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Operating Systems AIX How do you keep your AIX skills up to date? Post 302990188 by bakunin on Monday 23rd of January 2017 01:13:55 PM
Old 01-23-2017
Quote:
Originally Posted by Colin_Fearnley
I am very curious to find out how AIX admins keep up to date and refreshed with all of the options and features of AIX without having access to a test environment?
That (the fact that IBM has no AIX system at a price affordable for a singular person) is perhaps the most unwise (to avoid a stronger term) decision IBM ever has come up with and probably will - in the long run - be the undoing of AIX.

Sun Microsystems, for a long time, showered universities with lots of hardware at minimal prices (if not free of cost at all: "You want to buy some E4500? Great, we give you some good rebate and chip in 5 U05 for free.") and that served to educate the physicists, chemists, etc. in SunOS/Solaris. Most of the physicists don't work in physics but end up doing software engineering or systems administration and when these were asked which UNIX platform to select for a project - guess, which one they chose.

IBM, on the other hand, never had anything comparable to a U05 in the last ten years. If you want some equipment for playing around with Linux virtualisation you buy some better-than-average PC for, say, $ 1000 and start playing around. If you want some playground for AIX virtualisation you buy a HMC, a 822, a few licenses and you are conveniently set back some $50k. I, for my part, can't afford that.

All that leads to a severe lack of new blood. The average IBM shop has admins in my age range on average - and i am 55. We are the new MVS admins - another species rapidly being taken care of by biology.

So, to answer your question: i always make it a point that customers have some test equipment because i sure know i can't do tests for new things at home on my own. Second, i am an avid reader of documentation and whenever new features come up i read up on them, even if i can't try them always out. And, finally: AIX environments are a lot more static than i.e. Linux environments, so there is no need to be as innovative as with those. A typical AIX shop ten years ago ran about half a dozen applications (SAP, DB/2, Oracle, Informatica, Websphere, TSM) and that was it. A current AIX shop does the same, just the versions have changed. Therefore it is somewhat easier to keep up.

Does that answer your question?

bakunin
 

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PERLOS400(1)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide					      PERLOS400(1)

NAME
README.os400 - Perl version 5 on OS/400 DESCRIPTION
This document describes various features of IBM's OS/400 operating system that will affect how Perl version 5 (hereafter just Perl) is compiled and/or runs. By far the easiest way to build Perl for OS/400 is to use the PASE (Portable Application Solutions Environment), for more information see http://www.iseries.ibm.com/developer/factory/pase/index.html This environment allows one to use AIX APIs while programming, and it provides a runtime that allows AIX binaries to execute directly on the PowerPC iSeries. Compiling Perl for OS/400 PASE The recommended way to build Perl for the OS/400 PASE is to build the Perl 5 source code (release 5.8.1 or later) under AIX. The trick is to give a special parameter to the Configure shell script when running it on AIX: sh Configure -DPASE ... The default installation directory of Perl under PASE is /QOpenSys/perl. This can be modified if needed with Configure parameter -Dprefix=/some/dir. Starting from OS/400 V5R2 the IBM Visual Age compiler is supported on OS/400 PASE, so it is possible to build Perl natively on OS/400. The easier way, however, is to compile in AIX, as just described. If you don't want to install the compiled Perl in AIX into /QOpenSys (for packaging it before copying it to PASE), you can use a Configure parameter: -Dinstallprefix=/tmp/QOpenSys/perl. This will cause the "make install" to install everything into that directory, while the installed files still think they are (will be) in /QOpenSys/perl. If building natively on PASE, please do the build under the /QOpenSys directory, since Perl is happier when built on a case sensitive filesystem. Installing Perl in OS/400 PASE If you are compiling on AIX, simply do a "make install" on the AIX box. Once the install finishes, tar up the /QOpenSys/perl directory. Transfer the tarball to the OS/400 using FTP with the following commands: > binary > site namefmt 1 > put perl.tar /QOpenSys Once you have it on, simply bring up a PASE shell and extract the tarball. If you are compiling in PASE, then "make install" is the only thing you will need to do. The default path for perl binary is /QOpenSys/perl/bin/perl. You'll want to symlink /QOpenSys/usr/bin/perl to this file so you don't have to modify your path. Using Perl in OS/400 PASE Perl in PASE may be used in the same manner as you would use Perl on AIX. Scripts starting with #!/usr/bin/perl should work if you have /QOpenSys/usr/bin/perl symlinked to your perl binary. This will not work if you've done a setuid/setgid or have environment variable PASE_EXEC_QOPENSYS="N". If you have V5R1, you'll need to get the latest PTFs to have this feature. Scripts starting with #!/QOpenSys/perl/bin/perl should always work. Known Problems When compiling in PASE, there is no "oslevel" command. Therefore, you may want to create a script called "oslevel" that echoes the level of AIX that your version of PASE runtime supports. If you're unsure, consult your documentation or use "4.3.3.0". If you have test cases that fail, check for the existence of spool files. The test case may be trying to use a syscall that is not implemented in PASE. To avoid the SIGILL, try setting the PASE_SYSCALL_NOSIGILL environment variable or have a handler for the SIGILL. If you can compile programs for PASE, run the config script and edit config.sh when it gives you the option. If you want to remove fchdir(), which isn't implement in V5R1, simply change the line that says: d_fchdir='define' to d_fchdir='undef' and then compile Perl. The places where fchdir() is used have alternatives for systems that do not have fchdir() available. Perl on ILE There exists a port of Perl to the ILE environment. This port, however, is based quite an old release of Perl, Perl 5.00502 (August 1998). (As of July 2002 the latest release of Perl is 5.8.0, and even 5.6.1 has been out since April 2001.) If you need to run Perl on ILE, though, you may need this older port: http://www.cpan.org/ports/#os400 Note that any Perl release later than 5.00502 has not been ported to ILE. If you need to use Perl in the ILE environment, you may want to consider using Qp2RunPase() to call the PASE version of Perl. AUTHORS
Jarkko Hietaniemi <jhi@iki.fi> Bryan Logan <bryanlog@us.ibm.com> David Larson <larson1@us.ibm.com> perl v5.12.1 2010-04-26 PERLOS400(1)
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