IBM/HCC Chapter 1 - tc3.hccs.edu
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Introduction To The
New Mainframe
Stephen S. Linkin
Houston Community College
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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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.
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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The New Mainframe
70% of all web pages are stored on
mainframe systems
Transaction Processing is a Prime use.
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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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
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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The S/360: A Turning Point In
Mainframe History
A Series Of Generations
First Generation Systems – 1951
Second Generation – 1956
Third Generation - 1964
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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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
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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The S/360: A Turning Point In
Mainframe History
Standardized Software Utilities
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An Evolving Architecture
Definition Of Architecture
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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
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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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.
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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An Evolving Architecture
Stable
Secure
Compatible
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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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What Is A Mainframe?
The Largest Servers
Server
Farms
Networked
Servers
Central Data Repository
Platform
The Single Box…
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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What Is A Mainframe?
Style Of Operation
Hosting
Commercial Databases
Transaction Servers
Applications Requiring A Great
Degree Of Security
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What Is A Mainframe?
Style Of Operation
Compatibility
Centralized
Control Of
Resources
Shared Access To Disk Drives
On Other Systems
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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What Is A Mainframe?
Style Of Operation
Dedicated
Operations Staff
S.O.P
Clustering Technologies
Parallel
Sysplex
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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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.
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Factors contributing to
mainframe use
Reliability, Availability, Serviceability
Security
Scalabilty
Continuing Compatibility
Evolving Architecture
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Factors contributing to
mainframe use
Reliability, Availability, Serviceability
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Factors contributing to
mainframe use
Security
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Factors contributing to
mainframe use
Scalabilty
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Factors contributing to
mainframe use
Continuing Compatibility
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Factors contributing to
mainframe use
Evolving Architecture
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Typical mainframe workloads
Batch
Interactive
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Typical mainframe workloads
Batch
Fig 1-2
Large Volumes
Timed Activity
Multiple Tasks
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Typical mainframe workloads
Interactive
Fig 1-3
Immediate
Short Response
Time
Mission Critical
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Roles in the mainframe world
System Programmers
System
Administrators
Application Designers
And Programmers
System Operators
Production Control Analysts
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z/OS and other mainframe
operating systems
z/OS
z/VM®
z/VSE™
Linux
z/TPF
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z/OS and other mainframe
operating systems
z/OS
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z/OS and other mainframe
operating systems
z/VM®
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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z/OS and other mainframe
operating systems
z/VSE™
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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z/OS and other mainframe
operating systems
Linux
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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z/OS and other mainframe
operating systems
z/TPF
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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Summary
Read The Redbook
©HCCS & IBM® 2008 Stephen Linkin
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