On 07/02/2026 03:51, Steve Lewis wrote:
Dave,

Page 439 of that document you linked has a nice chart of "integrated emulators that run execute under VM/370" -  now I do recall one of the "famous" things about the prior S/360 was it could emulate 1401 and other IBM systems.  Then later on, more systems to emulate would be the 709-series.     Ok, so VM/370 is more like what we might today call a Hypervisor?  So the "it looks like whatever you want" comment makes sense.

You don't need VM to emulate a 1401, I believe the 1401 emulator ran under MVS as well, or I think on some S/360 machines you could load 1401 microcode. So yes VM itself is what today we would call a hypervisor. It creates virtual machines and each virtual machine is pretty much totally isolated. But CMS was provided as source code, and in the early days it was very limited so sites made many modifications.

I suppose what I'm after is more a visual on the usage of CMS, DOS/VS or OS/VS1 ( OS's that one would only use on an S/370 ? )


There was also MTS and MUSIC plus a few other TSO and CICS replacements.

I put a couple reference images here on what I have about CTSS and TOPS-10 (CTSS is from a modern-day emulators, TOPS-10 is from one of their manuals so its from in 1970).   I see how you mean VM/370 isn't quite the same nature (not "just an OS" but an enterprise thing like for airlines, banks, financial brokers -- and the virtualization helped in testing/deploying new systems -- that maybe had newer OS's -- without disrupting operational systems?)

https://github.com/voidstar78/OS_NOTES

OK I can do something similar for VM and CMS but got a busy day here:-

https://www.scienceandindustrymuseum.org.uk/whats-on/meet-baby

(yes thats me, the rest of the team are camera shy)


- Steve



Dave

On Fri, Feb 6, 2026 at 10:00 AM David Wade <[email protected]> wrote:



    On 06/02/2026 14:55, Steve Lewis wrote:
    > Thanks Dave, the 3270 terminal screen makes sense. Or to make
    use of
    > the system and resources, you'd remote to it using a 3270.
    > So it may have been at a time no one thought to snap a
    photograph of
    > any of those 3270s in use (not just a "room full of 3270's" kind of
    > photo - but of the actual screen, showing whatever it was they were
    > doing;  managing tape/disk resources, files, users, or running
    APL or
    > something.  That's more what I was looking for, when you "used
    VM/370
    > {or remoted into it}, this is what it looked like."
    Generally thats not what you did with VM/370. You edited,
    compiled, and
    ran programs....

    >
    > There had to be some kind of installer?  Or maybe I'm viewing it
    wrong
    > - they (a business) didn't just buy a S/370 then decide what OS to
    > install.  But rather it was a packaged prepared by IBM, so maybe it
    > was pre-installed with VM/370 and configured to whatever the
    > arrangement/contract was?

    For VM you usually got a "starter system" on a tape. There was a
    different tape for each disk type. The first file on the tape is the
    standalone disk dump and restore program, DDR. So you IPL (boot) from
    this tape, and use DDR to restore the starter system to  DASD (disk).
    You usually needed three packs. The first time you IPL the restored
    starter system it asks you some basic config questions, and you then
    have a working system that you can use to restore the rest of the
    VM/370, load and apply service (fixes) , and configure to your exact
    hardware set-up.

    I expect at 522 pages this manual which covers install and
    congigureis a
    tad bigger than the one for other systems...

    
https://bitsavers.org/pdf/ibm/370/VM/370/Release_6/GC20-1801-10_VM370_Sysgen_Rel_6_Jan80.pdf


    > Or a way to say "when someone used a S/370 {or CMS}, this is
    what the
    > console content looked like" (printed, or by that time yea probably
    > more likely a CRT).
    >

    It looked like whatever you wanted. The samples in the previous
    e-mail
    are typical...


    > “The Origin of the VM/370 Time-Sharing System” – R.J. Creasy
    gives a
    > little bit of a description on those components CP, CMS, and RSCS.
    > But no photo/image yet of a terminal with content to identify
    "yeah,
    > see they are using a S/370 there" (maybe its listing disk packs,
    > tapes, memory resources, etc?)  I got something like this for the
    > earlier CTSS and TOPS-10.
    >
    pass me what  you have for that so I can see what a VM Equivalent
    might
    be. The definitive thing on a users 3270 is the status bottom right
    which on a pukka system which usually reads "VM READ VM/370" but can
    also start "RUNNING", "HOLDING" "CP READ".

    > -Steve
    >
    >
    Dave

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