The IBM System/32 (IBM 5320) introduced in January 1975 was a midrange computer with built-in display screen, disk drives, printer, and database report software. It was used primarily by small to midsize businesses for accounting applications. RPG II was the primary programming language for the machine.
Overview
thumb|IBM System/32 in Computer History Museum
The 16-bit single-user System/32, also known as the IBM 5320, was introduced in 1975, and it was the successor to the IBM System/3 model 6 in the IBM midrange computer line. IBM described it as "the first system to incorporate hardware and comprehensive application software." Within 40 months, "the System/32 had surpassed the IBM System/3 as the most installed IBM computer." Whereas the System/3 used a hardwired processor, the System/32 implemented the System/3 instruction set in microcode. The System/32 processor utilized a vertical microcode format, with each microinstruction occupying 16 bits of control storage. There were 19 different microinstruction opcodes, however certain microinstructions could carry out different operations depending on which bits were set in the rest of the microinstruction, meaning that there were about 70 distinct operations available in total. An optional set of Scientific Macroinstructions was also available, which were used to support a Fortran compiler by implementing support for floating point arithmetic in microcode. Some IBM engineers, including Glenn Henry and Frank Soltis, have retrospectively described the System/32's microcode as resembling a RISC instruction set. The later System/34 and System/36 systems addressed this problem by using two different processors - the System/32 CSP architecture was used exclusively for operating system, I/O control and floating point code, whereas user code ran on the Main Storage Processor (MSP) which implemented the System/3 instruction set directly in hardware without microcode. The use of microcode to implement instruction set emulation as well as performance-critical operating system components had some influence on the design of the microcode layers in the later System/38.
- 5 MB
- 9 MB
- 13 MB
The system included an eight-inch floppy drive that could also read floppies from the IBM 3740 family.
Only one side of the 77-track floppy diskette was used. Each track held 26 128-byte sectors. An extended format was offered by IBM, and it permitted 512 bytes per sector. Even so, that came to an 8-inch floppy holding less than one third of a megabyte.
System/32 operator
When keying input data, the operator would be viewing the character display, which was also common to the then current IBM 3740 family of data entry to floppy disk media.
A computer specialist was not required for the operation of System/32.
System software
Some terms associated with the System/32's software include:
- SCP (System Control Program) the operating system of the System/32.
- SEU (Source Entry Utility, the programming editor),
- DFU (Data File Utility, a query and report generator),
- OCL (Operations Control Language, the command-line language), and
- #LIBRARY (the directory or disk partition in which executable code was stored).
See also
- IBM System/3
- IBM System/34
- IBM System/36
- IBM System/38
References
External links
- A System/32 restoration project
- Video of Corestore Museum System/32 performing IMPL/IPL from disk
- Insightful newsgroup post about System/32 and System/34 architecture
Photographs
- System/32
- S/32 front view with one panel open
- S/32 rear view with both panels open
- Large Image of IBM 5320
