Misplaced Pages

Cray Operating System

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
System software for supercomputers
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Cray Operating System" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Operating system
Cray Operating System
DeveloperCray Research
Working stateDiscontinued
Initial release1975; 49 years ago (1975)
Latest release1.17.2 / July 1990; 34 years ago (1990-07)
Marketing targetSupercomputers
Available inEnglish
PlatformsCray-1, Cray X-MP line
Influenced byCDC SCOPE
LicenseProprietary
Preceded byChippewa Operating System
Succeeded byUNICOS

The Cray Operating System (COS) is a Cray Research operating system for its now-discontinued Cray-1 (1976) and Cray X-MP supercomputers. It succeeded the Chippewa Operating System (shipped with earlier Control Data Corporation CDC 6000 series and 7600 computer systems), and was the Cray main OS until replaced by UNICOS in the late 1980s. COS was delivered with Cray Assembly Language (CAL), Cray FORTRAN (CFT), and Pascal.

Design

As COS was written by ex-Control Data employees, its command language and internal organization bore strong resemblance to the CDC SCOPE operating system on the CDC 7600 and before that EXEC*8 from CDC's earlier ERA/Univac pedigree. User jobs were submitted to COS via front-end computers via a high-speed channel interface, and so-called station software. Front end stations were typically large IBM or Control Data mainframes. However the DEC VAX was also a very popular front-end. Interactive use of COS was possible through the stations, but most users simply submitted batch jobs.

Disk-resident datasets used by a user program were 'local' to the individual job. Once a job completed, its local datasets would be released and space reclaimed. In order to retain the data between jobs, datasets had to be explicitly made 'permanent'. Magnetic tape datasets were also supported on Cray systems which were equipped with an I/O Subsystem.

COS also provided job scheduling and checkpoint/restart facilities to manage large workloads, even across system downtimes (both scheduled and unscheduled.)

Internally, COS was divided into a very small message-passing EXEC, and a number of System Task Processors (STP tasks). Each STP task was similar in nature to the peripheral processor programs in earlier Control Data operating systems, but since the Cray machines did not have peripheral processors, the main central processor executed the operating system code.

List of STP tasks

This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (February 2011)
STP Task Description
Z, ZY Startup Prep
STARTUP Startup
EXP User Exchange Processor
MSP Message Processor
DQM Disk Queue Manager
TQM Tape Queue Manager
JSH Job Scheduler
PDM Permanent Dataset Manager
JCM Job Class Manager
SCP Station Call Processor

While the source for version 1.13 was released as public domain, 1.17 is available at archive.org.

See also

References

  1. ^ T-0103C-CRAY_1_Computer_System-Operating_System_COS_Workbook-Training-15th September_1981
  2. "COS 1.17 disk image for Cray-1/X-MP".
Supercomputer operating systems
Current
Historic
Stub icon

This operating-system-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: