VM (operating system) explained

See also: CP/CMS and History of CP/CMS.

z/VM
Logo Size:64px
Developer:IBM
Source Model:1972–1986 Open source, 1977–present Closed source
Supported Platforms:System/370, System/390, zSeries, IBM zEnterprise System
Family:VM family
Latest Release Version:IBM z/VM V7.2
Marketing Target:IBM mainframe computers
Language:English
Working State:Current
License:1972–1981 Public domain, 1976–present Proprietary

VM (often: VM/CMS) is a family of IBM virtual machine operating systems used on IBM mainframes System/370, System/390, zSeries, System z and compatible systems, including the Hercules emulator for personal computers.

The following versions are known:

Virtual Machine Facility/370
  • VM/370, released in 1972, is a System/370 reimplementation of earlier CP/CMS operating system.
    VM/370 Basic System Extensions Program Product
  • VM/BSE (BSEPP) is an enhancement to VM/370 that adds support for more devices (such as 3370-type fixed-block-architecture DASD drives), improvements to the CMS environment (such as an improved editor), and some stability enhancements to CP.
    VM/370 System Extensions Program Product
  • VM/SE (SEPP) is an enhancement to VM/370 that includes the facilities of VM/BSE, as well as a few additional fixes and features.
    Virtual Machine/System Product
  • VM/SP, a milestone version,[1] replaces VM/370, VM/BSE and VM/SE. Release 1 added EXEC2 and XEDIT System Product Editor; Release 3 added REXX; Release 6 added the shared filesystem.
    Virtual Machine/System Product High Performance Option [2]
  • VM/SP HPO adds additional device support and functionality to VM/SP, and allows certain S/370 machines that can utilize more than 16 MB of real storage to do so, up to 64 MB. This version was intended for users that would be running multiple S/370 guests at once.
    Virtual Machine/Extended Architecture Migration Aid [3]
  • VM/XA MA is intended to ease the migration from MVS/370 to MVS/XA by allowing both to run concurrently on the same processor complex.
    Virtual Machine/Extended Architecture System Facility [4]
  • VM/XA SF is an upgraded VM/XA MA with improved functionality and performance.
    Virtual Machine/Extended Architecture System Product [5]
  • VM/XA SP is an upgraded VM/XA MA with improved functionality and performance, offered as a replacement for VM/SP HPO on machines supporting S/370-XA. It includes a version of CMS that can run in either S/370 or S/370-XA mode.
    Virtual Machine/Enterprise Systems Architecture [6]
  • VM/ESA provides the facilities of VM/SP, VM/SP HPO and VM/XA SP. VM/ESA version 1 can run in S/370, ESA/370 or ESA/390 mode; it does not support S/370 XA mode. Version 2 only runs in ESA/390 mode. The S/370-capable versions of VM/ESA were actually their own separate version from the ESA/390 versions of VM/ESA, as the S/370 versions are based on the older VM/SP HPO codebase, and the ESA/390 versions are based on the newer VM/XA codebase.
    z/VM[7]

    z/VM, the last version still widely used as one of the main full virtualization solutions for the mainframe market. z/VM 4.4 was the last version that could run in ESA/390 mode; subsequent versions only run in z/Architecture mode.

    The CMS in the name refers to the Conversational Monitor System, a component of the product that is a single-user operating system that runs in a virtual machine and provides conversational time-sharing in VM.

    Overview

    The heart of the VM architecture is the Control Program or hypervisor abbreviated CP, VM-CP and sometimes, ambiguously, VM. It runs on the physical hardware, and creates the virtual machine environment. VM-CP provides full virtualization of the physical machine – including all I/O and other privileged operations. It performs the system's resource-sharing, including device management, dispatching, virtual storage management, and other traditional operating system tasks. Each VM user is provided with a separate virtual machine having its own address space, virtual devices, etc., and which is capable of running any software that could be run on a stand-alone machine. A given VM mainframe typically runs hundreds or thousands of virtual machine instances. VM-CP began life as CP-370, a reimplementation of CP-67, itself a reimplementation of CP-40.

