EasyManuals Logo

IBM System/370 Guide

IBM System/370
194 pages
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Next Page IconTo Next Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
To Previous Page IconTo Previous Page
Page #81 background imageLoading...
Page #81 background image
1.
Time-dependent
programs
being
executed
on
a
7000-series
system
or
emulated
on
a
Model
65
may
not
execute
properly.
Provision
has
been
made
to
allow
some
time-dependent
programs
to
be
emulated
correctly
(see
the
appropriate
emulator
reference
manual
for
details>.
2.
Programs
with
undetected
programming
errors
give
unpredictable
results.
3.
If
programs
that
use
unsupported
features
or
I/O
devices
(as
described
for
each
emulator
in
successive
subsections
and
in
emulator
reference
manuals>
are
to
be
emulated,
they
must
be
modified
to
conform
to
the
support
provided
by
the
specific
emulator
program.
The
Tape
Preprocessor
and
Tape
Postprocessor
formatting
programs
supplied
to
Model
165
7000-series
emulator
users
operate
as
processing
programs
and
can
be
executed
with
any
OS
control
program
generated
with
the
emulator
macro
specified.
The
Tape
Preprocessor
operates
in
a
program
area
of
4K
bytes
plus
I/O
buffer
requirements
and
accepts
as
input
seven-
and
nine-track
tape
in
7000-series
format.
It
produces
as
output
spanned
variable-length
(OS
VBS>
format
data
that
can
be
written
on
seven-
or
nine-track
tape
or
on
direct
access
storage.
Input
records
longer
than
32,755
bytes
are
reblocked,
since
OS
BSAM
cannot
handle
a
physical
data
block
longer
than
32K
bytes.
The
Tape
Postprocessor
operates
in
a
program
area
of
5K
bytes
plus
I/O
buffer
requirements
and
performs
the
reverse
of
the
Tape
Preprocessor.
The
postprocessor
program
is
useful
when
a
copy
of
a
data
set
in
OS vas
and
another
in
7000
format
are
required.
(The
7000-
series
emulator
programs
accept
as
input
and
produce
as
output
both
the
formats
handled
by
these
two
tape
formatting
programs.>
The
tape
formatting
programs
can
handle
200,
556,
800,
and
1600
BPI
densities,
mixed
density
tape
volumes,
and
even,
odd,
and
mixed
parity
tapes.
While
existing
tape
files
with
blocks
longer
than
32K
bytes
must
be
preprocessed,
conversion
to
vas
format
offers
the
user
the
following:
The
ability
to
emUlate
tape
data
sets
on
direct
access
devices
The
ability
to
share
among
several
concurrently
executing
emulator
jobs
read-only
files
maintained
on
direct
access
devices,
such
as
7000
system
libraries.
The
ability
to
process
VBS
format
data
sets
with
both
OS
and
emulated
7000-series
programs.
(Note
that
OS
programs
must
be
written
with
knowledge
of
the
VBS
format
of
preprocessed
tapes.)
The
ability
to
increase
emulator
job
performance
by
reblocking
7000-series
format
tape
files
with
short
blocks,
assuming
that
enough
processor
storage
is
available
The
ability
to
reduce
processor
storage
buffer
requirements
by
reblocking
files
with
very
large
blocks
The
following
subsections
discuss
the
three
emulator
programs.
They
discuss
features
and
I/O
device
support,
Model
165
configuration
requirements.,
job
SUbmission"
conversion
requirements,
and
performance.
59

Table of Contents

Other manuals for IBM System/370

Questions and Answers:

Question and Answer IconNeed help?

Do you have a question about the IBM System/370 and is the answer not in the manual?

IBM System/370 Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandIBM
ModelSystem/370
CategoryServer
LanguageEnglish

Related product manuals