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<div style="text-align: right;">
<div style="text-align: right;">
<h1 style="color: black;">mcpcms &nbsp; </h1>
<h1 style="color: black;">mcpcms &nbsp; </h1>
<h5 style="position: relative;top: 0px;color: black;">master control program &nbsp; <br>CMS MCS shell &nbsp; </h5>
<h5 style="position: relative;top: 0px;color: black;"><span style=background-color:yellow;"> &nbsp; conversational monitoring system &nbsp; </span><br>DCP Shell &nbsp; </h5>
</div>
</div>
<div style="position:relative;top:-60px;"> &nbsp; <a  style="position: relative;top: -15px;" title="Home Profile"
<div style="position:relative;top:-60px;"> &nbsp; <a  style="position: relative;top: -15px;" title="Home Profile"
             href=https://sameboat.network/user><img src=https://meansofproduction.biz/images/corbusierDuHaut.jpg width=100></a>
             href=https://sameboat.network/user><img src=https://meansofproduction.biz/images/corbusierDuHaut.jpg width=100></a>
           <span style="position: relative; top: -40px;"> &nbsp;<tt style="background-color: black; color: yellow; font-weight: bold;"> conversational monitor system &nbsp; </tt><br><br>
           <span style="position: relative; top: -40px;"><a style="color: lime;" title="About the MCP reinvention"
             <a  title="mcpcms cli or webssh login if not in a SSO session" style="position: relative; left: 130px; top: -20px;" target=_blank href=https://dcms.ai-integration.biz><b>launch</b></a>
              href=/eg/index.php/MCP> <tt style="background-color: black; color: yellow; font-weight: bold;"> &nbsp; minimalist clustering paradigm &nbsp; </tt></a><br><br>
             <span style="position: relative;left:130px;top: -20px;">&mdash; a shell on a <a style="color: lime;" title="About the MCP reinvention"
             <a  title="mcpcms cli or webssh login if not SAR authenticated"  
              href=https://eg.meansofproduction.biz/eg/index.php/MCP>MCP</a> node, &sup1;  provisioned per your current SSO context. &sup2;</span>
            style="height:50px;background-color:purple;color:white;position: relative; left: 130px; top: -20px;" href=/eg/index.php/MCPCELL><b> &nbsp; launch &nbsp;</b></a>
             <span style="position: relative;left:130px;top: -20px;">&mdash; an MCP cell &sup1;  provisioned by DCP per your current context. &sup2;</span>
           </span>
           </span>
</div>
</div>
<div style="z-index:150;position:relative;top:-90px;right:60px;">
<img align=right width=300px src="https://meansofproduction.biz/images/b6700nMCP2.png">
<span style="float:right;position:relative;top:270px;left:310px;font-size:10px;">Dual 6700, c. 1971/2, binding says MK 0.0, so 2.0.0<br>
<audio style="float:right;height:14px;" title="'Woody'n You' Ahmad Jamal 1958" controls source src="https://meansofproduction.biz/pub/WoodyNYou.mp3" type="audio/mpeg"> This page has an audio but your browser does not support the audio element.</audio><br>
<span style="float:right;font-size:8px;color:purple;">This page has an audio track, mouseover for title/credit.</span>
<br>
</span>
</div>
<div style="position: relative; top: -100px;">
<div style="position: relative; top: -100px;">
<blockquote style="width: 70%;font-weight: bold;" >
<blockquote style="position: relative;top: 0px;"> Semantic Roadmap
MCPCMS  presents the operator display terminal CONTROLLER for MCP ops and the default or "</html>[[:en:CANDE|CANDE]]<html>" MCS&sup3;.
        <tt>
<blockquote style="width: 80%;font-weight: bold;">
        <ul>
          Restricted to AKPERSONs (see <a href=/eg/index.php?title=AKPERSON>Entitlements</a>), and whitelisted <a style="color: lime;"  href=https://commons.sameboat.network/stationHistory>stations</a> .<br><br>
        <li>0.3.0 4721-04-17&nbsp; 1<sup>st</sup> written tl;dr story.&dagger; </li>
          A running <a style="color: lime;" href=https://eg.meansofproduction.biz/eg/index.php/WFL/DCP_SPO>SPO</a> counts against launch limits.<br><br>
        <li>0.9.0 47yy-00-00&nbsp; MCP BaselineOfDomainSpace. </li>
          ABORTED, ACTIVE, COMPLETEDOK, or STOPPED are completion codes for launch job but in the wild it's not run.
        <li>1.0.0 47yy-00-00&nbsp; LAN and cloud vendor provisioning; production geonode flows.</li>
         </blockquote><br> Launch code ABORTED implies additional info in your home profile DS control blocks.
        <li>1.1.0 47yy-00-00&nbsp; DCP BaselineOfKEE. </li>
        <hr width="50%" style="float: left;">
        <li>1.2.0 &nbsp;07y-00-00&nbsp; DCP in the wild, Transparent Ledger in Books, Shopify Integration.</li>
        </blockquote>      
        <li>2.0.0 &nbsp;07y-00-00&nbsp; &int; VM (CMS, MVS) / DCP &part; DS. The MF-One story.</li>
        <li>3.0.0 &nbsp;07y-00-00&nbsp; Done 2<sup>nd</sup> tl;dr story, 1<sup>st</sup> working WFL, DGUI for job edit and debug with visual execution. </li>
         <li>4.0.0 &nbsp;07y-00-00&nbsp; Mature DDD/KEE product.</li>
        </ul></tt></blockquote>
<center>
MCP-CMS &mdash; a platform for the Domain Control Program, with an aesthetic in homage to the Burroughs and IBM OSes.
</center>  
         <blockquote style="position: relative;">
         <blockquote style="position: relative;">
         <span style="z-index: 100;position: relative;font-size: 10px;">&sup1; Resource limits are dynamically set except for F class which always gets the system limit if there is one.</i><br>
         <span style="z-index: 100;position: relative;font-size: 10px;">&sup1; Resource limits are dynamically set except for F class which always gets the system limit if there is one which for billable accounts is the set spend limit.</i><br>
         &sup2;  MCP nodes must have sub-millisecond ping. Set parameters for your own AWS or Linode accounts or your manually provisioned hosts in the Remote Inventory DS block in your home profile.<br>&sup3; MCS: a message control subsystem of a MCP.
         &sup2;  Set parameters for your cloud provider in the DS Dashboard control blocks in your DCMS account or use system inventory.<br>
         </span>
         </span>
         </blockquote>
         </blockquote>
    <button type="button" class="collapsible"><div id="tldrDet">tl;dr</div></button>  
<blockquote style="position:relative;left:-5px;top:-10px;z-index:200;font-size:8px;">&dagger; This page and <a href="https://devops1.sameboat.network/About DCP">About DCP</a> are top level specifying stories,  cog arch internals aren't divulged as I mean them to be adaptable without notice, everything else is source accessible by devops users.</blockquote>
<div class="content">
<button type="button" class="collapsible"><div id="tldrDet">tl;dr</div></button>  
<blockquote>
<div class="content">
<blockquote  style="width: 70%;font-weight: bold;" >
MCPCMS presents the "</html>[[:en:CANDE|CANDE]]<html>" MCS&sup3; for DS users.
<blockquote style="width: 80%;font-weight: bold;">
 
  AKPERSONs (see <a href=/eg/index.php?title=AKPERSON>Entitlements</a>), and whitelisted <a style="color: lime;"  href=https://commons.sameboat.network/stationHistory>stations</a>
  can connect with the link above or in a running <a style="color: lime;" href=https://eg.meansofproduction.biz/eg/index.php/WFL/DCP_SPO>SPO</a> to a MCP running it.
</blockquote>
The attempt, if it reaches the MCP, results in completion codes reported in DS control block displays in your DCMS profile.<br>
Only ssh access from the wild, but this page will attempt, using your SAR credentials if the <a href=https://devops1.sameboat.network/roles>session role</a> is greater than 1.<br>
MCP operator messages will go to your ODT message queue.
<hr width="50%" style="float: left;">
</blockquote>   
<span style="font-size: 10px;position:relative;left:150px;">&sup3; MCS: a message control subsystem of a MCP.</span>
<center class=plainlinks>
  <a style="background-color:aliceblue;" href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Lycurgus/MoCA#Burroughs_CANDE> MCP 3.3 CANDE Reference Card</a><br>
  <a style="background-color:aliceblue;" href=https://meansofproduction.biz/pub/MCP15SystemCommands.pdf> MCP 15 System Commands </a>
</center>
<blockquote>
  <b>CANDE MCS</b>   
  <b>CANDE MCS</b>   
<center class=plainlinks><a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Lycurgus/MoCA#Burroughs_CANDE> MCP 3.3 CANDE Reference Card</a></center>
  <blockquote>
<blockquote>
    MCP-CMS connects via an MCS which is often referred to as the CANDE MCS although it is more general than that being the default ubiquitous DCP/MCP MCS.
  In Burroughs MCP, the CANDE MCS was used ubiquitously. I recall using a full screen editor which i think fed CANDE. The text edit functions are obsolete and
    Upon <b>mcpcms</b> connect, like the lang specific subshells in the next &sect;, an additional command <b>cande</b> can be used which will process the MCP-CMS system commands
  not part of the <b>mcpcms</b> MCS. Some other commands do map to the new system context though and they are developed in a similar fashion to WFL  with an additional shell mode command
    analogous to those in the MCP 15 document above. The system command processor is also available as a pane in the SPO.
  <b>cande</b> like the lang specific subshells in the next &sect;, which invokes the MCS command processor at a <b>mcpcms</b> prompt.
  <br><br>
<br><br>
  In Burroughs MCP, the CANDE MCS was used ubiquitously. I recall using a full screen editor which i think fed CANDE. The text edit functions are obsolete and
  The command processor is also available as a pane in the WebKEE legacy SPA and the CANDE MCS is the default ubiquitous DCP/MCP MCS. CANDE is used in current Unisys MCP but neither it nor the MCS have their former prominence when the OS runs under Windows.
  not part of the <b>mcpcms cande</b>. CANDE is used in current Unisys MCP but neither it nor the MCS have their former prominence when the OS runs under Windows.
</blockquote>
  </blockquote>
  <b>mcpcms</b>
  <b>mcpcms</b>
  <blockquote>
  <blockquote>
     is derived from  <b>zsh</b> for MCP and the shell variant set for it in /etc/shells. In an authenticated session, the launch link normally results in a WebSSH session with this shell. Aside from the modification for the MCP machine model, it is otherwise just zsh however the following (mode) commands are available to establish different shell behaviour in support of the KEE:
     A modified <b>zsh</b> for MCP serves as analog of the CMS from VM/CMS. Upon successful connect, the launch link above results in a terminal session with this shell in the browser.
<ul><li><b>shcl</b> (common lisp nature)</li><li><b>shhs</b> (HsShellScript, haskell nature)</li><li><b>upsh</b> (prolog nature)</li></ul> Lisp and prolog implementations are variable, and multiple can be combined but shcl and upsh themselves use sbcl and swipl, respectively.
    Aside from the modification for the MCP machine model, it is otherwise just zsh however the following (mode) commands are available to establish different shell behaviour in support of the KEE:
    <ul><li><b>shcl</b> (common lisp nature)</li><li><b>shhs</b> (HsShellScript, haskell nature)</li><li><b>upsh</b> (prolog nature)</li></ul> Lisp and prolog implementations are variable, and multiple can be combined but shcl and upsh themselves use sbcl and swipl, respectively.
   <b>mcpcms</b> can be accessed with ssh using the following script. Using the FQDSAgentName syntax is equivalent to what the launch link does in an AKPERSONs session.<pre><tt>#!/usr/bin/bash
   <b>mcpcms</b> can be accessed with ssh using the following script. Using the FQDSAgentName syntax is equivalent to what the launch link does in an AKPERSONs session.<pre><tt>#!/usr/bin/bash
# save as &lt;fileName&gt; and invoke with &lt;fileName&gt;  &lt;connect-spec&gt; where             
# save as &lt;fileName&gt; and invoke with &lt;fileName&gt;  &lt;connect-spec&gt; where             
#         
#         
#  &lt;connect-spec&gt;::= &lt;ipV6Address&gt;:&lt;port&gt; | &lt;ipV4Address&gt;:&lt;port&gt; | FQDSA&lt;whiteSpace&gt;&lt;FQDSAgentName&gt;  
#  &lt;connect-spec&gt; ::= &lt;mcpCommand&gt; &lt;FQDSAgentName&gt; | &lt;connect-spec&gt;
#  FQDSAgentName ::= &lt;agentId&gt;@&lt;domain&gt;[:&lt;port&gt;]
#  &lt;connect-spec&gt; ::= &lt;ipV6Address&gt;:&lt;port&gt; | &lt;ipV4Address&gt;:&lt;port&gt;
#  FQDSAgentName ::= &lt;agentId&gt;@&lt;domain&gt;[:&lt;port&gt;]
#
#
#  and the values are displayed in the DCMS account profile.   
#  and the values manually supplied from control blocks in the DCMS account profile where connect attempt results will also be available.   
#  The &lt;mcpCommand&gt;.  indicates the station where the script runs is trusted and the responsible AKPERSON is the operator.
#
#
if [ -z $2 ] then
if [ -z $2 ] then
Line 91: Line 130:
fi
fi
#
#
# Get connect values from FQDSA.
# Try a connect based on just the FQDSA assuming an eligible station. A port on submitted second parm is ignored with a warning.
# The no &lt;mcpCommand&gt; specified, a DCP determined default shell type is connected.
#
#
FQDSA=getmcpcms.ai-integration.biz/?FQDSA=$2
FQDSA=mcp.meansofproduction.biz/?FQDSA=$2&$1
PARMS=$(curl -L $FQDSA)
PARMS=$(curl -L $FQDSA)
ssh $PARMS
ssh $PARMS
</tt></pre>
</tt></pre>
  <b>mcpcms</b> is implemented for Linux first then MacOS. The intent is to support mainframe OSes after that, specifically the Hercules version of IBM and the Windows based version of Unisys MCP. Core Domain Space uses either AWS or Linode to dynamically provision whole hosts as MCP nodes and nodes may also be created as composed containers on an existing host.
  <b>mcpcms</b> is implemented first for Linux natively running or containerized in docker on Mac and Windows then for the Hercules version where
    VM/CMS replaces the modified zsh for that special path.  
    Cloud compute resources are dynamically provisioned using either system inventory or user supplied provisioning credentials with supported cloud vendors.
   </blockquote>
   </blockquote>
   <b>WFL</b>
   <b>WFL</b>
   <blockquote>
   <blockquote>
    is derived from the <a href=https://meansofproduction.biz/pub/mcpWFL.pdf>MCP 12 WFL</a> job control model, runs underneath <b>mcpcms</b> and serves as the physical base of MCP/DCP elements.<br><br>
  has eponymous origin in the <a style="background-color:aliceblue;"  href=https://meansofproduction.biz/pub/mcpWFL.pdf>MCP 12 WFL</a> job control model and supports the DCP with a line of demarcation between the minimalist MCP and its extension specific to DCP which is meant to protect properties of its internals. A way to think about it and my design intent is that MCP is a basic unix cluster machine to host any common mix, while the WFL machine is a private specialization. <br><br>
