S/390 Support is Now on Kernel 2.2
Alan Cox has released kernel 2.2.14pre14 (And now 15). The big news is that IBM S/390 Support is now merged into the 2.2 kernel (most of it). Currently the port features: Full SMP support, Disk, Networking & Console. More details can be found on this feature from Linux Today
Why are they (IBM) porting Linux on that platform?
Are they thinking about the future of S/390 without OS/390?
Cool, but the rough kernel support doesn't cut it. Someone must make a Linux distribution for S/390 to make this port useful
That bloody kernel eats up 50MB already! No more ports! Stop it before it's too late! Heeeeelp!!
EagerEyes.org: Visualization and Visual Communication
Well, well!
After so many back-stabbing, behind-the-scenes, out-flanking FUD and BS from commercial companies pannicked about how they could possibly survive real "Open" competition, Unix is finally getting unified.
That it's Linux does not matter.
That it's open source does.
The amount of sharing between SGI, Sun, IBM, and espeically the free "Unix-like" operating system groups -- *BSD definately included -- can only accelerate.
To be honest I already had the chance of reading 3 comments so I have the advantage of knowing what at least 3 other people think :) For me it seems only natural - a consequence of a trend that has grown stronger lately. No longer than a week ago Creative announced availability of jobs for open source drivers. Over the late year major companies (I guess all of you know them, so I won't bother mentioning names) have anounced their intent to enter the Linux market. Why ? Because it's good. Because it could mean the end of an era in the computers' industry. An era dominated by egos (and not in the nicest way I could say). I also means that we may have grown up (as an industry, as a field of research etc.). So i guess I can say that this is really good news.
With Linux ports now ranging from PDAs to PCs to Workstations and now to Mainframes, Linux is acutally proof that you can write a portable OS without using a Mircokernel. The argument used to be that only a Microkernel based OS would be highly portable but Linux proves that this is not true. We've gone from 1 platform (IBM PCs) to lots of them (I have no clue what the current count is) with the first few being done with (virtually) no commercial backing.
...
Some companies out there (with deep pockets) who once claimed (or at least aimed for) portability across platforms, should be seriously embarassed by this. Linux proves that portability can be achieved under a traditional/monolithic kernel design. And while some OS purists/professors may argue about some of the finer points of this, it should be noted that Linux is here now and it works on a ton of platforms. The fact that it's free and (as far as an OS can be) cool is an added benefit, with the latter being lost on 99+% of the population
Help me too! Those of us who are not blessed with multi-T3 internet connections and so happen not to have 50+ megs of hard drive space to play around with are a bit out of luck :-( Fourtunately there are patches, but I'm personally worried about messing it up if I patch more than 2 times or so. Split the kernel based on architecture, guys! Of course there is the argument of being able to cross-compile and stuff, but how many people are actually going to bother cross-compiling a kernel, and of those who are, can you wait another couple of minutes at most for a kernel with the ASM and drivers for that architecture to download?
GET linux-2.4.1-i386.tar.bz2
How hard can that be?
Kenneth
Um, that's what patches are for. You know, patch-2.2.13.bz2. If you're going to be compiling kernels it's assumed that you know how to apply a patch. It's not rocket science.
If you like to muck with new kernels and don't really have the bandwith learn to use patches PROPERLY, it's not that hard. If not, just stick with your favourite distribution and wait for the next CD release to upgrade.
:)
Splitting the kernel into separate architecture modules is going to be a nightmare for the kernel maintainers. They will have to spend more time maintaining and less time hacking, you don't want that do you? Besides, the archive is only 13MB bzipped2'd now. That's only like 3 full length mp3 songs! Think about that!
-adnans
PS. 'fraid of messing up your kernel tree with patch? Try patch with --dry-run first.
"In short: just say NO TO DRUGS, and maybe you won't end up like the Hurd people." --Linus Torvalds
But given that the NetBSD folks are geniuses at these sort of things, I'm sure it will be along soon ;) Evidently theres rumours of a Dreamcast port of NetBSD as well, whee!#@$!
-- FreeBSD - The Power to Serve NetBSD - of course it runs NetBSD OpenBSD - Armed to the Gills Three tools in our
Assuming I'm familiar with von Neuman architecures, stack machines, microprocessors, minicomputers, memory mapped memory, memory mapped devices, IO ports, interrupts, and the unix concepts of streams, char devices, block devices, etc... what don't I know about mainframes? (Please don't make me read the source :)
One thing I *do* know from using them briefly, is that IBM "terminals" (3270s? something like that) are really weird: they are not simply connected via a serial cable. They have these extra control signals that light up indicators that say "you can't type now, I'm busy" and the text editors seem to do their editing on the "screen" locally and then send the changes back when you are done. I realize this has nothing to do with the kernel, but it would seem to make the whole experience quite surreal.
