainframes announced on June 30, 1970 as the successors to the System/360 family. The series maintained backward compatibility with the S/360, allowing an easy migration path for customers; this, plus improved performance, were the dominant themes of the product announcement. New architectural features distinct from the S/360 range included: standard dual-processor capability; full support for virtual memory; and 128-bit floating point arithmetic. (Not all these features were part of the initial S/370 announcement, however; see below.)
Evolution
The original System/370 line underwent several architectural improvements during its roughly 20-year lifetime. The first and most significant change was the introduction of virtual memory, which was first made generally available in 1972 via IBM's "System/370 Advanced Function" announcement. IBM had initially (and controversially) chosen to exclude virtual storage from the S/370 line.[1][2] The August 2nd, 1972 announcement included:
- Address relocation hardware on all S/370s except the original models 155 and 165
- The new S/370-158 and -168
- Four new operating systems: DOS/VS (DOS with virtual storage), OS/VS1 (OS/MFT with virtual storage), OS/VS2 (OS/MVT with virtual storage) Release 1, termed SVS (Single Virtual Storage), and Release 2, termed MVS (Multiple Virtual Storage) and planned to be available 20 months later (at the end of March 1974), and VM/370 – the re-implemented CP/CMS
Virtual memory had in fact been delivered on S/370 hardware before this announcement:
- In June, 1971, on the S/370-145 (one of which had to be 'smuggled' into Cambridge Scientific Center to prevent anybody noticing the arrival of a S/370 at that hotbed of virtual memory development – since this would have signaled that the S/370 was about to receive address relocation technology).[3] The S/370-145 had relocation hardware (i.e., microcode) from the very beginning. IBM just did not document the facility nor annotate the relevant bits in the control registers and PSW that were displayed on the operator control panel when selected using the rollers. Existing S/370-145 customers were happy to learn that they did not have to purchase a hardware upgrade in order to run DOS/VS or OS/VS1 (or OS/VS2 Release 1, which was possible, but not common because of the limited amount of main storage available on the S/370-145).
Shortly after the August 2nd, 1972 announcement, DAT box (address relocation hardware) upgrades for the S/370-155 and S/370-165 were quietly announced, but were available only for purchase by customers who already owned a Model 155 or 165. After installation, these models were known as the S/370-155-II and S/370-165-II. IBM wanted customers to upgrade their 155 and 165 systems to the widely-sold S/370-158 and -168.[4] These upgrades were surprisingly expensive ($200,000 and $400,000, respectively) and had long ship date lead times after being ordered by a customer; consequently, they were never popular with customers, majority of which leased their systems via a third-party leasing company. This led to the original S/370-155 and S/370-165 models being described as boat anchors. The upgrade, required to run OS/VS1 or OS/VS2, was not cost efficient for most customers by the time IBM could actually deliver and install it, so many customers were stuck with these machines running MVT until their lease ended. It was not unusual for this to be another four, five or even six years for the more unfortunate ones, and turned out to be a significant factor[citation needed] in the slow adoption of OS/VS2 MVS, not only by customers in general, but for many internal IBM sites as well.
Later architectural changes primarily involved expansions in memory (central storage) – both physical memory and virtual address space – to support larger workloads and meet client demands for more storage. This was the inevitable trend as Moore's Law eroded the unit cost of memory. As with all IBM mainframe development, preserving backward compatibility was paramount.
- In October 1981, the 3033 and 3081 processors added "extended real addressing," which allowed 26-bit addressing for physical storage (but still imposed a 24-bit limit for any individual address space). This capability appeared later on other systems, such as the 4381 and 3090.
- The S/370-XA architecture, first available in early 1983 on the 3081 and 3083 processors, provided a number of major enhancements, including: expansion of the address space from 24-bits to 31-bits; facilitating movement of data between two address spaces; and a complete redesign of the I/O architecture. The cross-memory services capability which facilitated movement of data between address spaces was actually available just prior to S/370-XA architecture on the 3031, 3032 and 3033 processors.
- The ESA/370 architecture (later named 390/ESA[citation needed] and finally ESA/390) made further extensions, including the addition of sixteen 32-bit access registers, more addressing modes, and various facilities for working with multiple address spaces simultaneously.
Expanding the address space
As described above, the S/370 product line underwent a major architectural change: expansion of its address space from 24 to 31 bits.
The evolution of S/370 addressing was always complicated by the basic S/360 instruction set design, and its large installed code base, which relied on a 24-bit logical address. (In particular, a heavily-used machine instruction, "Load Address" (LA), explicitly cleared the top eight bits of the address being placed in a register. This created enormous migration problems for existing software.)