   Burroughs WFL is basically just an inspiration and point of departure to a WFL
   Unisys WFL is just a point of departure to our WFL. In Burroughs systems, WFL didn have as high a profile as IBM JCL, the main punch of the overall system, in an industry installation, would be its system of  transactions and these ran from a database which the Burroughs architecture delivered seamlessly without WFL to terminals as a special db stack. Our WFL is the central driver and basis of our MCP architecture
   <ol>
   <ol>
     <li>built for the MCP machine model</li>
     <li>is built for the MCP machine model</li>
     <li>which is a prime driver for the development of that model</li>
     <li>which is a prime driver for the development of that model</li>
     <li>with code blocks containing text of other supported langs</li>
     <li>with code blocks containing text of other supported langs</li>
   </ol>
   </ol>
   As far as the elaboration of JCL statements and so forth WFL is developed in a bottom up prototyping style without any spec other than the mainframe reference and the nascent MCP concept, so there will be no documentation for some time  
   As far as the elaboration of JCL statements and so forth WFL is developed in a bottom up prototyping style without any spec other than the mainframe reference and the DCP/MCP concept, so there will be no documentation for some time  
   other than the text of actual jobs. &#8470; 3 above is implemented by variants for the SUBROUTINE statement, with the same attachment of BEGIN and END bounded blocks:
   other than the text of actual jobs. &#8470; 3 above is implemented by variants for the SUBROUTINE statement, with the same attachment of BEGIN and END bounded blocks:
     <center><table style="color:black;background-color:white;width:300px;">
     <center>
     <tr style="font-size:10px;"><td width=250 >Subroutine Declarator</td><td align=center width=250>Language</td><td align=right width=250>Intrinsic</td></tr>
      <div style="font-size:10px;position:relative;left:0px;"><b>MCP Block Types</b></div>
     <tr><td>CL</td><td align=center>Common Lisp</td><td align=right>No</td></tr>
    <table border=2 style="color:black;background-color:lemonchiffon;width:600px;">
     <tr><td>HS</td><td align=center>Haskell </td><td align=right>No</td></tr>
     <tr style="background-color:black;color:white;font-size:10px;"><td width=125 align=center >Block Declarator</td><td align=center width=90>Language</td><td align=center width=180>Intrinsic</td><td align=center width=205>Purpose/Role</td></tr>
     <tr><td>LP</td><td align=center>LogTalk</td><td align=right>No</td></tr>
    <tr style="background-color:white;font-size:10px;"><td colspan=4 align=center>Front </td></tr>
     <tr><td>PL</td><td align=center>Prolog</td><td align=right>No</td></tr>
     <tr><td>CL</td><td align=center>Common Lisp</td><td align=center>No</td><td>Lateral R</td></tr>
     <tr><td align=left>SUBROUTINE</td><td align=center>WFL (JCL) </td><td align=right>Yes</td></tr>
     <tr><td>HS</td><td align=center>Haskell </td><td align=center>No</td><td>Applications</td></tr>
     <tr style="font-size:10px;"><td></td><td align=center>System Internal</td><td></td></tr>
     <tr><td align=left>JOB</td><td align=center>WFL </td><td align=center>Yes</td><td>JCL </td></tr>
     <tr><td>MINT</td><td align=center>MINT 3</td><td align=right>Yes</td></tr>
     <tr><td>LP</td><td align=center>LogTalk</td><td align=center>No</td><td>Lateral L</td></tr>
     <tr><td>UNIT</td><td align=center><a href=https://jmvdveer.home.xs4all.nl/en.algol-68-genie.html><b>Algol 68</b></a></td><td align=right>Yes</td></tr>
     <tr><td>PL</td><td align=center>Prolog</td><td align=center>No</td><td>Plain Prolog</td></tr>
     </table>
     <tr style="background-color:white;font-size:10px;"><td colspan=4 align=center>Back </td></tr>
  <div style="font-size:10px;position:relative;left:20px;"><b>MCP Block Types</b></div>