What is the value of a Linux port to the S/390? The price/performance ratio would be awful -- even before taking into account the hardware maintenance costs of an S/390.
I can see maybe a small scalability value in that the latest S/390's have quite fast processors, which, along with their small number (10? 12? on Hitachi?) of CPU's and Linux's limitations with large CPU counts might combine to be as fast an SMP Linux port as is available -- but surely not much faster than a Compaq 8400 (or whatever they call their high-end SMP Alpha box these days).
Does this make solid business sense to anyone?
Geeky modern art T-shirts
IBM: Hello, IBM S/390 sales group, how may I help you?
Caller: I'd like to buy a '390 with 32 CPUs and 64GB of main memory
IBM: Would you like disks and communications with that?
Caller: Yes. I'd like 400 terabytes of redundant, channel attached DASD's, a full compliment of COMC's for 3270 and ANSI terminal devices for 500 directly connected users, LU6.2, SNA and TCP/IP networking over fiber and coax and an attached robotic tape library.
IBM: Which operating system would you like? VM/390 or Linux?
Caller: Linux, please.
IBM: No problem. We can pre-install it, or you can download it from ftp.kernel.org on the Internet.
We'll schedule overnight delivery of your system, please make sure there's someone available in your data center who can sign for the delivery...
Oh, and will you be paying for this with Mastercard, Visa, American Express or a purchase order (valid D&B required)...?
Caller: Bummer, you don't take Discover? Um... Amex, I guess. Can I get some Linux/390 t-shirts and coffee mugs with that too?
:
:
Hmmmmm.... I wonder how much power and A/C I'd have to install in the basement in order to...
Does anybody know where I can find the gcc patches to compile for S/390?
I can't tell from IBM's web site what sort of processor(s) these beasts use. It just says "S/390 capable processor." eh? Anyone know?
-- haaz.
1.5 Billion (with a B) transistors on a 127x127 mm Multi Chip Module! Wow!
In your example, you can get the 5->6, 6->7, 7->8, 8->9, 9->10, 10->11,11->12.
It's a shame there isn't a script that does this for you....
Hmm, an idea has just formed...
Your Working Boy,
...many times on linux-kernel. The short story is that Linus will never do this, but obviously won't stop someone else if they want to give it a try.
However, the benefit of doing this is minimal. The majority of the code in the kernel is not in the arch/ subdirectories, but rather in the drivers. A more reasonable approach to me would seem to be some sort of dynamic system (web-driven or otherwise), where you could go and "order" a custom kernel tarball (i.e. i386, SB32, NE2000, nfs and firewall support) and out pops a stripped-down kernel source tree with the appropriate subset of the kernel proper.
There's quite a huge Linux culture in IBM that is currently comprised mostly of techies -- very few people in management really understand or use the OS (Though they are getting caught up in the hype, so the hype does have its uses.)
IBM has accidentaly managed to hire some very sharp technical people, many of whom the corporate culture has not yet crushed the spirit out of yet, and those people might say "Gee, it'd be neat to port Linux to a S/390." Much of the cool stuff that has come out of IBM in the historical past has been initiated by single employees in the company, often working on their own time. I'm rather surprised the S/390 changes were allowed to be released, since the standard IBM contract says IBM owns anything you do in your own time and AFAIK they have not yet released any guidelines for writing open source softwre in your own time.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
IIRC the I386 version of OS/2 had a monolithic kernel, so they started from scratch on the PPC using a microkernel design. I saw it running once. Guy whose machine it was said it'd run for about 1/2 hour and then freeze up solid. IBM scrapped the OS/2 on PPC shortly before they admitted they'd been defeated by MS in the OS war and dropped support for OS/2 for everyone but the really big customers.
I find it ironic that Linux is now realizing the goal of one OS everywhere.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
Lets take the biggest hardware NT runs on and the biggest hardware Linux runs on...
I guess this pretty much kills the FUD about Linux not scaling well...
