This sort of discussion is periodically raised – within IBM as well as without
– which caused me to come up with a definitive spreadsheet of what machine
implemented each instruction, beginning with the S/360. Unfortunately, it also
contained a lot of IBM confidential instructions, and I left
I guess the best you can do for your future product updates is to ask your team
to make sure they are always checking the latest edition of the PoOps manual
when they are coding new changes.
Peter
From: IBM Mainframe Assembler List On Behalf
Of Mark Hammack
Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2024
Thanks for the reminder Peter. More curiosity than anything else. The
product I support currently uses MACHINE(ARCH-10) in ASMAOPTS so that we
can all but guarantee that any customer can run the software. With that
said, I try to keep a current copy of PoOps on hand. Since the latest and
Following up on my own reply to ask Mark: What is your goal/need? Just
curiosity, or do you have a project / task that needs this information? If the
latter, can you describe what you need? We may be able to help you better if
we know what you need.
Peter
From: IBM Mainframe Assembler List
Bob,
how much is that some $$$ .?
I would be willing to help and support the attempt to resurrect Tachyon.
Even with Dignus being as good as it is.
Would you be able to get in touch with Kay and get somewhere or would it
need an other person?
Martin
Am 21.03.24 um 18:45 schrieb Bob
What David Cole said is sad and true.
After the dissolution of marriage and Kay Bond taking over
the business, David and Kay asked me if I would be interested
in helping Kay with technical support and maintenance of the
Tachyon software suite. I said Yes, and, for a brief time, I
did what I
Dave Bond and his wife got divorced. The wife got the business, Dave
got his freedom. Tachyon has been orphaned.
At 3/20/2024 04:34 PM, Tony Harminc wrote:
On Wed, 20 Mar 2024 at 17:12, Mark Hammack wrote:
> Is there a list somewhere (other than OPTABLE LIST) that shows which
> instructions
The OPCODE table, like the rest of the POO , has change bars to tell you what
changed since the previous edition.
--
Tom Marchant
On Wed, 20 Mar 2024 21:53:35 +, Farley, Peter
wrote:
>The only way I can think of to accurately (more or less) track the additions
>would be to extract the