The Venerable Mainframe Rolls on at IBM With the Release of the z16 (techcrunch.com) 101
Today IBM unveiled the latest mainframe in its storied history, the z16. It runs on the IBM Telum processor, which the company released last summer. The chip has been optimized to run massive workloads, processing 300 billion high-value financial transactions per day with just one millisecond of latency, according to the company. From a report: That's for customers who have a serious need for speed with heavy volume. The primary use case the company is selling for this monster machine is real-time fraud prevention. Financial institutions in particular are the target customers, but Ric Lewis, SVP for IBM systems, says it's for just about any company processing a lot of business-critical transactions. "It's still banking, insurance, public sector, government, healthcare, retail -- anywhere where you really have high transaction throughput, where you need security, reliability and the world's best transaction processing," Lewis said. That comes down to the largest companies in the world, including two-thirds of the Fortune 100, 45 of the world's top 50 banks, eight of the top 10 insurers, seven of the top 10 global retailers and eight out of the top 10 telcos, which are using mainframes, according to data provided by IBM. Most of those machines come from IBM.
fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even cab (Score:2)
fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even cables or transceivers. Also for M.2 cards / pci-e cards and more. And you better pay for the monthly visit from the IBM tech.
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Yeah because IBM doesn’t want to help you figure out why your 100% authentic parts from Amazon cause the occasional error. It’s been like that for decades with vendors.
Re:fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:4, Interesting)
Once upon a time, IBM actually sold some repair parts over the counter. The printing function of an 026 keypunch used a machined metal plate as the dot matrix character "ROM" and an array of steel pin wires in sleeves to neck down the matrix from code plate dimensions to print character dimensions. We (local government function on a tight budget) had an old 026 off maintenance that had broken some of the pin wires and damaged the code plate. I learned of the IBM parts counter somewhere in downtown Los Angeles, bought the parts, fixed the keypunch, and wrecked my back trying to move the thing.
Possibly apocryphal tales exist of replacement or upgrade mainframe TCMs (Thermal Conduction Modules: multilayer ceramic hybrid circuit assemblies integrated with water cooling structures) arriving at customer sites in armored cars.
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That was due to the 1956 consent decree, which was specifically about the availability of service and parts. IBM was forced to provide access to parts to pretty much anyone who wanted to service an IBM machine.
One small correction about TCMs - they did not have integrated water cooling. The water cooling was provided by a 'cold plate' which was bolted on to the module after it was installed. The 'thermal conduction' came from copper spring-loaded 'pistons' that sat atop each chip and carried the heat to
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Re:fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:5, Insightful)
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It does not pay to cheap out when you are processing billions of dollars.
Then why does IBM have more employees in India than in the U.S. ? (and who are paid *SIGNIFICANTLY* less than U.S. workers).
This is no different from any other IT company. If they don't need to physically be on site, they can be anywhere in the world. I mostly work with Cisco equipment and the support people are scattered all over.
If you own a mainframe you can pay to have someone certified available 24x7 to be physically on site if you wish. That too is often peanuts in the grand scale of things.
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Mainframes are designed in Poughkeepsie and Endicott NY, Austin TX, and Boeblingen Germany. They are manufactured in Poughkeepsie.
Re: fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:2)
Kinda racist...
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It has nothing to do with race, but rather getting what you pay for. India has produced many bright, capable technicians and engineers, and the good ones can ask for more money.
The cost of living in India is lower, but only for basic stuff. Once you move to having a higher-end standard of living, you start spending closer to the same amount of money that you would in the west. A nice car isn't any cheaper in India. A Playstation 5 isn't any cheaper in India. A nice house in a secure neighborhood is cheaper,
Re:fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:5, Interesting)
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The mainframe world is not at all like the x86 server world. Yes, it is expensive, for both hardware and support, but these are companies that can afford it and are willing to pay for the ultimate in reliability. It does not pay to cheap out when you are processing billions of dollars.
Just curious, is COBOL still the dominant programming language?
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On mainframes running z/OS, probably COBOL and Java. For mainframes running Linux, whatever is popular in that environment.
Re: fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:2)
No, but it is very common. COBOL code from the last century is still running all across the financial and commercial markets.
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Tell that to the guys forced to support 20+ year old mainframes still in production somewhere.
Hell, I left a company in 2010 that was still running PDP-11/94's.
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PDP-11/94, while an awesome machine in and of itself, does not a mainframe make.
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Tell that to the guys forced to support 20+ year old mainframes still in production somewhere.
Hell, I left a company in 2010 that was still running PDP-11/94's.
Tell that to the guys forced to support 20+ year old mainframes still in production somewhere.
Hell, I left a company in 2010 that was still running PDP-11/94's.
So what?
How many people live in a house/apartment that is more than 20 years old? How many office buildings are more than 20 years old? How many 20 year old cars/trucks are still in use? Should we be required to tear everything down after some arbitrary number of years?