The strategy chosen was to implement expanded addressing in three stages:
- First at the physical level (to enable more memory hardware per system)
- Then at the operating system level (to let system software access multiple address spaces and utilize larger address spaces)
- Finally at the application level (to let new applications access larger address spaces)
Since the core S/360 instruction set remained geared to a 24-bit universe, this third step would require a real break from the status quo; existing assembly language applications would of course not benefit, and new compilers would be needed before non-assembler applications could be migrated. Most shops thus continued to run their 24-bit applications in a higher-performance 31-bit world.
This evolutionary implementation (repeated in z/Architecture) had the characteristic of solving the most urgent problems first: Relief for real memory addressing being needed sooner that virtual memory addressing.
31 versus 32 bits
IBM's choice of 31-bit (versus 32-bit) addressing for S/370-XA involved various factors. The S/360-67 had included a full 32-bit addressing mode, but this feature was not carried forward to the S/370 series, which began with only 24-bit addressing. When IBM later expanded the S/370 address space in S/370-XA, several reasons are cited for the choice of 31 bits:
- The desire to retain the high-order bit as a "control or escape bit."[5] In particular, the standard subroutine calling convention marked the final parameter word by setting its high bit.
- Interaction between 32-bit addresses and two instructions (BXH and BXLE) that treated their arguments as signed numbers (and which was said to be the reason TSS used 31-bit addressing on the S/360-67).[6]
- Input from key initial S/360-67 sites, who had debated the alternatives during the initial system design period, and had recommended 31 bits (instead of the 32-bit design that was ultimately chosen at the time).[7]
Series and models
The following table summarizes the major S/370 series and models. The middle column lists the principal architecture associated with each series. Many models supported more than one architecture; thus, 308x processors initially shipped as S/370 architecture, but later offered XA; and many processors, such as the 4381, had microcode that allowed customer selection between S/370 or XA (later, ESA) operation.
Note also the confusing term "System/370-compatible", which appeared in IBM source documents to describe certain products. Outside IBM, this term would more often describe systems from Amdahl Corporation, Hitachi Ltd., and others, that could run the same S/370 software. This choice of terminology by IBM may have been a deliberate attempt to ignore the existence of those plug compatible manufacturers (PCMs), because they competed aggressively against IBM hardware dominance.
First year of series |
Architecture | Market level |
Series | Models |
---|---|---|---|---|
1970 | System/370 (no DAT) | high-end | System/370-xxx | -155, -165, -195 |
1970 | System/370 (DAT) | mid-range | -145 and -135 | |
1972 | System/370 | high-end | -158 and -168 | |
entry | -115 and -125 | |||
mid-range | -138 and -148 | |||
1977 | System/370-compatible[8] | high-end | 303x | 3031, 3032, 3033 |
1979 | entry/mid | 43xx | 4331, 4341, 4361 | |
1980 | high-end | 308x | 3081, 3083, 3084 | |
1981 | System/370-XA | |||
1983 | mid-range | 4381 | 4381 | |
1986 | high-end | 3090 | -120 to -600 | |
1986 | System/370-compatible[9] | entry | 937x | 9370, ... |
1988 | ESA/370 | high-end | ES/3090 | ES/3090 |
1988 | mid-range | ES/4381 | -90, -91, -92 |
Notable machines in the 370 range include the IBM 370/195, the IBM 370/168, the IBM 3033, the IBM 3090 mainframe/supercomputer with its optional vector facility (VF) extension, and the relatively inexpensive IBM 9370 tailored for small-to-medium size businesses.
S/370 replacement
The System/370 line was replaced by the System/390 in the 1990s, and the architecture was similarly renamed from ESA/370 to ESA/390. This was essentially just a rename for marketing reasons, rather than major architectural change.
In 2000, the System/390 was replaced by the zSeries. The zSeries mainframes introduced the 64-bit z/Architecture, the most significant design improvement since the 31-bit transition. All have retained essential backward compatibility with the original S/360 architecture and instruction set.
Linux on the S/370
The GNU Compiler Collection had a backend for S/370, but it became obsolete over time and was finally replaced by the S/390 backend. Although the S/370 and S/390 instruction sets are essentially the same (and have been consistent since the introduction of the S/360), gcc support for older systems has been deprecated. Current support is available for machines supporting the full instruction set of System/390 Generation 5 (G5), the hardware platform for the initial release of Linux/390.
Architecture details
S/370 also refers to a computer system architecture specification [10], and is a direct and mostly backward compatible evolution of the System/360 architecture[11][12] from which it retains most aspects. This specification does not make any assumptions on the implementation itself, but rather describes the interfaces and the expected behavior of an implementation. The architecture describes mandatory interfaces that must be available on all implementations and optional interfaces which may or may not be implemented.
Some of the most notable aspects of this architecture are:
- Big endian byte ordering
- One or more processors with
- 16 32-bit General purpose registers
- 16 32-bit Control registers
- A 64-bit Program status word (PSW) which describes (among other things)
- Interrupt masks
- Privilege states
- A condition code
- A 24-bit instruction address
- Timing facilities (Time of day clock, interval timer, CPU timer and clock comparator)
- An interruption mechanism, maskable and unmaskable interruption classes and subclasses
- An instruction set. Each instruction is wholly described and also defines the conditions under which an exception is recognized in the form of program interruption.