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
Consider this: when was the last time you heard of a MacOS-emulator for Windows? To be clear, I think FreeBSD is wonderfull. The point is that the collective BSD's have already lost the battle of 'network effects'. Linux has not only a much larger community of individual developers and users, it also has IBM and SGI contributing to the kernel now. Going back to the initial topic - this (Big Corp. porting Linux to thier Big Hardware) will seems like on obvious eventuality in the (near?) future. Yes, Linux & GNU (GNU/Linux anyone?) are becoming the 'Standard Unix'. Consider: - Linix ABI as emerging standard: witness FreeBSD running Linux binaries - GNU/Free Software as a standard 'environment'. How many people use a Sun box 'as is' out of the box? The _first_ thing I do is load up bash,tcsh,gnu-fileutils (I love 'df -h'), etc. - The Linux kernel as a standard. Small embedded hardware to, soon(?), IBM 'BigIron'. - The Linux OS (colloquial sense -- GNU/Linux for the literal minded) as a 'standard'? The battle rages on... p.s. Why? I say GPL and Linus' true achievment of establishing a _very_ open development process/community. Real Hackers(TM) and BigBlue rub elbows (well, patches)! Who'd have thought.
Imagine all the application they now got in a "glance", all the Open Source one Apache, Perl, Gimp, and even the proprietary SAP, Oracle, etc. Finally Linux is faster heading to WORA than Java.
As others have noted, it makes sense in shops that run VM, bought the mainframe primarily to run other OS's on it, but want to run web stuff too. It's less hassle to run Linux as another OS on top of VM that it is to port web tools to a mainframe OS.
The AS/400 line of machines has just about the same hardware specs as the RS/6000 line. The RS/6000 line already supports linux (not all available systems) it wouldn't make sense to port linux to AS/400 systems.
On RS/6000 linux is only supported on the 43P and the F50 model, a desktop workstation and a workgroup server. They only have a maximum of 4 processors. The really high end stuff, the S80 can have up to 24 processors and 64GB of memory. But as Linux can not scale that well (yet) it's not much of an issue.
for i in `ls patch-2.2.*.gz | sort -t . -g -k 3`; do
/usr/src that you need to take you from your current version to whatever version you want. I even tested this from 2.2.0 through 2.2.13 and it worked fine. Moving linux to linux-2.2.13, untarring linux-2.2.13.tar.gz, and then running diff --unified --recursive linux linux-2.2.13 shows:
zcat $i | patch -p0
done
Just have all the patch-2.2.x.gz files in
Nothing! See, told ya it isn't rocket science. I'd frankly be a little worried if there were any differences...
Well, nothing like seeing another linux port on /.
Makes me happy for the rest of the day. Now that we have mainframe support, the next thing to do is go the exact opposite direction- embedded systems. Then we may truely bask in the glory of an os that supports every machine from embedded systems to mainframes. Are there any major architectures that Linux doesn't support yet?
Wouldn't these babies make an awesome beowulf cluster???
:o
Wait a minute, each one is like a beowulf cluster
-W.W.
"Well it should be obvious to even the most dim-witted individual who holds an advanced degree in hyperbolic topology...
but linux is only free as in money, not as in speech
I may be just plain stupid, deluded or otherwise insane, but I always thought that one of the main atractions of Linux (OSS in general) was that it was free, as in free speech. Did I miss something rather fundamental here?
As for your argument about the price of Linux developers: lets say you have 1000 (full time) developers and pay them $60K/year. That would be $60 Million. For companies like IBM, Sun or MS that's peanuts. So it's not just a matter of money although I agree that in principle Linux gets and incredible amount of development work for free
Maybe so, but what does it say about the state of an OS when it's developers write signifigant portions of code to enable it to run applications written for another OS?
This is just like television, only you can see much further.
Back in the summer of 1998 it slipped out in an open IBM Linux online forum that an intern in the Toronto Labs had, in his spare time, ported Linux to run under VM on a 390 mainframe. There was a lot of talk amongst us propellerheads about how good this would be for IBM to do with Linux what the marketing folks claimed we would do with OS/2 (and failed).
Then the PHB's broke into the discussion and squished it. It frightened them. I think it still does. IBM doesn't make nearly as much money on the iron as they do on the software. Make the software free and there is a lot of lost revenue. Maybe the PHB's are coming around to the fact that IBM still makes zillions on service, and it's better to be the first company to offer a unified UNIX solution cross-platform than to watch a competitor do it.
With IBM actively involved in development of everything from palm devices to big iron, Linux only makes sense for selling smart solutions to customers. So, some revenue is lost on software sales. Big deal. Increased volume via bundled solutions will make up for that.
The official Linux/400 site is at :
http://users.snip.net/~gbooker/as400.htm
> Linux has the advantage of a limited amount of asm...and being compilable by an almost universal compiler.