If it works and does what you need, there's nothing wrong with "old". You still need to support it? Well boo-fucking-hoo.
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My truckette is now 20 years old, a 2002 Tacoma 5 speed with the smallest 4-banger they sold, which does exactly what I need it to. My wife occasionally tells me that I need a new truck, and I ask her, "Have the wheels fallen off? No? Then I don't need a new truck."
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You don't need one, but if you get t boned by a drunk, you might wish you had one. Cars are one area where your can get substantially better safety systems than 20 years ago.
With safety out of the way WTF is up with modern cars? I don't own one, I felt every few months btw.
The only good ones seem to be either cheap or very expensive. Anything mid range has shit knockoffs of the fancy automated expensive features that just work badly. Take the automated hand brake. Seems like av pointless thing, but I guess
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Tell that to the guys forced to support 20+ year old mainframes still in production somewhere.
That's not even very old.
Re:fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:5, Interesting)
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Mod parent Funny and negative Happy (= Sad). Pretty good FP, though I wish it had been better crafted.
The quality of the FP itself sadly reminds me of the old IBM principles of (1) Respect for the individual, (2) Customer service, and (3) Quality. Can't remember what the new IBM principles are. I think there were eight of them? Or was that a list about dimensions of employee fealty or something?
(Do I need a disclaimer for having spent most of my career in the Big Blue food chain?)
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Get what in what sense? I'm not saying the days of big iron are completely behind us, but still...
But I only spent a few weeks as an operator. Early days of offshore hiring? I was actually covering for a Filipina who had gone home for a funeral or something. Only time I ever heard of the Phase IV clones of IBM mainframes, but mostly I remember special print jobs with various weird forms. Maybe end-of-month billing? I was working the graveyard shift and that's when they ran most of those jobs.
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I once worked as an operator for a CDC 170/750. The thing I most remember about it is that the boot code was a roughly eight by eight foot panel of toggle switches.
Re:fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:5, Interesting)
I was an operator for a couple of years on a midrange system in the late '90s, it was my second IT job and I really learned a lot about the business.
One task that I was handed was to replace the data transfer system that we had, which consisted of FedEx-ing 9-track tapes around the country to various vendors. We ended up with a combination of methods, including modem transfers, mailing CDs, encrypted email attachments. There was one that we couldn't change though, our transfer to American Express. They wanted us to drop an unencrypted text file on their FTP site. Connecting as Anonymous with no password, I was supposed to drop it in a folder named with our customer number. As soon as I connected I did an ls, and found that I could see, and then browse, every other customer's folders. Some of them had two years worth of files in their folders. I showed this to my boss, and he said, "No way in hell."
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Can't remember what the new IBM principles are.
1. More money
2. More money
3. More money
4. Lower pay for you, more money for us
5. More money
6. More money
7. More money
8. More money
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Sad ACK.
Re: fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:3)
fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even cables or transceivers. Also for M.2 cards / pci-e cards and more. And you better pay for the monthly visit from the IBM tech.
You know literally nothing about mainframes, you would have been better served to just write "First Post!" and collect your geek points.
That you think IBM mainframes use commodity m.2 SSDs and PCI expansion cards is staggering...
Re: fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts eve (Score:1)
This post deserves an upvote
Re: fraud detection = can't use non ibm parts even (Score:1)
If companies donâ(TM)t do this then they get flooded with support requests because of 3rd party accessories. Some companies want to ensure a flawless experience and do not want the experience ruined by such a low cost part. It also wastes their debug time.
They forgot (Score:3)
Bitcoin Mining! :)
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Re: They forgot (Score:1)
This is true. My personal experience with direct mainframe contact can verify this.
Can it still boot DOS? (Score:2)
If it can't boot DOS so I can use edlin to edit the system configuration files then they need to go back and redo it.
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In the world of IBM these machines don't boot, they IPL. But you aren't wrong about system config files. You have to map out all the system IO channels and devices manually and build your own config.
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No. "Plug and pray" was invented as a pejorative term for plug and play because when plug and play was first invented, it wasn't as reliable as it is now.
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Re: Can it still boot DOS? (Score:2)
Also known as the Plug and Pray technology?
No, that referred to "Plug 'n Play" technology from the PC industry from late last century...
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All zOS machines since the S370 can boot DOS yes.
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It can boot DOS, just not the DOS you're thinking of. [wikipedia.org]
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Sounds a lot like Linux. Why do we have /bin /usr/bin /usr/local/bin /sbin again? Oh yeah because of the space limitations of the DEC RK05 disk pack. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] introduced in 1972.
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What? No.
The /bin directory contains the essential user binaries (programs) that must be present when the system is mounted in single-user mode. The /sbin contains essential system administrator tools that must be present when the system is mounted single-user. The others can be NFS mounted (remote). /usr is for user binaries and /usr/local is for locally COMPILED user binaries.
