At 3/1/2012 06:46 PM, Skip Robinson wrote:
For years we ran a 'channel extender' product call RDS. It worked by front-endng FLIH for I/O interrupts to determine whether the I/O was to or from a supported device as defined to RDS. If not, the I/O was passed along for normal processing. If so, RDS redirected the I/O to its own network device for transmission (out); or written to the intended device (in). It sounds kludgy, but it worked amazingly well. The vendor was very forthright about the internals. We had occasional hardware problems with RDS, but I never once saw an OS failure caused by this technique.

This sort of thing is best not done at home.

This also is a example of a "legitimate" use of an intercept. It does not confer authority upon its caller. All it does is perform a service on behalf of a caller and which the caller itself does not have the authority to perform on its own. In this sense it is no different from any other system service (OPEN, WTO, GETMAIN, etc.) performed by the OS.






JO.Skip Robinson
SCE Infrastructure Technology Services
Electric Dragon Team Paddler
SHARE MVS Program Co-Manager
626-302-7535 Office
323-715-0595 Mobile
[email protected]

Dave Cole              REPLY TO: [email protected]
ColeSoft Marketing     WEB PAGE: http://www.colesoft.com
736 Fox Hollow Road    VOICE:    540-456-8536
Afton, VA 22920        FAX:      540-456-6658

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