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Guy Harris (talk | contribs) →History: Remove some redundancy, and put the mainframe stuff together and put the IBM PowerPC/Power ISA midrange stuff after it, with the disk array and x86-64 LPARs after those. |
Guy Harris (talk | contribs) →History: Remove the IBM Power Systems stuff from a paragraph about mainframes; the Power PC/Power ISA stuff is discussed later. |
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cite book |url=http://www.vm.ibm.com/pubs/HCSF8A50.PDF |title=z/VMbuilt on IBM Virtualization Technology General Information Version 4 Release 3.0 |id=GC24-5991-04 |date=2002-04-12 |publisher=[[IBM]]}}</ref> IBM introduced the Start Interpretive Execution (SIE) instruction (designed specifically for the execution of virtual machines) in 1983 as part of [[IBM System/370-XA|370-XA]] architecture on the [[IBM 3081]], as well as VM/XA versions of VM to exploit it.
[[Amdahl Corporation]]'s Multiple Domain Facility (MDF) was introduced in 1982.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Doran |first1=R.W. |title=Amdahl multiple-___domain architecture |journal=Computer |date=October 1988 |volume=21 |issue=10 |pages=20–28 |doi=10.1109/2.7054 |s2cid=1738798 |url=http://www-ti.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de/~spruth/edumirror/xx067.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170829211626/http://www-ti.informatik.uni-tuebingen.de/~spruth/edumirror/xx067.pdf |archive-date=2017-08-29}}</ref> IBM introduced its functionally similar PR/SM in 1988, implemented on its [[ESA/370]] architecture released that year with the [[IBM 3090]] processors.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.redbooks.ibm.com/redpapers/pdfs/redp5157.pdf|title=IBM Z Functional Matrix|author1=Frank Packheiser|author2=Octavian Lascu|author3=Bill White|page=18|publisher=[[IBM]]|date=2018}}</ref> PR/SM (Processor Resource/System Manager) is a type-1 [[Hypervisor]] (a [[virtual machine]] monitor) that allows multiple logical partitions to share physical resources such as [[Central processing unit|CPU]]s, memory, [[Channel I/O|I/O channels]] and LAN interfaces; the LPARs can share I/O devices such as [[direct access storage device]]s (DASD). PR/SM is integrated with all [[IBM System z]] machines
MDF-based LPAR technology continued to be developed separately by Amdahl, and [[Hitachi Data Systems]] in part for their implementations of the new ESA/370 architecture, which featured the introduction of [[access registers]] that allowed use of multiple [[data space]]s addressable by a single [[address space]].
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