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1 Introduction To The New Mainframe Stephen S. Linkin Houston Community College ©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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2 The New Mainframe Mainframe Computers Play A Central Role In Daily Operations Coveted Place In Today’s E-business Environment. Banking, Finance, Healthcare, Insurance, Public Utilities, Government Mainframe Computing Dominates Large- Scale Business Computing.
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin3 The New Mainframe 70% of all web pages are stored on mainframe systems Transaction Processing is a Prime use.
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin4 The S/360: A Turning Point In Mainframe History IBM 701 Circa 1951 Univac System Circa 1950 IBM 1401 Circa 1956 IBM 360 Circa 1964
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin5 The S/360: A Turning Point In Mainframe History A Series Of Generations First Generation Systems – 1951 Second Generation – 1956 Third Generation - 1964
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin6 The S/360: A Turning Point In Mainframe History Standardized Mainframe Computers Microcode Corrections Or New Functions Can Be Implemented By Updating No Concern Over Compatibility Standardized Languages Assembler, COBOL, FORTRAN, PL/1
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin7 The S/360: A Turning Point In Mainframe History Standardized Software Utilities
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin8 An Evolving Architecture Definition Of Architecture
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin9 An Evolving Architecture More And Faster Processors More Physical Memory And Greater Memory Addressing Capability Dynamic Upgrading Of Hardware And Software Automation Of Hardware Error Checking And Recovery
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin10 An Evolving Architecture Enhanced (I/O) More And Faster Channels Sophisticated I/O Attachments, E.G. LAN Adapters Ability To Divide Resources Of One Machine Into Multiple, Isolated Systems, Running Its Own OS Advanced Clustering, Parallel Sysplex, That Share Data Among Multiple Systems.
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin11 An Evolving Architecture Stable Secure Compatible
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin12 Mainframes In Our Midst Mainframes Are Largely Invisible They Are Resistant To Viruses And Trojan Horses. They Share Space With Other Hardware Devices: External Storage Devices Hardware Network Routers Channel Controllers Automated Tape “Robots”
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin13 What Is A Mainframe? The Largest Servers Server Farms Networked Servers Central Data Repository Platform The Single Box…
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin14 What Is A Mainframe? Style Of Operation Hosting Commercial Databases Transaction Servers Applications Requiring A Great Degree Of Security
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin15 What Is A Mainframe? Style Of Operation Compatibility Centralized Control Of Resources Shared Access To Disk Drives On Other Systems
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin16 What Is A Mainframe? Style Of Operation Dedicated Operations Staff S.O.P Clustering Technologies Parallel Sysplex
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin17 Who uses mainframe computers? Everyone Perform large-scale transaction processing (thousands of transactions per second) Support thousands of users and application programs concurrently accessing resources Manage terabytes of information in databases Handle large-bandwidth communication The roads of the information superhighway often lead to a mainframe.
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin18 Factors contributing to mainframe use Reliability, Availability, Serviceability Security Scalabilty Continuing Compatibility Evolving Architecture
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin19 Factors contributing to mainframe use Reliability, Availability, Serviceability
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin20 Factors contributing to mainframe use Security
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin21 Factors contributing to mainframe use Scalabilty
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin22 Factors contributing to mainframe use Continuing Compatibility
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin23 Factors contributing to mainframe use Evolving Architecture
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin24 Typical mainframe workloads Batch Interactive
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin25 Typical mainframe workloads Batch Fig 1-2 Large Volumes Timed Activity Multiple Tasks
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin26
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin27 Typical mainframe workloads Interactive Fig 1-3 Immediate Short Response Time Mission Critical
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin28
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin29 Roles in the mainframe world System Programmers System Administrators Application Designers And Programmers System Operators Production Control Analysts
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin30 z/OS and other mainframe operating systems z/OS z/VM® z/VSE™ Linux z/TPF
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin31 z/OS and other mainframe operating systems z/OS
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin32 z/OS and other mainframe operating systems z/VM®
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin33 z/OS and other mainframe operating systems z/VSE™
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin34 z/OS and other mainframe operating systems Linux
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin35 z/OS and other mainframe operating systems z/TPF
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©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin36 Summary Read The Redbook
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