Re:An old piece of shit, upgraded to a ... (Score:5, Interesting)
How about yes? http://lists.busybox.net/piper... [busybox.net]
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Thank you.
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This was a fantastic read. 12 years old, and still relevent today.
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/usr isn't short for "user" - it's an initialism for "UNIX system resources".
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Re:An old piece of shit, upgraded to a ... (Score:5, Informative)
Seems like your username should be 'OneDumbFuck'. Saying the z/16 is 'z/OS' is the same as saying a Xeon processor is 'Windows'. In other words, fucking stupid.
What, exactly, is an 'archaic abomination' about the z16?
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There is more Linux workload on mainframes than z/OS workload.
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Re:An old piece of shit, upgraded to a ... (Score:5, Informative)
'I want 7 9s uptime, best available security, massive throughput, ability to run my workload in a cloud environment without the cloud provider having any access to any portion of my image, etc' are all valid reasons to go buy a mainframe. Those are not because of 'the marketing department', they are because of engineering, design, and manufacturing.
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Show me where I said running Linux was a reason to buy a mainframe. I just pointed out that the majority of mainframe workload is something other than z/OS, so clearly there are reasons to buy a mainframe other than z/OS, and those reasons have nothing to do with the marketing department.
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No, it is not 'clearly due to AAPs and IIPs andz/OS license reasons'. That doesn't even make any sense. The reason is because customers are buying mainframes for the purpose of running Linux. Some customers have a mix of Linux engines (IFLs) and z/OS engines (CPs/AAPs/IIPs) on the same system. Other customers have Linux (IFL) only systems (LinuxOne) which aren't even capable of running z/OS. How can you possibly leap to the conclusion that all those IFLs have anything to do with AAPs and IIPs and z/OS
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Everything, and I really do mean everything, else is an archaic abomination held in place, seemingly, by very vocal, very passionate old school pencil-necks. They're all beyond retirement age, and are rapidly approaching death age, so we can only hope that things get better in the next few years.
There is nothing archaic about this technology. At all. Few technologies can claim 7 9s of uptime.
https://www.anandtech.com/show... [anandtech.com]
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'Old shit' doesn't mean 'bad shit.' I think you should measure computing power in weight. You can set a laptop on top of a main frame and the main frame will run just fine. Can you say the same of the laptop if set the main frame on top of it?
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'Old shit' doesn't mean 'bad shit.' I think you should measure computing power in weight. You can set a laptop on top of a main frame and the main frame will run just fine. Can you say the same of the laptop if set the main frame on top of it?
Especially with the mainframe being forged from a big piece of iron.
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Don't they come with a laptop, who's sole purpose is to validate the licence to run the mainframe?
As in "if that laptop fails to boot, the mainframe will refuse to IPL?"
Does it sit on top? ;-)
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I think you are probably referring to the support element (SE). At one time the SEs were laptops, but they have been 1U servers for several generations.
The purpose of the SEs have nothing to do with 'licenses to run the mainframe'. They are there to do things like power/thermal control and monitoring, IMLing the CEC, configuration and control of LPARs, recovery functions, problem analysis, and all kinds of other functions. There are two SEs, for redundancy.
What on earth makes you think you need 'a licen
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Thanks for the clarification.
As to "what on earth....", I'm sure I read it on /.
Or it may have been Ars, but the nub of it was that if the laptop failed, the mainframe wouldn't run.
Aren't there surplus components that are enabled depending on your licence? Or processing elements that can be enabled for limited periods for an additional fee?
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It’ll run, but won’t IPL.
Same with HDS storage arrays (best on the planet, although takes a PhD to operate.) If the SVP fails, the array rocks on, but you’re not servicing or rebooting jt.
Just like the SE, the SVP used to be a laptop; now it’s a 1U server.
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Yes, if both SEs were to fail simultaneously you would be unable to do things like IPL, but any already running partitions would continue to run normally. And of course the SEs can be repaired or replaced without disrupting the running system.
The configuration of the system is controlled by a signed configuration file, but it is not a 'license'. The customer purchases, for instance, an additional CP, and that CP is added via the configuration file. From that point on the customer owns the CP.
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Not at all, if both SE were to fail the mainframe will still continue merrily plugging along, just don't try to reboot it. Drop a new pair of SE in place with the config file and everything is running normally again.
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Few technologies can claim 7 9s of uptime.
Well, Etherium claims 100% uptime. Bitcoin too if you ignore the early years where the technology was immature. Both do better than networks like Visa, which are presumably the target customers for these mainframes.
The machines themselves don't really matter beyond consumer-grade reliability. It's the design that makes a service reliable.
