Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

IBM System/360 Model 85

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
High-end IBM computer model from late 1960s
IBM System/360 Model 85
IBM System/360 Model 85.
View of system console.
The left side has a
Microfiche Document Viewer
ManufacturerInternational Business Machines Corporation (IBM)
Product familySystem/360
Memory512 K - 4 M Core

TheIBM System/360 Model 85 is a high-end member of theSystem/360 family of computers, with many advanced features, and was announced in January 1968 and first shipped in December 1969.[1] IBM built only about 30 360/85 systems[1][2] because of "a recession in progress".[3]

Models

[edit]

The four models of the 360/85[4] are: I85 (512K), J85 (1M), K85 (2M) and L85 (4M), configured with twoIBM 2365 Processor Storage units, four2365 units, anIBM 2385 Processor Storage unit Model 1 (=2M), or anIBM 2385 Processor Storage unit Model 2 (=4M) respectively. The I85 includes two-wayinterleaved memory while the others provide four-way interleaving of memory access.

Advanced/special features

[edit]
  • The system console is L-shaped: one leg is the Main Control Panel, including a CRT, and the other leg includes 2 screens: "Microfiche Document Viewer" and "Indicator Viewer."[4]: p.8 
  • CPU cache, which IBM termed "high-speed buffer storage" - depending on the model and the situation, "the effective system storage cycle becomes one-third to one-fourth of the actual main storage cycle."[4]: p.5  The cache is high-speed, static buffer memory situated between the CPU and main system memory ("Level 1" cache), available in 16 KB and 32 KB size options. The System/360 Model 85 is the first commercially available computer with cache memory.
  • Monolithic integrated circuits[5]
  • Enhanced floating point - The Model 85 comes with extended-precision 128-bitquadruple-precision floating point
  • The Model 85 has both Read-only andWriteable Control Storage[4]: p.14  (it is the second System/360 to have writeable control storage; theIBM System/360 Model 25 is the first to have rewriteable control storage; the 360/85 was introduced Jan. 30, 1968).

Emulation

[edit]

The 360/85, when equipped with the 709/7090/7094 Compatibility Feature,[6]with the use of anemulator program permits running709,7040,7044,7094 and 7094 II programs.[4]: p.9 [7]

Gateway to the future

[edit]

In some respects, the System/360 Model 85 provided a glimpse into the futureSystem/370 product line,[8] particularly theIBM System/370 Model 165 which IBM announced two years later (1970). It used the MST circuitry that was later used in the initial System/370 models, and introduced features such as 128-bit floating point arithmetic and block multiplexor channels that are also part of the System/370 architecture.

The 360/85 has a hardwired I-unit to fetch and decode instructions, but the E-unit usesmicrocode to control instruction execution,[9] unlike the completely-hardwired360/75 and360/91; the high-end models ofSystem/370 also usehorizontal microcode, except for theIBM System/370 Model 195.[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abPugh, Emerson W.; Johnson, Lyle R.; Palmer, John H. (1991).IBM's 360 and Early 370 Systems. Cambridge: MIT Press. p. 419.ISBN 0-262-16123-0.
  2. ^but it was noted inhttp://hercules-390.yahoogroups.narkive.com/ritmdhO6/the-360-91-and-associated-machines that "a 360/85 was delivered from when a 91 was ordered until it was ready." This same source, after quoting from Pugh et al adds "Many disagree on the number of 360/91s that IBM built or sold. I have read and heard it authoritatively stated that the number was 10, 11, 12, 14, 15, or 20."
  3. ^The recession's most important effect regarding the high-end mainframes was a matter of less available government money, as noted inhttps://history.nasa.gov/SP-4221/ch7.htm ("CHAPTER 7: AEROSPACE RECESSION"). By contrast, the Bureau of Labor Statistics says "From the early 1960s through the mid-1980s, the outlook for growth in the computer manufacturing industry was, for most of the period, unusually optimistic."http://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/1986/09/art2full.pdf
  4. ^abcde"IBM System/360 Model 85 Functional Characteristics"(PDF).IBM. June 1968. A22-6916-1.
  5. ^Conti; et al. (1968). "Structural aspects of the System/360 Model 85, I: General organization".IBM Systems Journal.7 (1):2–14.doi:10.1147/sj.71.0002.Its basic design includes monolithic circuits, very wide data paths, an 80-nanosecond internal buffer of at least 16K bytes, and a high-speed multiply feature.
  6. ^IBM System/360 Special Feature Description 709/7090/7094 Compatibility Feature for IBM System/360 Model 85 (First ed.), IBM, March 1969, GA27-2733-0
  7. ^Emulating the IBM 7094 on the IBM Models 85 and 165 using OS/360 Program Number for M/85: 360C-EU-734 Program Number for M/165: 360C-EU-740 OS Release 20 (Third ed.), IBM, November 1971, GC27-6951-2
  8. ^Pugh, Emerson W.; Johnson, Lyle R.; Palmer, John H. (1991).IBM's 360 and Early 370 Systems. Cambridge: MIT Press. p. 479.ISBN 0-262-16123-0.In May 1968, during the course of contention over Model 85 architecture, which was intended to represent a first step toward NS architecture...
  9. ^Robert L. Asenhurst (2014-06-25).Foundations of Microprogramming. p. 34.ISBN 978-1483215877.
  10. ^"IBM Archives: System/370 Model 195".IBM. 23 January 2003. Archived fromthe original on 2023-07-29. RetrievedMarch 24, 2018.
Models
Standard
Custom
Peripherals
Software
Innovations
Related
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=IBM_System/360_Model_85&oldid=1336110182"
Category:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp