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IBM System/370 Guide

IBM System/370
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Those
7074
programs
that
use
unsupported
I/O
devices
or
facilities
can
be
modified
to
remove
the
unsupported
item
and
then
emulated,
or
these
programs
can
be
rewritten
to
run
in
System/370
mode.
The
internal
performance
(that
is,
the
speed
of
performing
7074
CPU
instructions
weighted
by
frequency
of
use)
of
the
7074
Emulator
program
for
the
Model
165
is
approximately
three
times
that
of
a
7074
system.
The
throughput
achieved
by
the
integrated
7074
emulator
operating
on
the
Model
165
versus
that
obtained
using
an
7074
is
dependent
on
the
characteristics
of
the
7074
program
being
emulated,
the
hardware
resources
available
to
the
7074
emulator,
and
the
number
of
other
jobs
operating
concurrently
with
the
emulated
7074
job(s).
Emulator
performance
is
improved
when
each
7074
channel
is
emulated
with
a
single
Model
165
channel
(2860,
2880,
or
2870
selector
subchannel).
Total
system
throughput
should
be
improved
by
use
of
integrated,
rather
than
stand-alone,
emulation.
40:15
709/7090/7094/7094II
EMULATOR
PROGRAM
This
emulator
is
referred
to
in
this
subsection
as
the
7094
Emulator
program.
The
use
of
7094
in
the
text
refers
to
all
709X
systems
emulated
unless
otherwise
indicated.
A Model
165
with
the
7094
Compatibility
Feature
(#7119),
512K
(MFT)
or
1024K
(MVT)
or
more
of
processor
storage,
and
enough
I/O
devices
for
the
operating
system
and
emulated
7094
programs
is
required.
An
online
printer
dedicated
to
the
7094
emulator
is
recommended.
The
7094
Emulator
program
requires
a minimum
partition
or
region
size
of
374K
in
which
to
execute.
This
minimum
supports
two
channels
with
ten
tape
units
each
and
one
1560-byte
buffer
per
tape
data
set.
(Note
that
buffering,
I/O
device
configuration,
performance,
etc.,
will
often
necessitate
use
of
an
emulator
partition
or
region
larger
than
374K.)
Table
40.15.1
lists
the
7094
system
features
that
are
supported
and
Table
40.15.2
indicates
those
that
are
unsupported.
The
facilities
supported
by
the
Model
165
7094
Emulator
program
are
the
same
as
those
provided
by
the
integrated
7094
Emulator
program
for
the
Model
85.
The
hardware
and
I/O
devices
supported
by
the
Model
165
7094
emulator
are
the
same
as
those
supported
by
the
Model
65
stand-alone
7094
emulator
with
two
exceptions.
The
Model 65
stand-alone
7094
emulator
supports
704
emulation
and,
mixed
density
tape,
but
the
Model
165
7094
emulator
does
not.
(The
Model
85
emulator
does
not
support
704
emulation
or
mixed
density
tape
either.)
The
7094
Emulator
program
accepts
and
produces
two
data
formats
using
BSAM:
1.
7094
format
tapes
written
by
the
Tape
Postprocessor
program,
a
7094
system~
a
1401
system
or
1401
emulator,
or
the
7094
emulator
for
the
Model
65,
85,
or
165.
These
tapes
can
contain
embedded
tapemarks
and
mixed
mode
files,
that
is,
BCD
(even
parity)
and
binary
(odd
parity)
data.
2.
Spanned
variable-length
(OS
VBS)
format
tapes
that
are
produced
by
the
Tape
Preprocessor
program
or
one
of
the
IBM
emulators.
Embedded
tapemarks
and
mixed
parity
data
cannot
be
handled
in
this
format,
but
BCD
(even
parity)
characters
are
represented
by
using
equivalent
EBCDIC
characters,
and
a
parallel
set
of
characters
is
used
to
represent
binary
data
(odd
parity).
Special
blocks
are
created
to
simulate
tapemarks.
VBS
format
tape
volumes
can
contain
OS
standard
labels
in
addition
to
7094
labels
and
can
be
processed
by
both
OS
and
emulated
7094
programs.
A
nine-track
2400-series
tape
unit
or
a
seven-track
tape
63

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IBM System/370 Specifications

General IconGeneral
BrandIBM
ModelSystem/370
CategoryServer
LanguageEnglish

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