    Running within each virtual machine is another operating system, a guest operating system. This might be:

    Hypervisor interface

    IBM coined the term hypervisor for the 360/65[12] and later used it for the DIAG handler of CP-67.

    The Diagnose instruction ('83'x—no mnemonic) is a privileged instruction originally intended by IBM to perform "built-in diagnostic functions, or other model-dependent functions."[13] IBM repurposed DIAG for "communication between a virtual machine and CP."[14] [15] The instruction contains two four-bit register numbers, called Rx and Ry, which can "contain operand storage addresses or return codes passed to the DIAGNOSE interface," and a two-byte code "that CP uses to determine what DIAGNOSE function to perform." A few of the available diagnose functions are listed below.

    Hexadecimal code Function
    0000Store Extended-Identification Code
    0004 Examine Real Storage
    0008Virtual Console Function—Execute a CP command
    0018Standard DASD I/O
    0020 General I/O—Execute any valid CCW chain on a tape or disk device
    003C Update the VM/370 directory
    0058 3270 Virtual Console Interface—perform full-screen I/O on an IBM 3270 terminal
    0060 Determine Virtual Machine Storage Size
    0068 Virtual Machine Communication Facility (VMCF)

    CMS use of DIAGNOSE

    At one time, CMS was capable of running on a bare machine, as a true operating system (though such a configuration would be unusual). It now runs only as a guest OS under VM. This is because CMS relies on a hypervisor interface to VM-CP, to perform file system operations and request other VM services. This paravirtualization interface:

    Minidisks

    CMS and other operating systems often have DASD requirements much smaller than the sizes of actual volumes. For this reason CP allows an installation to define virtual disks of any size up to the capacity of the device. For CKD volumes, a minidisk must be defined in full cylinders. A minidisk has the same attributes as the underlying real disk, except that it is usually smaller and the beginning of each minidisk is mapped to cylinder or block 0. The minidisk may be accessed using the same channel programs as the real disk.

    A minidisk that has been initialized with a CMS file system is referred to as a CMS minidisk, although CMS is not the only system that can use them.

    It is common practice to define full volume minidisks for use by such guest operating systems as z/OS instead of using DEDICATE to assign the volume to a specific virtual machine. In addition, "full-pack links" are often defined for every DASD on the system, and are owned by the MAINT userid. These are used for backing up the system using the DASD Dump/Restore program, where the entire contents of a DASD are written to tape (or another DASD) exactly.

    Shared File System

    VM/SP Release 6 introduced the Shared File System [16] which vastly improved CMS file storage capabilities. The CMS minidisk file system does not support directories (folders) at all, however, the SFS does. SFS also introduces more granular security. With CMS minidisks, the system can be configured to allow or deny users read-only or read-write access to a disk, but single files cannot have the same security. SFS alleviates this, and vastly improves performance.

    The SFS is provided by service virtual machines. On a modern VM system, there are usually three that are required: VMSERVR, the "recovery machine" that does not actually serve any files; VMSERVS, the server for the VMSYS filepool; and VMSERVU, the server for the VMSYSU (user) filepool.[17] The file pool server machines own several minidisks, usually including a CMS A-disk (virtual device address 191, containing the file pool configuration files), a control disk, a log disk, and any number of data disks that actually store user files.With modern VM versions, most of the system can be installed to SFS, with the few remaining minidisks being the ones absolutely necessary for the system to start up, and the ones being owned by the filepool server machines.If a user account is configured to only use SFS (and does not own any minidisks), the user's A-disk will be FILEPOOL:USERID. and any subsequent directories that the user creates will be FILEPOOL:USERID.DIR1.DIR2.DIR3 where the equivalent UNIX file path is /dir1/dir2/dir3. SFS directories can have much more granular access controls when compared to minidisks (which, as mentioned above, can often only have a read password, a write password, and a multi-write password). SFS directories also solve the issues that may arise when two users write to the same CMS minidisk at the same time, which may cause disk corruption (as the CMS VM performing the writes may be unaware that another CMS instance is also writing to the minidisk).

