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Full Discussion: Time travel
The Lounge War Stories Time travel Post 302713153 by bakunin on Wednesday 10th of October 2012 10:28:05 AM
Old 10-10-2012
Only now i got it: "IOS", not "I OS". Actually this is not a mainframe but a midrange system, just like the p-series - in fact it is the same hardware.

This system was formerly called "AS/400" and the OS "OS/400" and you will find probably a lot more under these terms than under "IOS". Most of it, even the most outdated information, will probably still apply because the system hasn't changed that much for the last 20 years.

The AS/400 is quite radically different from anyother machine (for instance it has a linear address space which spans memory AND disk space - you move a file and it is dumped from memory to disk) and getting around the concepts is probably quite hard first.

On the other hand the AS/400 is famous for needing next to no administration at all. There are many companies owning a AS/400 and having had no Sysadmin for the last 15 years. Try that with a Unix system, it would be long broken.

The network is an alien thing too: it is called 5250 and works similar to (but is still different from) the SNA system and the 3270 data stream the IBM mainframes use.

Now for the good news: because IOS systems work in p-Series hardware there are still VIOS and HMC and they work absolutely the same way as you are accustomed to. Just the LPARs running IOS are different (inside - they are still the same LPARs from outside, say, from the viewpoint of the VIOS or the HMC).

I hope this helps.

bakunin
 

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TIMED(8)						      System Manager's Manual							  TIMED(8)

NAME
timed - time server daemon SYNOPSIS
timed [ -t ] [ -M ] [ -n network ] [ -i network ] DESCRIPTION
Timed is the time server daemon and is normally invoked at boot time from the rc(8) file. It synchronizes the host's time with the time of other machines in a local area network running timed(8). These time servers will slow down the clocks of some machines and speed up the clocks of others to bring them to the average network time. The average network time is computed from measurements of clock differences using the ICMP timestamp request message. The service provided by timed is based on a master-slave scheme. When timed(8) is started on a machine, it asks the master for the net- work time and sets the host's clock to that time. After that, it accepts synchronization messages periodically sent by the master and calls adjtime(2) to perform the needed corrections on the host's clock. It also communicates with date(1) in order to set the date globally, and with timedc(8), a timed control program. If the machine running the master crashes, then the slaves will elect a new master from among slaves running with the -M flag. A timed running without the -M flag will remain a slave. The -t flag enables timed to trace the messages it receives in the file /usr/adm/timed.log. Tracing can be turned on or off by the program timedc(8). Timed normally checks for a master time server on each network to which it is connected, except as modified by the options described below. It will request synchronization service from the first master server located. If permitted by the -M flag, it will provide synchronization service on any attached networks on which no current master server was detected. Such a server propagates the time computed by the top-level master. The -n flag, followed by the name of a network which the host is connected to (see networks(5)), overrides the default choice of the network addresses made by the program. Each time the -n flag appears, that network name is added to a list of valid networks. All other networks are ignored. The -i flag, followed by the name of a network to which the host is connected (see networks(5)), overrides the default choice of the network addresses made by the program. Each time the -i flag appears, that network name is added to a list of networks to ignore. All other networks are used by the time daemon. The -n and -i flags are meaningless if used together. FILES
/usr/adm/timed.log tracing file for timed /usr/adm/timed.masterlog log file for master timed SEE ALSO
date(1), adjtime(2), gettimeofday(2), icmp(4P), timedc(8), TSP: The Time Synchronization Protocol for UNIX 4.3BSD, R. Gusella and S. Zatti 4.3 Berkeley Distribution November 17, 1996 TIMED(8)
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