    <tr><td>MINT</td><td align=center>MINT 3</td><td align=center>Yes</td><td>MCP direct interpreter</td></tr>
</center>
     <tr><td>SUBROUTINE</td><td align=center><a href=https://www.gnu.org/software/marst/><b>A60</b></a></td><td align=center>Yes</td><td>JCL </td></tr>
   Intrinsic means the lang is native to MCP/WFL and doesn't require COMPILE or BIND to produce a RUNable title.<br>
     <tr><td>UNIT</td><td align=center><a style="background-color:aliceblue;"  href=https://jmvdveer.home.xs4all.nl/en.algol-68-genie.html><b>A68</b></a></td><td align=center>Yes</td><td>System Applications</td></tr>
   Job titles are bound to files by the <b>cande</b> WFL command after which they can be STARTed.<br>
     </table><br><br>
   The WFL compiler translates JCL to A68, MINT, and assembly which are run by genie, mint, and da Fe, respectively.
    </center>
  </blockquote><br><br>
   Intrinsic means the lang is native to MCP/WFL and doesn't require COMPILE or BIND to produce a RUN eligible object title.<br>
   <span style="font-size:12px;">The namestyles are a homage to <a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burroughs_MCP>MCP</a> and <a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversational_Monitor_System>VM/CMS</a> main
   MAKE binds job titles to files executable by the <b>cande</b> MCS with the START or SCHEDULE commands.
  frame operating systems which are both still in use and Unisys WFL (<a href=https://public.support.unisys.com/aseries/docs/clearpath-mcp-18.0/86001047-516/index.html>Work Flow Language</a>).</span>
  <div style="width:60%;text-align:justify;">
<div  style="float:right;text-align:center;font-size:12px;position:relative;left:-150px;top:-120px;width:400px;font-family:Papyrus;" ><a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abydos_King_List><img align=right width=400px src=https://meansofproduction.biz/images/kings_list.012.jpg></a><br>The Abydos Kings List &nbsp; c. -400 &nbsp; to &nbsp; 1400 &nbsp; 公元, &nbsp; Menes &mdash; Seti I</div>
   WFL(JCL) job streams are translated from source text to A60/C, A68, and MINT then  compiled and linked to the Barton machine, or interpreted by genie or MINT, respectively. WFL(JCL) is A60 translated to C, compiled and bound, interspersed with the JCL statements interpreted by the B machine. Non-intrinsic code forms unified code trees in the DGUI and is maintained there under the control of the governing build  statements and commands. Thus, a general WFL job orchestrates an application divided into system part executed by the B machine and application parts executed in the OS image extended from the base OS by the B machine.<br><br>'WFL' used without the JCL qualifier or 'WFL workframe' refers to general source processing framework of the high level part of the DCP. Build statements and commands refers to COMPILE/BIND/MAKE.
  </div>
</blockquote><br><br>
   <span style="position:relative;top:-30px;font-size:12px;">The namestyles are a homage to <a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burroughs_MCP>MCP</a> and <a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversational_Monitor_System>VM/CMS</a> mainframe OSes, both still in use and Unisys WFL (<a style="background-color:aliceblue;"  href=https://public.support.unisys.com/aseries/docs/clearpath-mcp-18.0/86001047-516/index.html>Work Flow Language</a>). The machine thus defined will be ported to other cloud vendors (Google, Azure, et. al.) after workout in Akamai (linode) and AWS.</span>
<div  style="float:right;text-align:center;font-size:12px;position:relative;left:-150px;top:-230px;width:400px;font-family:Papyrus;" ><a href=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abydos_King_List><img align=right width=400px src=https://meansofproduction.biz/images/kings_list.012.jpg></a><br>The Abydos Kings List &nbsp; c. -400 &nbsp; to &nbsp; 1400 &nbsp; 公元, &nbsp; Menes &mdash; Seti I</div>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
  </div>
  </div>
 