    The file pool server machines also serve a closely related filesystem: the Byte File System. BFS is used to store files on a UNIX-style filesystem. Its primary use is for the VM OpenExtensions POSIX environment for CMS. The CMS user virtual machines themselves communicate with the SFS server virtual machines through the IUCV mechanism.[18]

    History

    The early history of VM is described in the articles CP/CMS and History of CP/CMS. VM/370 is a reimplementation of CP/CMS, and was made available in 1972 as part of IBM's System/370 Advanced Function announcement (which added virtual memory hardware and operating systems to the System/370 series). Early releases of VM through VM/370 Release 6 continued in open source through 1981, and today are considered to be in the public domain. This policy ended in 1977 with the chargeable VM/SE and VM/BSE upgrades and in 1980 with VM/System Product (VM/SP). However, IBM continued providing updates in source form for existing code for many years, although the upgrades to all but the free base required a license. As with CP-67, privileged instructions in a virtual machine cause a program interrupt, and CP simulated the behavior of the privileged instruction.VM remained an important platform within IBM, used for operating system development and time-sharing use; but for customers it remained IBM's "other operating system". The OS and DOS families remained IBM's strategic products, and customers were not encouraged to run VM. Those that did formed close working relationships, continuing the community-support model of early CP/CMS users. In the meantime, the system struggled with political infighting within IBM over what resources should be available to the project, as compared with other IBM efforts. A basic problem with the system was seen at IBM's field sales level: VM/CMS demonstrably reduced the amount of hardware needed to support a given number of time-sharing users. IBM was, after all, in the business of selling computer systems.

    Melinda Varian provides this fascinating quote, illustrating VM's unexpected success:

    The marketing forecasts for VM/370 predicted that no more than one 168 would ever run VM during the entire life of the product. In fact, the first 168 delivered to a customer ran only CP and CMS. Ten years later, ten percent of the large processors being shipped from Poughkeepsie would be destined to run VM, as would a very substantial portion of the mid-range machines that were built in Endicott. Before fifteen years had passed, there would be more VM licenses than MVS licenses.[19]
    A PC DOS version that runs CMS on the XT/370 (and later on the AT/370) is called VM/PC. VM/PC 1.1 was based on VM/SP release 3. When IBM introduced the P/370 and P/390 processor cards, a PC could now run full VM systems, including VM/370, VM/SP, VM/XA, and VM/ESA (these cards were fully compatible with S/370 and S/390 mainframes, and could run any S/370 operating system from the 31-bit era, e.g., MVS/ESA, VSE/ESA).

    In addition to the base VM/SP releases, IBM also introduced VM/SP HPO (High Performance Option). This add-on (which is installed over the base VM/SP release) improved several key system facilities, including allowing the usage of more than 16 MB of storage (RAM) on supported models (such as the IBM 4381). With VM/SP HPO installed, the new limit was 64 MB; however, a single user (or virtual machine) could not use more than 16 MB. The functions of the spool filesystem were also improved, allowing 9900 spool files to be created per user, rather than 9900 for the whole system. The architecture of the spool filesystem was also enhanced, each spool file now had a unique user ID associated with it, and reader file control blocks were now held in virtual storage. The system could also be configured to deny certain users access to the vector facility (by means of user directory entries).[20]

    Releases of VM since VM/SP Release 1 supported multiprocessor systems. System/370 versions of VM (such as VM/SP and VM/SP HPO) supported a maximum of two processors, with the system operating in either UP (uniprocessor) mode, MP (multiprocessor) mode, or AP (attached processor) mode.[21] AP mode is the same as MP mode, except the second processor lacks I/O capability. System/370-XA releases of VM (such as VM/XA) supported more. System/390 releases (such as VM/ESA) almost removed the limit entirely, and some modern z/VM systems can have as many as 80 processors.[22] The per-VM limit for defined processors is 64.

    When IBM introduced the System/370 Extended Architecture on the 3081, customers were faced with the need to run a production MVS/370 system while testing MVS/XA on the same machine. IBM's solution was VM/XA Migration Aid, which used the new Start Interpretive Execution (SIE) instruction to run the virtual machine. SIE automatically handled some privileged instructions and returned to CP for cases that it couldn't handle. The Processor Resource/System Manager (PR/SM) of the later 3090 also used SIE. There were several VM/XA products before it was eventually supplanted by VM/ESA and z/VM.

