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I'm not sure this is useful info.


(==System generation procedures==)

There is no "standard" procedure for sysgens on systems from different vendors. Sysgen procedures fall into at least three categories:

  • Compile or assemble operating system kernel, nucleus, or supervisor. In this case other sysgen tasks such as building system libraries are usually manually performed. Systems using this procedure include:
    • Burroughs large systems Master Control Program (MCP). The Burroughs MCPs were written in a high-level ALGOL-like languages ESPOL or NEWP. The MCP is tailored by coding $OMIT conditional-compilation pragmas, which conditionally bypass compilation of specified pieces of code.[1]
    • IBM System/360 Disk Operating System (DOS) was written in assembler. The systems programmer performing the sysgen codes macros specifying the desired options and assembles the supervisor.
    • Linux still provides this as an option, called tailoring the kernel. The Linux kernel is coded in C and it is possible to make source changes and rebuild the kernel.
  • Some procedures accept a set of specifications and perform all the tasks necessary to build a tailored system.
    • IBM OS/360 had a two-step procedure called Stage I and Stage II. In Stage I the programmer specified the options for the system in a set of macros and assembled them. The output of Stage I was a job stream which contained the job control to perform all the necessary assemblies, link edits, and to create the required system libraries and copy the necessary modules into them.[2]
Well, that might help explain it to newer readers familiar with configuring Linux kernels, and also helps keep it from being seen as IBM mainframe OS-specific. (As I remember, RSX-11 had a similar configuration mechanism, conditionally assembling parts of the supervisor.) Guy Harris (talk) 22:56, 23 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

References

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  1. ^ Kimpel, Paul. "End of the Summer Update". B5500 Emulation Project. Retrieved June 21, 2013.
  2. ^ IBM Corporation (1966). IBM System/360 Operating System System Generation (PDF).

Yes, there were programs literally named "sysgen" that did system generation

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Such programs did exist, and were used to generate a new system. I used such "sysgen" systems on DEC PDP systems. In particular, I did this with an RT11 system on PDP11/03 hardware. I seem to remember that RSTS/E also used this, though I don't believe that I ever participated in one of its sysgen sessions. 128.186.121.71 (talk) 17:00, 10 October 2024 (UTC)[reply]