FMS was a different operating system, and the only OSs that I know of on the 
7000 series to support multiprogramming were CTSS and some on Stretch.  OS/360 
supported multiprogramming and time sharing without DAT.

Could be an instruction for the CE, could be an unintended instruction.


--
Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz
http://mason.gmu.edu/~smetz3

________________________________________
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [[email protected]] on behalf of 
Paul Gilmartin [[email protected]]
Sent: Thursday, March 3, 2022 2:16 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: S0C4 pic 4

On Thu, 3 Mar 2022 18:27:54 +0000, Seymour J Metz wrote:

>There was only one that I know of: IBM 7040/7044 Operating System (16K32K) - 
>7040-PR-150; basically IBSYS/IBJOB. Whether they used it or ran stand-alone I 
>don't know.
>
IIRC, FMS didn't multi-process jobs.  I doubt that IBSYS was different -- tape
ruled and no DAT.   Interpreters can provide multi-processing -- GE-Dartmouth
provided time sharing with no hardware memory protection, and I encountered
a Data General system that did likewise, decoding 16 110-baud RS-232 lines
with CPU timing!

I suspect that setting bad parity supported hardware diagnostics.


>________________________________________
>From: Paul Gilmartin
>Sent: Thursday, March 3, 2022 10:47 AM
>>
>>There used to be a student compiler for FORTRAN IV that initialized storage 
>>to bad parity and put out an "uninitialized" message if you read that storage 
>>before you set it.
>>
>What hardware+OS supports that?

--
gil

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