Re: An old piece of shit, upgraded to a ... (Score:2)
Credit card processing, check processing, Fortune 500 accounting (fun fact, Sun Microsystems ran their accounting systems on an IBM mainframe back in the day, not their own large iron), airline reservations, air traffic control, and countless federal and state government accounting applications are all run on mainframes.
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And Hotmail ran on a bunch of Sun SPARC servers.
Global market for 5 (Score:5, Funny)
I think their might be a global market for 5 of these computers.
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Said no-one ever
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"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."
Thomas Watson, president of IBM, 1943
Re:Global market for 5 (Score:5, Informative)
Never said it. Quite the opposite. He believed there WAS a decent market for computers, and to prove it he had his engineers design (not build) one. Then he took that design (not a working model) to 20 potential customers around the world to judge interest in it. His actual statement was 'out of those 20 presentations, I was hoping to get 5 orders (as that would demonstrate a viable market), I got 18'. That is a far cry from 'I think there is a world market for maybe five computers'.
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Never said it. Quite the opposite. He believed there WAS a decent market for computers, and to prove it he had his engineers design (not build) one. Then he took that design (not a working model) to 20 potential customers around the world to judge interest in it. His actual statement was 'out of those 20 presentations, I was hoping to get 5 orders (as that would demonstrate a viable market), I got 18'. That is a far cry from 'I think there is a world market for maybe five computers'.
In support of never said it: https://geekhistory.com/conten... [geekhistory.com] Conclusion at the end of the article: "Thomas Watson was one of the richest men of his time, a leading self-made businessmen [sic] and often called one of the world's greatest salesmen. If there was a time and place where Watson made the statement, 'I think there is a world market for maybe five computers,' it would be logical to assume there would be some record of it. Without a credible source of when the alleged quote was made we can only con
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I agree that the quote is mis-attributed to Thomas Watson senior in 1943. Seems it was his son who said they didn't think they'd get more than 5 orders for their first computer at a shareholder's meeting in 1953.
However, I take issue with the claim that Thomas Watson senior was convinced of the market. Yes, he built a single scientific computer in the 1940's as a kind of demo but it was his son Thomas Watson junior who pushed IBM into the computer market. Thomas Watson senior was not convinced of it and IB
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To be fair, in 1943 computers were science fiction and nobody had built a fully electronic working one. The electro-mechanical machines of the era were somewhat unreliable and limited. From that perspective it was probably hard to see what they could develop into.
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that depends upon what you mean by "fully electronic."
The ABC was designed in 1937 and working in 1942.
Computation was electronic (tubes) and memory was on rotating drums of capacitors.
It wasn't programmable, though, in the sense we normally mean it.
Re:Global market for 5 (Score:4, Funny)
"I predict that within 10 years, computers will be twice as powerful, ten thousand times larger, and so expensive that only the 5 richest kings of Europe will own them."
ELI5 what OS it actually runs (Score:1)
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Nearly all run z/VM as the hypervisor and then many instances of Linux and z/OS. Containers and virtual machines are standards now but IBM was doing the exact same thing on the S/370 series in the 1970s!
You can try z/OS yourself with the Hercules emulator. Get the images from bit torrent.
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z/VM isn't used all that much anymore. The systems support enough LPARs (up to 85) that it isn't really necessary. Most Linux users use KVM to provide virtualization in a Linux partition. In fact, if you want to use Secure Execution for Linux you must use KVM, although in that case the virtualization is not actually provided by KVM (it just sets up the guests) but by an ultravisor in the firmware.
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z/VM isn't used all that much anymore. The systems support enough LPARs (up to 85) that it isn't really necessary.
It depends. On current hardware, z/VM can easily scale to tens of thousands of VMs. Some customers need this.
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The person I responded to said 'nearly all' mainframes run z/VM. That is not true. I did not say nobody uses z/VM.
Re: ELI5 what OS it actually runs (Score:2)
I looked but didn't find zOS or zVM images. What should I search for?
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Most mainframes run either z/OS or Linux, although there are still some users of VSE.
The mainframe operator defines between 1 and 85 'logical partitions' (LPARs). Each LPAR has a defined configuration (number and type of processors, memory, I/O devices, usage weighting , etc). The partitions are isolated from each other (EAL5). Each partition appears as a real machine to the operating system running in it. This allows one machine to look like up to 85 independent machines.
Multiple systems (up to 32) can
Why IBM Mainframes are Better (Score:2)
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Unlike PC rubbish, the IBM will catch all memory leaks.
Not *all* leaks. Some of our LPARs had to be IPLed at least once every three months before memory leaks filled certain critical OS-related storage areas (areas sometimes referred to loosely as 'oscore').
The leaks were typically due to badly behaved third-party system software (CA, I'm looking at you!), so not IBM's fault as such; these products would leave small orphaned storage areas which z/OS had no means to tell were not in use any more. z/OS did no