    In addition to RSCS networking, IBM also provided users with VTAM networking. ACF/VTAM for VM was fully compatible with ACF/VTAM on MVS and VSE.[23] Like RSCS, VTAM on VM ran under the specialized GCS operating system. However, VM also supported TCP/IP networking. In the late 1980s, IBM produced a TCP/IP stack for VM/SP and VM/XA.[24] The stack supported IPv4 networks, and a variety of network interface systems (such as inter-mainframe channel-to-channel links, or a specialized IBM RT PC that would relay traffic out to a Token Ring or Ethernet network). The stack provided support for Telnet connections, from either simple line-mode terminal emulators or VT100-compatible emulators, or proper IBM 3270 terminal emulators. The stack also provided an FTP server. IBM also produced an optional NFS server for VM; early versions were rather primitive, but modern versions are much more advanced.[25]

    There was also a fourth networking option, known as VM/Pass-Through Facility (or more commonly called, PVM). PVM, like VTAM, allowed for connections to remote VM/CMS systems, as well as other IBM systems.[26] If two VM/CMS nodes were linked together over a channel-to-channel link or bisync link (possibly using a dialup modem or leased line), a user could remotely connect to either system by entering "DIAL PVM" on the VM login screen, then entering the system node name (or choosing it from a list of available nodes). Alternatively, a user running CMS could use the PASSTHRU program that was installed alongside PVM, allowing for quick access to remote systems without having to log out of the user's session. PVM also supported accessing non-VM systems, by utilizing a 3x74 emulation technique. Later releases of PVM also featured a component that could accept connections from a SNA network.

    VM was also the cornerstone operating system of BITNET, as the RSCS system available for VM provided a simple network that was easy to implement, and somewhat reliable. VM sites were interlinked by means of an RSCS VM on each VM system communicating with one another, and users could send and receive messages, files, and batch jobs through RSCS. The "NOTE" command used XEDIT to display a dialog to create an email, from which the user could send it. If the user specified an address in the form of user at node, the email file would be delivered to RSCS, which would then deliver it to the target user on the target system. If the site has TCP/IP installed, RSCS could work with the SMTP service machine to deliver notes (emails) to remote systems, as well as receive them. If the user specified user at some.host.name, the NOTE program would deliver the email to the SMTP service machine, which would then route it out to the destination site on the Internet.

    VM's role changed within IBM when hardware evolution led to significant changes in processor architecture. Backward compatibility remained a cornerstone of the IBM mainframe family, which still uses the basic instruction set introduced with the original System/360; but the need for efficient use of the 64-bit zSeries made the VM approach much more attractive. VM was also utilized in data centers converting from DOS/VSE to MVS and is useful when running mainframe AIX and Linux, platforms that were to become increasingly important. The current z/VM platform has finally achieved the recognition within IBM that VM users long felt it deserved. Some z/VM sites run thousands of simultaneous virtual machine users on a single system. z/VM was first released in October 2000[27] and remains in active use and development.

    IBM and third parties have offered many applications and tools that run under VM. Examples include RAMIS, FOCUS, SPSS, NOMAD, DB2, REXX, RACF, and OfficeVision. Current VM offerings run the gamut of mainframe applications, including HTTP servers, database managers, analysis tools, engineering packages, and financial systems.