</div>
        <blockquote style="position: relative;top: -50px;">Devops Roadmap
<div style="position:relative;top:-100px;">
        <tt>
  <hr style="position:relative;left:20px;" width=80%>
        <ul>
<div id="10CC" style="position: relative;text-align:center;height:150px;">
        <li>0.3.0 c. 4721-03-03&nbsp; Told tl;dr story. </li>
<video id="10C" style="position: relative;top:-10px;" title="Pharoah bids Hebrews glean own straw with same count of bricks, presumably for Pi Rameses. The court snickers, Nefertari and Aaron look to Moise who stalks out." poster="http://meansofproduction.biz/images/TIVlarge.png" controls>
        <li>0.9.0 c. 4721-00-00&nbsp; BaselineOfDomainSpace. </li>
        <source src="https://meansofproduction.biz/pub/tldrMCPWFL.webm" type='video/webm'; />
        <li>1.0.0 c. 4721-00-00&nbsp; BaselineOfKEE. </li>
        <p>No content matching HTML5 video setup!</p>
        <li>1.1.0 c. 4721-00-00&nbsp; Provisions generic base cluster, working geonode budding, shown tl;dr story. All public pre MCP hosts migrated.</li>
  </video></div></div></div></div>
        <li>1.2.0 c. 4721-00-00&nbsp; First dependent SKUs made GA.</li>
        <li>2.0.0 c. 47yy-00-00&nbsp; First working WFL workframe, a UI for job edit and debug with visual execution. </li>
        <li>3.0.0 c. 47yy-00-00&nbsp; Mature DDD/KEE product.</li>
        </ul></tt>
<blockquote style="font-size:8px;">
A geneology of the system concepts is linked by the cartouche at the first page in the 'text' div in the left nav.
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Latest revision as of 11:07, 19 April 2024

mcpcms  

  conversational monitoring system  
DCP Shell  
    minimalist clustering paradigm  

  launch   — an MCP cell ¹ provisioned by DCP per your current context. ²
Dual 6700, c. 1971/2, binding says MK 0.0, so 2.0.0

This page has an audio track, mouseover for title/credit.

Semantic Roadmap

  • 0.3.0 4721-04-17  1st written tl;dr story.†
  • 0.9.0 47yy-00-00  MCP BaselineOfDomainSpace.
  • 1.0.0 47yy-00-00  LAN and cloud vendor provisioning; production geonode flows.
  • 1.1.0 47yy-00-00  DCP BaselineOfKEE.
  • 1.2.0  07y-00-00  DCP in the wild, Transparent Ledger in Books, Shopify Integration.
  • 2.0.0  07y-00-00  ∫ VM (CMS, MVS) / DCP ∂ DS. The MF-One story.
  • 3.0.0  07y-00-00  Done 2nd tl;dr story, 1st working WFL, DGUI for job edit and debug with visual execution.
  • 4.0.0  07y-00-00  Mature DDD/KEE product.
MCP-CMS — a platform for the Domain Control Program, with an aesthetic in homage to the Burroughs and IBM OSes.

¹ Resource limits are dynamically set except for F class which always gets the system limit if there is one which for billable accounts is the set spend limit.
² Set parameters for your cloud provider in the DS Dashboard control blocks in your DCMS account or use system inventory.

† This page and About DCP are top level specifying stories, cog arch internals aren't divulged as I mean them to be adaptable without notice, everything else is source accessible by devops users.

MCPCMS presents the "CANDE" MCS³ for DS users.

AKPERSONs (see Entitlements), and whitelisted stations can connect with the link above or in a running SPO to a MCP running it.

The attempt, if it reaches the MCP, results in completion codes reported in DS control block displays in your DCMS profile.
Only ssh access from the wild, but this page will attempt, using your SAR credentials if the session role is greater than 1.
MCP operator messages will go to your ODT message queue.


³ MCS: a message control subsystem of a MCP.

CANDE MCS

MCP-CMS connects via an MCS which is often referred to as the CANDE MCS although it is more general than that being the default ubiquitous DCP/MCP MCS. Upon mcpcms connect, like the lang specific subshells in the next §, an additional command cande can be used which will process the MCP-CMS system commands analogous to those in the MCP 15 document above. The system command processor is also available as a pane in the SPO.

In Burroughs MCP, the CANDE MCS was used ubiquitously. I recall using a full screen editor which i think fed CANDE. The text edit functions are obsolete and not part of the mcpcms cande. CANDE is used in current Unisys MCP but neither it nor the MCS have their former prominence when the OS runs under Windows.

mcpcms

A modified zsh for MCP serves as analog of the CMS from VM/CMS. Upon successful connect, the launch link above results in a terminal session with this shell in the browser. Aside from the modification for the MCP machine model, it is otherwise just zsh however the following (mode) commands are available to establish different shell behaviour in support of the KEE:

  • shcl (common lisp nature)
  • shhs (HsShellScript, haskell nature)
  • upsh (prolog nature)

Lisp and prolog implementations are variable, and multiple can be combined but shcl and upsh themselves use sbcl and swipl, respectively. mcpcms can be accessed with ssh using the following script. Using the FQDSAgentName syntax is equivalent to what the launch link does in an AKPERSONs session.

#!/usr/bin/bash
# save as <fileName> and invoke with <fileName>  <connect-spec> where            
#         
#  <connect-spec> ::= <mcpCommand> <FQDSAgentName> | <connect-spec>
#  <connect-spec> ::= <ipV6Address>:<port> | <ipV4Address>:<port>
#  FQDSAgentName  ::= <agentId>@<domain>[:<port>]
#
#  and the values manually supplied from control blocks in the DCMS account profile where connect attempt results will also be available.  
#  The <mcpCommand>.  indicates the station where the script runs is trusted and the responsible AKPERSON is the operator.
#
if [ -z $2 ] then
  ssh  $1
  exit
fi
#
# Try a connect based on just the FQDSA assuming an eligible station. A port on submitted second parm is ignored with a warning.
# The no <mcpCommand> specified, a DCP determined default shell type is connected.
#
FQDSA=mcp.meansofproduction.biz/?FQDSA=$2&$1
PARMS=$(curl -L $FQDSA)
ssh $PARMS

mcpcms is implemented first for Linux natively running or containerized in docker on Mac and Windows then for the Hercules version where VM/CMS replaces the modified zsh for that special path. Cloud compute resources are dynamically provisioned using either system inventory or user supplied provisioning credentials with supported cloud vendors.

WFL

has eponymous origin in the MCP 12 WFL job control model and supports the DCP with a line of demarcation between the minimalist MCP and its extension specific to DCP which is meant to protect properties of its internals. A way to think about it and my design intent is that MCP is a basic unix cluster machine to host any common mix, while the WFL machine is a private specialization.

Unisys WFL is just a point of departure to our WFL. In Burroughs systems, WFL didn have as high a profile as IBM JCL, the main punch of the overall system, in an industry installation, would be its system of transactions and these ran from a database which the Burroughs architecture delivered seamlessly without WFL to terminals as a special db stack. Our WFL is the central driver and basis of our MCP architecture

  1. is built for the MCP machine model
  2. which is a prime driver for the development of that model
  3. with code blocks containing text of other supported langs

As far as the elaboration of JCL statements and so forth WFL is developed in a bottom up prototyping style without any spec other than the mainframe reference and the DCP/MCP concept, so there will be no documentation for some time other than the text of actual jobs. № 3 above is implemented by variants for the SUBROUTINE statement, with the same attachment of BEGIN and END bounded blocks:

MCP Block Types
Block DeclaratorLanguageIntrinsicPurpose/Role
Front
CLCommon LispNoLateral R
HSHaskell NoApplications
JOBWFL YesJCL
LPLogTalkNoLateral L
PLPrologNoPlain Prolog
Back
MINTMINT 3YesMCP direct interpreter
SUBROUTINEA60YesJCL
UNITA68YesSystem Applications


Intrinsic means the lang is native to MCP/WFL and doesn't require COMPILE or BIND to produce a RUN eligible object title.
MAKE binds job titles to files executable by the cande MCS with the START or SCHEDULE commands.

WFL(JCL) job streams are translated from source text to A60/C, A68, and MINT then compiled and linked to the Barton machine, or interpreted by genie or MINT, respectively. WFL(JCL) is A60 translated to C, compiled and bound, interspersed with the JCL statements interpreted by the B machine. Non-intrinsic code forms unified code trees in the DGUI and is maintained there under the control of the governing build statements and commands. Thus, a general WFL job orchestrates an application divided into system part executed by the B machine and application parts executed in the OS image extended from the base OS by the B machine.

'WFL' used without the JCL qualifier or 'WFL workframe' refers to general source processing framework of the high level part of the DCP. Build statements and commands refers to COMPILE/BIND/MAKE.



The namestyles are a homage to MCP and VM/CMS mainframe OSes, both still in use and Unisys WFL (Work Flow Language). The machine thus defined will be ported to other cloud vendors (Google, Azure, et. al.) after workout in Akamai (linode) and AWS.


The Abydos Kings List   c. -400   to   1400   公元,   Menes — Seti I