- A memory (called storage) subsystem with
- 8 bits per byte
- A special processor communication area starting at address 0
- Key controlled protection
- 24-bit addressing
- Manual control operations that allow
- A bootstrap process (a process called Initial Program Load or IPL)
- Operator-initiated interrupts
- Resetting the system
- Basic debugging facilities
- Manual display and modifications of the system's state (memory and processor)
- An Input/Output mechanism - which doesn't describe the devices themselves
Some of the most notable optional features are:
- A Dynamic Address Translation mechanism that can be used to implement a virtual memory system
- Floating point instructions
Due to the extensible nature of the interface specification, new interface could be devised without breaking the initial interface contract. Such examples are:
- ECPS:VM, a feature to assist the VM/370 operating system
- ECPS:VSE, a feature to assist the DOS operating system
Great care was taken in order to ensure that further modifications to the architecture would remain compatible, at least as far as non-privileged programs were concerned. This philosophy predates the definition of the S/370 architecture and started with the S/360 architecture. If certain rules are adhered to, a program written for this architecture will run with the intended results on the successors of this architecture.
One of the key aspect that allows this compatibility is to define that unused fields are to be set to a predetermined value (usually 0) - and that using another value leads to an exception condition being recognized. When the interface is modified, this unused field can then be used to alter the interface contract. A well formed program can then still produce the expected result even when executing on an implementation of the new interface.
Such an example is that the S/370 architecture specifies that the 64 bit PSW register bit number 32 has to be set to 0 and that doing otherwise leads to an exception. Subsequently when the S/370 XA architecture was defined, it was stated that this bit would indicate whether the program was a program expecting a 24 bit address architecture or 31 bit address architecture. Thus, most programs running on the 24 bit architecture can still run on 31 bit systems and the new 64 bit system.
However, not all of the interfaces can remain compatible. Emphasis was put on having non control programs (called problem state programs) remain compatible. Thus, operating systems have to be ported to the new architecture because the control interfaces can (and were) redefined in an incompatible way. For example, the I/O interface was redesigned in S/370 XA making S/370 program issuing I/O operations unusable as-is.
See also
References
- ^ Pugh, E.W. IBM's 360 and early 370 systems. MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-16123-0.
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suggested) (help) - ^ "Information technology industry timeline, 1964-1974".
- ^ Varian, op. cit., p. 29 – security over delivery of relocating 145 to CSC
- ^ A. Padegs (September 1981). "System/360 and Beyond" (PDF). IBM Journal of Research & Development. 25 (5). IBM: 377–390. – tables include model characteristics (Table 1) and announcement/shipment dates (Table 2). The S/370-155-II and -165-II are listed under the former but not the latter, because the upgraded systems were not formally announced as separate models. The "System/370 Advanced Function" announcement, including the -158 and -168, was the main public event.
- ^ A. Padegs (May 1983). "System/370 Extended Architecture: design considerations". IBM Journal of Research & Development. 27 (3). IBM: 198–205. [available on-line at www.research.ibm.com – a subsection titled "31-bit addressing" begins on page 201.
- ^ Melinda Varian, VM and the VM community, past present, and future, SHARE 89 Sessions 9059-9061, 1977, p. 26, note 85; available online at www.princeton.edu/~melinda
- ^ Varian, op. cit., pp. 8-9, note 21; includes other comments about the "Inner Six" 360-67 design disclosees
- ^ "IBM timeline of S/370 series". with surprising term 'System/370-compatible' for the 3xxx and 4xxx series
- ^ "IBM 9370 announcement letter". to explain why the 9370 is categorized as a System/370 compatible system
- ^ GA22-7000: System/370 principles of operation
- ^ A22-6821: System/360 principles of operation
- ^ GA22-7000-4: System/370 principles of operation, p. 9, chapter 1 – describes philosophy of evolution from S/360 to S/370
External links
- "System/370 Principles of Operation, IBM, GA22-7000-4" (PDF). 1975.
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ignored (help) - "System/370 Announcement".
- Gum, P.H. (1983). "System/370 Extended Architecture: facilities for virtual machines" (PDF). IBM Journal of Research & Development. 27 (6).
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ignored (help) - Plambeck, K.E. (1989). "Concepts of Enterprise System Architecture/370" (PDF). IBM Systems Journal. 28 (1).
- Plambeck, K.E. "Development and attributes of z/Architecture". IBM Journal of Research & Development. 46 (4/5). doi:10.1147/rd.464.0367.
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suggested) (help) - "Information technology industry timeline, 1964-1974". provides a good overview of period events
- Web-based S/370 Assembler Simulator
- Course Notes from Northern Illinois University on IBM 370