IBM System/370 Model 145

The IBM System/370 Model 145 was announced Sep 23, 1970,[1] three months after the 155 and 165[2] models.
New capabilities
As with all IBM 370 systems, the 145 could "out of the box" provide support for for an architecture described as "extended, but not redesigned, for System/370."[2].
The 370 introduced some new instructions, such as
- MOVE CHARACTER LONG (MVCL) and
- COMPARE CHARACTER LONG (CLCL),
thereby permitting operations on up to 2^24-1 bytes (16 MB), vs. the 256-byte limits on the 360's MVC and CLC,[3][4] but lacked a DAT (Dynamic Address Translation) box.
Virtual memory
Some said about the early members of the IBM System/370 family, looking back, that they were not "the real 370 line" because "neither offered virtual storage capability, which was to be a hallmark of the 370 line."[5]
Unlike the earlier Model 155 and 165 systems, for which an upgrade to virtual memory required the purchase of an expensive upgrade to add a DAT box,[5] the 145's customers had two advantages:
- 370/145 customers did not have to wait as long for this lack of virtual memory to be remedied[NB 1]
- there was no need to buy extra hardware: An upgrade to the 145's microcode through a new microcode floppy disk [6] via floppy drive[7][8] enabled virtual memory capability.
VM/CMS
Upon gaining virtual memory capability via a microcode update, the 145 could now support the VMF (Virtual Machine Facility) and VM/CMS, a time-sharing system.
See also
- List of IBM products
- IBM System/360
- IBM System/370
- IBM System/370 Model 155
- IBM System/370 Model 165
- IBM 3090
Notes
- ^ June 1971 vs. Aug. 1972
References
- ^ "System/370 Model 145". IBM Archives. IBM.
- ^ a b "System/370 Model 165". IBM Archives. IBM.
- ^ http://faculty.cs.niu.edu/~byrnes/csci360/notes/360ex.htm
- ^ http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/people/gbell/tcmwebpage/timeline/chap51_ibm370_cs2.pdf
- ^ a b "What Course for the 3081?". Computerworld. November 24, 1980. p. 34.
- ^ IBM Maintenance Library 3145 Processing Unit Theory - Maintenance. IBM. pp. CPU 117–129. SY24-3581-2
- ^ Computerworld. July 5, 1976 https://books.google.com/books?id=pGJK0ayV3S8C.
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(help) - ^ www.computerhistory.org/timeline/memory-storage