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Vernon posted this site, I would recommend reading it. >One of a number of webpages on porting to the 400 is thispage, giving an >>verview of 400 architecture: <http://www-919.ibm.com/developer/factory/porting/overview.html> With Pretty pictures too <SNIP> The iSeries architecture specifies a single very, very large virtual address space known as Single-Level Storage (SLS). All objects, programs, files, users, data, working space, database tables... everything, resides in this storage space. This storage space is addressed using 128-bit pointers. It is divided into sections, including Temporary and Persistent. This distinction refers to between re-boots. For examples, a user profile is in Persistent, and a shared memory segment is in Temporary. Because a single page table maps all virtual addresses to physical addresses, task switching is very efficient. Further, most SLS addresses contain a real address, eliminating the need for address translation, and thus speeding up data access. Additionally, OS/400 automatically spans data objects across all available disks arms, automatically improving the speed of paging and persistent object retrieval. For database operations, this eliminates the need for a database and/or systems administrator to perform petty non-business tasks like managing data spaces. You can think of all storage (various memory, disk, tape, etc) as "currently available" ways to store data in the vast Single-Level-Storage. Currently, magnetic disk technology and solid-state flash memory (aux storage) are used to hold as much of the persistent SLS as possible, and ECC memory (main storage) is used as temporary storage and as a cache for disk storage. As new technologies, possibly bubble and holographic memories, emerge from IBM Research, the iSeries architecture will enable iSeries applications to exploit these with no modification. Note: No other computing platform has such a powerful architecture as SLS. It's patented. As simple as it sounds, it's also an immense effort to effectively implement. SLS is a result of some of the most forward-thinking ideas. In fact, the design, in development, was named "FS" for Future System <SNIP>
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