:-)
Actually, a big skeleton more than one of the commercial vendors have in their closets is that their commercial OS kernels are built with gcc and not the compilers which they sell to their customers, for the obvious technical reasons. I won't name names, but they know who they are
If they stopped to think about it, they'd realise they could make more money by abandoning C/C++ compiler development and instead selling officially supported packages of gcc or egcs. A classic case of open source being a more viable business model as well as the best technology.
Linux and *BSD are far from being the only OS'es built with gcc.
Why the heck would anyone spend the kinda huge
$$ it takes to run a 390 series machine or a
Fujitsu or other 3rd party VM processor and
then run freeking Linux? What kinda moronic
place would RUN this???
Do any of these guys know what it costs to run these things!!!?? Let alone the insane maintnance costs IBM extracts from customers!
The electricity alone for a month would buy a
couple 'a beautiful 4p VA boxes. Not to mention
the stupid cooling req., floor space, etc.
This is yet another in a long line of STUPID VM
tricks from IBM so that this old-arse arch. stays around. What a pathetic waste of
resources. (and floor space)
fsck this! Whats next IBM 502-linux? or maybe
DEC 20xx series linux? fscking-A!
da'fly on da' fly in da' valley
goto chips.ibm.com (their microelectronics site) and search for s390. The last link is the best.
Also check out the Blue Logic(TM) section for more one the technology that enables the G6 to reach 1600 MIPS.
While I wouldn't normally say this, because I'm against intentional crippling of software (in general), but please leave OUT support for SNA and Twinax! Two dead technologies they are, that no one seems to be willing to let go of-- so maybe if they were unable to use them, they may convert over to something more MODERN like.. Token ring or Arcnet :) (groan from gallery)
Hilary Rosen's speech was about her love of money and her desire to roll around naked in a pile of money.
you're missing the point here... this is aimed at people who already have 390s, lots of them, for legitimate bussiness reasons. They have some extra cycles (or can easily upgrade a system to get some) and want to migrate an existing application or one they wrote in house from an overloaded PC to there trusted mainframe.
There is also the geek factor... IBMers are geeks first and foremost, especially the engineers, there have been a number of projects that came out of both research and development that were started by a much of engineers sitting around at lunch talking about how cool it would be to do X, or sitting in boring meetings with managers dreaming about how cool it would be to do X (ya know, standard geek stuff...). So they do it on a weekend or after hours and it gets going and works and they bring in a few geek co-workers and talk about it and eventually a manager hears about it and says "we can market this." Then a bunch of managers rub their heads together and figure out a plan and PRESTO you've got a product with no declared bussiness use, but the geeks of the world will find it and put it to use in their projects and eventually someone will come up with a bussiness use.
You forget Cray/Linux, of course.
- UNICOS? Bah! Who needs dem steenkin' UNICOS? We'll just go and install RedHat and-- oooh, pretty Enlightenment themes....
- HEY! The T90 just crashed! The missiles are out of control!
- What's that on the screen? "1 0WN J00 L0Z3R"... what does that mean?!?
To the editors: your English is as bad as your Perl. Please go back to grade school.
Yeah, it's so nice that, now that Linux will be running on S/390, they'll finally be able to run SAP on OS/390's.
Oh, wait, they already can.
I think Oracle does as well, but their Web site requires Javascript and, as I'm currently running a UNIX version of Communicator, there's no way I'm turning Javacrash^H^H^H^H^Hscript on.
Linus: "I remember when World Domination was just a joke..."
IBM: "I remember World Domination...."
(Disclaimer: Yes, I've recognized how IBM's become one of the cooler companies in the industry over the last few years, much to my slack-jawed amazement.)
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://www.doxpara.com
you seem to have no problem with using someone else's free code, and selling it. your problem is that you do not want your code to remain free. What inclination then, does the community have to allow you to use this source? The BSD license _is_ a bit more altruistic to the commercial world (but , but the GPL insures that the next person with an idea to bulid on your code...can!
(besides, IMHO, people have free speech, financial concerns such as buisinesses, are not, and should not be considered citizens. Rights such as free speech, should not apply)
_this is not a signature_
The first versions of AIX did run in VM. Not sure if the current versions do or not (I didn't think they did but I could be mistaken)
Like, for instance, WINE? It's got its own icon here at Slashdot. :)
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
you're not the first...
/usr/src/linux/scripts/patch-kernel (or wherever your kernel sources are).
just change into your dir with the patch files and run
I don't want to diminish the great achievements of the many people porting Linux to such diverse platforms - however, Unix is also monolithic and was ported to a vast variety of minicomputers, mainframes, workstations and PCs. In fact, this continues with PDAs and other esoteric platforms - see www.netbsd.org (NetBSD is the BSD variant that focuses on portability).
In the 1980s I used to be a sysadmin for Amdahl's Unix on IBM mainframes - it would be good to see Linux moving into the same domain.
One interesting approach might be install-time compilation of Java bytecodes into machine code (as done by TowerJ on Linux and elsewhere), providing very good performance and a *single binary standard* for applications. Combining Linux and compiled Java could provide good enough performance for Linux on a range of architectures, even for companies that need to ship binary application software.
Just think, you could download a single binary and run it on anything from a PDA to a mainframe, without the JVM or application having to deal with OS incompatibilities.
In other words, there could be two very high volume software markets (at least for binary applications) - Windows on x86 and maybe IA-64, and Linux+Java on any architecture.
Unfortunately, unless a really good JVM with install-time compilation gets open sourced, it's more likely the Linux market will turn into 'Linux on Intel plus a few other architectures'.
Some of these systems can be quite huge...
BTW, when I wrote "surreal", I was thinking of the porting process and running programs like emacs to editing code or run a debugger ... yep, I could try doing that through HTTP as well :)
I think you're wrong here, depending on your definition of the term USER. Anyone can take a GPL program and enhance it to their needs and not release the changes to the community, as long as they do not try to distribute their code or sell it. On the other hand, if you are not a USER (my definition) and are a company or developer or integrator who wants to modify code and then sell your changes or services to the community then you must release the source changes. I think this is fair. USERs are free to modify the code all they want, but if they want to try to profit from their changes by selling services or support then they must release the source. If they don't want to try to profit from their changes, what possible reason could there by for not releasing source changes?
I don't think that WINE is a Linux-only project, is it? Currently it's definately x86 only, but it's my understanding that it runs under multiple x86 Unix-like OSes. In fact, from the WINE about web page:
Wine works on most popular Intel Unixes, including Linux, FreeBSD, and Solaris.
Hence, that the WINE project is aimed at providing binary compatability on Unix like OSes, including Linux, FreeBSD, and Solars, is not comparable to the FreeBSD kernel programmers providing binary compatability for Linux programs. Your point is meaningless.
http://www.acude.org/roam.htm is a good site on mainframes and linux, and should cure some of you who still think that IBM runs the world :-)
moderater note: last sentence not intended as troll, just a fact of the modern mainframe world.
It's a way for users of Unix-like OSes to be able to use Windows apps. The fact that it gets a lot of attention certainly says something. Your confining my statement to only Linux totally misses the point. Sheesh, exactly how myopic are you anyway?
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
Why are they adding features to 2.2 if it was supposed to be stable code with only bugfixes?
I'd like to see a dmesg from an S/390 booting linux...:)
The corrected library will be available shortly. Thanks. Daniel Frye IBM
this is the complete list of openrating systems running on S/390: http://s390.ibm.com/software/
reasons for this might be, that linux-kernel, gcc and glibc have been written with portability in mind and AIXs not. or the S/390 department had some problems getting the AIX-source :)
I see no Slashdot icons for either of the things you mentioned. In fact, I can't remember there ever having been any stories about UAE. Even if that weren't the case, there's a big difference. The Amiga is a dead system, and the popularity of UAE is due to people wanting to keep a piece of the past around. This subthread, however, is about emulation where both systems are still viable, and the users of one system want to be able to use the "kewl stuff" that the other system has available to it.
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
An S/390 has features the UNIX world dreams of. Forget hot-swappable HDDs, RAID blah -- you can rip a network card out of these things, and it'll just keep going.
The nice thing about running Linux on a VM is that now you can have linux running on the most reliable hardware there is: virtual hardware.
Also, IBM may have liked to port, say, Apache or Lotus Domino to VM -- now there's no need. They can run domino on Linux on VM. Trust me, that'll be one *reliable* Domino server. Performance might not be the highest (mainframes prefer batch-oriented stuff, and those extra levels of abstraction won't help) but in terms of uptime -- whew!
Oh, and a new S/390 isn't as big as you think.
--
The Java port of CorelOffice was too slow and no-one seemed interested anyway.
Porting the lot to linux (or any *nix) would have taken too long
So they just pumped some cash/development into WINE so their apps are the same executable (AFAIK) on Win32 and Linux
Just wanted to point out that MkLinux is a microkernel (the open-source Mach microkernel). But fourtunately the monolithic LinuxPPC runs on most every new Mac. (I don't know about the G4; I haven't checked in a while.)
I will not argue with your later facts about Linux, because they are correct IM(H)O.
Ken