Difference between revisions of "VM/370"
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+ | * L. H. Seawright and R. A. MacKinnon, [https://cseweb.ucsd.edu/classes/wi11/cse221/papers/seawright79.pdf ''VM/370 - a study of multiplicity and usefulness''], IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 18, No. 1, March 1979 | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Latest revision as of 15:55, 24 January 2024
VM/370 was the first operating system on the IBM System/370 mainframe platform that supported virtual machines. This was a VERY popular OS for people to load onto their mainframes as now they wouldn't have to choose which OS to load for applications, as they could now load ALL of them.
Contents
Documentation sets
Bitsavers has a few manuals online. They can be found here:
Getting this to run
Thankfully the software is available, although I've found a few 'issues' with the install process and I've outlayed a tested one here: Installing VM/370 on Hercules
31bits and beyond
There has been a movement to expand the 370 virtual machine to incorporate 31bit addressing of the 390, allowing larger program sizes. Primarily this has been to allow gcc to self host under MVS.
There has been regular updates to what is currently known as the 'six pack'.
Further reading
- L. H. Seawright and R. A. MacKinnon, VM/370 - a study of multiplicity and usefulness, IBM Systems Journal, Vol. 18, No. 1, March 1979
External links
- VM and the VM Community
- The Origin of the VM/370 Time-sharing System
- My History in Computing: Inside IBM – 1968 to 1976 - inside VM/370 development (archived version; original now offline)