MCP: Difference between revisions

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About this time Unisys made MCP  available to run from Windows 7 or 10 64 bit as "MCP Express" although I didn learn of this until 2019Q3 and didn bring it up till end of Q4 '20 (version 5). It is the full OS, sufficient to develop programs for current MCP (18). A main issue is that the license has to be renewed every August 1, but unclear how much disruption that is, working assumption is that worst case is that the backup restore utility would have to be used and the MCP rebuilt from reinstall.
About this time Unisys made MCP  available to run from Windows 7 or 10 64 bit as "MCP Express" although I didn learn of this until 2019Q3 and didn bring it up till end of Q4 '20 (version 5). It is the full OS, sufficient to develop programs for current MCP (18). A main issue is that the license has to be renewed every August 1, but unclear how much disruption that is, working assumption is that worst case is that the backup restore utility would have to be used and the MCP rebuilt from reinstall. Will update this &sect; when I know.
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Having hands on MCP 18 and seeing that it is fully available as a development target opens a role for the legacy MCP in the DCP, where "Unisys MCP" will be used wherever the distinction needs to be made clear. Also usages like ODT, DMS II or MARC are unambiguously referring to the Unisys product as we never intended take more than inspiration from it  and it is great to see that all of the mainframe stuff is available in the Windows based product including TCP/IP and DNS interfaces.
Having hands on MCP 18 and seeing that it is fully available as a development target opens a role for the legacy MCP in the DCP, where "Unisys MCP" will be used wherever the distinction needs to be made clear. Also usages like ODT, DMS II or MARC are unambiguously referring to the Unisys product as we never intended take more than inspiration from it  and it is great to see that all of the mainframe stuff is available in the Windows based product including TCP/IP and DNS interfaces.

Revision as of 17:04, 17 March 2020


A timeline of "MCP" in my life course.

MCP 4 Era

The first referent of the acronym is the operating system of the same name, which was at release 19 in 2019.

I was the systems programmer at Daytona Beach Community, now Daytona State college which was then a Burroughs shop as my second multi-year job out of college. [1]

4715 Story

In a my domain space concept, it is the designation for nodes of a Domain Control Program (DCP).


«MCP» is the operating system abstraction on a single node of a cluster, or cloud of computers with fast interconnectivity, miniminally 1 gigabit per second. The MCPs operate as the nodes of the larger OS construct, the DCP. MCP itself has these components/layers:

  • The top level which is a lisp image running a generic blackboard model of realtime operations control and knowledge base management.
  • The workflow level which is implemented by the Work Flow Language, another Burroughs inspiration, reimagined as a context for literate programming and revival of the job control concept based on an adaptation of WFL to the DCP context.
  • A base layer close to machine level using the c++ actor framework and optionally a custom debian kernel.


MCP Express


About this time Unisys made MCP available to run from Windows 7 or 10 64 bit as "MCP Express" although I didn learn of this until 2019Q3 and didn bring it up till end of Q4 '20 (version 5). It is the full OS, sufficient to develop programs for current MCP (18). A main issue is that the license has to be renewed every August 1, but unclear how much disruption that is, working assumption is that worst case is that the backup restore utility would have to be used and the MCP rebuilt from reinstall. Will update this § when I know.

Having hands on MCP 18 and seeing that it is fully available as a development target opens a role for the legacy MCP in the DCP, where "Unisys MCP" will be used wherever the distinction needs to be made clear. Also usages like ODT, DMS II or MARC are unambiguously referring to the Unisys product as we never intended take more than inspiration from it and it is great to see that all of the mainframe stuff is available in the Windows based product including TCP/IP and DNS interfaces.

The most natural form of integration of Unisys MCP is to allow it as an alternate to linux MCP in a DCP. Practically, this would require at least a DCP aware WFL and DCALGOL and for everything impacted to be recompiled with these. Since this isn't in fact practicable, some fallback is needed.

The design principle embodying that fallback is that Unisys MCP will only have integration with the DCP cognitive architecture and not the physical one, each Unisys MCP in a DCP will be an island unlike the linux hosts which form a single system image. That being the case, no Unisys MCP components need to be altered. Rather the integration will be in software built with the standard Unisys dev kit targeting the DCP cog arch.

4716-18

α/β period:


In this period the elements of the DCP are prototyped, marshalled, deployed then productized:

  1. Get working build of all packages in same form they will ultimately be used in the product.
  2. Get working build of newly created elements such as the DGUI/SPO and WFL.
  3. Apply the above to the proto domains.
  4. Workout in service of the proto domains.
  5. Do productization/packaging for mass deployment


CP 4721 roughly corresponds to what is produced by 1 and 2 and the AKDOMHST/SVC SKUs to 5.


Sometime between milestone 2 and 4, a MCP shell/remote SPO service will be made available to authenticated users.

CP 4721

Blank for formatting purpose.

See also

Footnote