    CP commands

    As of release 6, the VM/370 Control Program has a number of commands for General Users, concerned with defining and controlling the user's virtual machine. Lower-case portions of the command are optional[28]

    Command Description
    1. CP
    Allows the user to issue a CP command from a command environment, or any other virtual machine after pressing the break key (defaults to PA1)
    ADSTOP Sets an address stop to halt the virtual machine at a specific instruction
    ATTN Causes an attention interruption allowing CP to take control in a command environment
    Begin Continue or resume execution of the user's virtual machine, optionally at a specified address
    CHangeAlter attributes of a spool file or files. For example, the output class or the name of the file can be changed, or printer-specific attributes set
    CloseCloses an open printer, punch, reader, or console file and releases it to the spooling system
    COUPLEConnect a virtual channel-to-channel adapter (CTCA) to another. Also used to connect simulated QDIO Ethernet cards to a virtual switch.
    CP Execute a CP command in a CMS environment
    DEFineAlter the current virtual machine configuration. Add virtual devices or change available storage size
    DETach Remove a virtual device or channel from the current configuration
    DIAL Connect your terminal at the logon screen to a logged-on multi-access virtual machine's simulated 3270 or typewriter terminals
    DISConnDisconnect your terminal while allowing your virtual machine to continue running
    Display Display virtual machine storage or (virtual) hardware registers
    DUMP Print a snapshot dump of the current virtual machine on the virtual spooled printer
    ECHO Set the virtual machine to echo typed lines
    EXTernalCause an external interrupt to the virtual machine
    INDicate Display current system load or your resource usage
    Ipl IPL (boot) an operating system on your virtual machine
    LINK Attach a device from another virtual machine, if that machine's definition allows sharing
    LOADVFCB Specify a forms control buffer (FCB) for a virtual printer
    LOGoff
    LOGout
    Terminate execution of the current virtual machine and disconnect from the system
    Logon
    Login
    Sign on to the system
    Message
    MSG
    Send a one-line message to the system operator or another user
    NOTReady Cause a virtual device to appear not ready
    ORDerReorder closed spool files by ID or class
    PURge Delete closed spool files for a device by class,m ID, or ALL
    Query Display status information for your virtual machine, or the message of the day, or number or names of logged-in users
    READY Cause a device end interruption for a device
    REQuest Cause an interrupt on your virtual console
    RESET Clear all pending interrupts for a device
    REWind Rewind a real (non virtual) magnetic tape unit
    SET Set various attributes for your virtual machine, including messaging or terminal function keys
    SLeep Place your virtual machine in a dormant state indefinitely or for a specified period of time
    SMsg Send a one-line special message to another virtual machine (usually used to control the operation of the virtual machine; commonly used with RSCS)
    SPoolSet options for a spooled virtual device (printer, reader, or punch)
    STore Alter the contents of registers or storage of your virtual machine
    SYStem Reset or restart your virtual machine or clear storage
    TAg Set a tag associated with a spooled device or file. The tag is usually used by VM's Remote Spooling Communications Subystem (RSCS) to identify the destination of a file
    TERMinal Set characteristics of your terminal
    TRace Start or stop tracing of specified virtual machine activities
    TRANsferTransfer a spool file to or from another user
    VMDUMP Dump your virtual machine in a format readable by the Interactive Problem Control System (IPCS) program product

    OpenEdition Extensions

    Starting with VM/ESA Version 2, IBM introduced the chargeable optional feature OpenEdition for VM/ESA Shell and Utilities Feature,[29] which provides POSIX compatibility for CMS. The stand-out feature was a UNIX shell for CMS. The C compiler for this UNIX environment is provided by either C/370 or C for VM/ESA. Neither the CMS filesystem nor the standard VM Shared File System has any support for UNIX-style files and paths; instead, the Byte File System is used. Once a BFS extent is created in an SFS file pool, the user can mount it using the OPENVM MOUNT /../VMBFS:fileservername:filepoolname /path/to/mount/point. The user must also mount the root filesystem, done with OPENVM MOUNT /../VMBFS:VMSYS:ROOT/ /, a shell can then be started with OPENVM SHELL. Unlike the normal SFS, access to BFS filesystems is controlled by POSIX permissions (with chmod and chown).

    Starting with z/VM Version 3, IBM integrated OpenEdition into z/VM[30] and renamed it OpenExtensions. OpenEdition and OpenExtensions provide POSIX.2 compliance to CMS.[31] Programs compiled to run under the OpenExtensions shell are stored in the same format as standard CMS executable modules. Visual editors, such as vi are unavailable, as 3270 terminals are not capable. Users can use ed or XEDIT instead of vi.

    VM mascot

    In the early 1980s, the VM group within SHARE (the IBM user group) sought a mascot or logo for the community to adopt. This was in part a response to IBM's MVS users selecting the turkey as a mascot (chosen, according to legend, by the MVS Performance Group in the early days of MVS, when its performance was a sore topic). In 1983, the teddy bear became VM's de facto mascot at SHARE 60, when teddy bear stickers were attached to the nametags of "cuddlier oldtimers" to flag them for newcomers as "friendly if approached". The bears were a hit and soon appeared widely.[32] Bears were awarded to inductees of the "Order of the Knights of VM", individuals who made "useful contributions" to the community.[33] [34]

    Criticism

    While VM was relatively light-weight (when compared to its counterparts, such as MVS), VM was somewhat unstable in its early days. It was considered quite a feat to keep a VM/370 system up for more than a week. Users also criticized the CMS file system, noting that other operating systems in the mid-1980s had directories, symbolic links, and other key features; CMS had none of these until 1988 when VM/SP release 6 came out, which introduced the Shared File System and alleviated these issues.

    Some users also noted that VM OpenEdition was somewhat "unnecessary."

    See also

    External links

    VM sources

    Other resources

    Notes and References

    1. SHARE August 2004 . The Evolution of IBM Mainframes and VM . Session 9140 . Elliott . Jim . August 17, 2004 . . Linux for S/390 Linux for Big Iron . October 21, 2007 . October 13, 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061013194037/http://linuxvm.org/Present/SHARE103/S9140jea.pdf . live.
    2. VM/SYSTEM PRODUCT HIGH PERFORMANCE OPTION ANNOUNCED . ZP81-0805 . October 21, 1981 . Announcement Letters . . December 17, 2021 . December 17, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211217151308/https://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/ShowDoc.wss?docURL=/common/ssi/rep_ca/5/877/ENUSZP81-0805/index.html&request_locale=en . live.
    3. VIRTUAL MACHINE/EXTENDED ARCHITECTURE MIGRATION AID . ZP81-0811 . October 21, 1981 . Announcement Letters . . December 17, 2021 . December 17, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211217151310/https://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/ShowDoc.wss?docURL=/common/ssi/rep_ca/1/877/ENUSZP81-0811/index.html&request_locale=en . live.
    4. VIRTUAL MACHINE/EXTENDED ARCHITECTURE (VM/XA) SYSTEMS FACILITY . 285-044 . February 12, 1985 . Announcement Letters . IBM . December 17, 2021 . December 17, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211217151309/https://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/ShowDoc.wss?docURL=/common/ssi/rep_ca/4/897/ENUS285-044/index.html . live.
    5. VIRTUAL MACHINE/EXTENDED ARCHITECTURE SYSTEM PRODUCT (VM/XA SP) RELEASE 1 . 287-239 . June 11, 1987 . Announcement Letters . IBM . December 17, 2021 . December 17, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211217151305/https://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/ShowDoc.wss?docURL=/common/ssi/rep_ca/9/897/ENUS287-239/index.html . live.
    6. VIRTUAL MACHINE/ENTERPRISE SYSTEMS ARCHITECTURE VERSION 1 RELEASE 1.0 AND VERSION 1 RELEASE 1.1 . 290-499 . September 5, 1990 . Announcement Letters . IBM . December 17, 2021 . December 17, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211217151305/https://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/ShowDoc.wss?docURL=/common/ssi/rep_ca/9/897/ENUS290-499/index.html . live.
    7. z/VM V3R1 Enabled for 64-bit Architecture . 200-358 . October 3, 2000 . Announcement Letters . IBM . December 17, 2021 . December 17, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211217151307/https://www.ibm.com/common/ssi/ShowDoc.wss?docURL=/common/ssi/rep_ca/8/897/ENUS200-358/index.html . live.
    8. Web site: VM AND THE VM COMMUNITY: Past, Present, and Future. Melinda. Varian. 55. April 1991. June 9, 2022. August 23, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220823152149/http://www.leeandmelindavarian.com/Melinda/neuvm.pdf. live.
    9. Creasy, op. cit., p. 483 — role of RSCS.
    10. News: Two versions of MUMPS out. 1987-11-30. Computerworld. XXI. 48. 2022-07-09. March 6, 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230306013159/https://books.google.com/books?id=7RERQMhC7cYC&pg=PP23. live.
    11. Web site: Licensed Products Migration Matrix for z/VM. 2009-12-02. IBM. 2022-07-09. August 10, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220810221151/https://www.vm.ibm.com/techinfo/lpmigr/vmlp610.pdf. live.
    12. System/370 integrated emulation under OS and DOS . Gary R. Allred . 164 . The Hypervisor concept was relatively simple. It consisted of an addendum to the emulator program and a hardware modification on a Model 65 having a compatibility feature. The hardware modification divided the Model 65 into partitions, each addressable from 0-n. The program addendum, having overlaid the system Program Status Words (PSW) with its own, became the interrupt handler for the entire system. After determining which partition had initiated the event causing the interrupt, control was transferred accordingly. The Hypervisor required dedicated I/O devices fore each partition and, because of this, the I/O configurations were usually quite large, and, therefore, prohibitive to the majority of uses. . . 38 . 10.1109/AFIPS.1971.58 . May 1971 . AFIPS Press . June 12, 2022 . July 25, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180725063513/https://www.computer.org/csdl/proceedings/afips/1971/5077/00/50770163.pdf . live.
    13. IBM System/370 Principles of Operation . 1987 . 10-5 . . August 17, 2019 . September 29, 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190929210055/http://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/370/princOps/GA22-7000-10_370_Principles_of_Operation_Sep87.pdf . live .
    14. IBM Virtual Machine Facility/370: System Programmer's Guide . GC20-1807-7 . Mar 1979 . Eighth . DIAGNOSE Instruction in a Virtual Machine . http://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/370/VM_370/Release_6/GC20-1807-7_VM370_System_Programmers_Guide_Rel_6_4-81.pdf#page=213 . August 17, 2019 . SysProg . IBM . April 2, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200402034703/http://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/370/VM_370/Release_6/GC20-1807-7_VM370_System_Programmers_Guide_Rel_6_4-81.pdf . live.
    15. z/VM Version 7 Release 2 CP Programming Services . SC24-6272-04 . August 12, 2020 . Chapter 1. The DIAGNOSE Instruction in a Virtual Machine . https://www.vm.ibm.com/library/720pdfs/72627204.pdf#page=49 . 3 . In a real processor, the DIAGNOSE instruction performs processor-dependent diagnostic functions. In a virtual machine, you use the DIAGNOSE interface to request that CP perform services for your virtual machine. When your virtual machine attempts to execute a DIAGNOSE instruction, control is returned to CP. CP uses information provided in the code portion of the instruction to determine what service it should perform. Once this service is provided, control returns to the virtual machine. . IBM . May 9, 2021 . April 30, 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210430064359/https://www.vm.ibm.com/library/720pdfs/72627204.pdf . live.
    16. VIrtual Machine/System Product CMS User's Guide Release 6. Chapter 4 (Using the Shared File System). July 1988. SC19-6210-05. IBM. August 19, 2021. June 17, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220617123632/http://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/370/VM_SP/Release_6_Jul88/SC19-6210-05_VM_SP_Release_6_CMS_Users_Guide_Jul1988.pdf. live.
    17. CMS File Pool Planning, Administration, and Operation . SC24-6261-02 . November 12, 2021 . File Pool Server Machines . https://www.vm.ibm.com/library/720pdfs/72626102.pdf#page=18 . 18–23 . z/VM 7.2 . June 10, 2022 . . October 6, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221006041027/http://www.vm.ibm.com/library/720pdfs/72626102.pdf . live.
    18. Web site: IUCV Overview . 2022-07-31 . www.ibm.com . en-us . July 31, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220731215201/https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/zvm/7.1?topic=vehicle-iucv-overview . live .
    19. Varian, op. cit., p. 30 – extent of VM use; more VM licenses than MVS licenses
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