vote up 1 vote down star

I hear repeatedly that while NFS-style files systems are available on IBM mainframes, they are often not enabled, presumably to minimize the security risks of the mainframe vis-a-vis the rest of the world.

Given that I'd like to produce PC-based tools that reach out and process files on the mainframe, this makes a simple problem ("open NFS file '\mainframe\foo'") much harder; what can I count on to provide file system access in a networked enviroment? (Linux systems offer NFS via Samba pretty much as standard, so this is easy).

IBM offers Rational Developer for Z, an Eclipse variant used by IBM COBOL programmers. RDZ seems to have direct access to the IBM mainframe file system. What are they using to do that? Why isn't that available to me, and if it is, what is it?

flag

47% accept rate

2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

RDz has a started task (a daemon in UNIX-speak) which runs on the z/OS host and accepts connections from the Eclipse plug-in. The protocol is proprietary so you're unlikely to be able to find out any information about it.

And RDz isn't just for COBOL programmers. It's used in many shops where people want to store all their source code on the mainframe - why maintain two separate repositories? That's why it has those longname/shortname and ASCII/EBCDIC translations to turn those ungodly Java paths into our beautifully elegant 8-character member names and allow us to read it under z/OS, although the ISPF editor's "source ascii" command has alleviated that last concern somewhat.

If you want to do a similar thing, you'll need to code up your own started task to accept incoming connections from your clients. This isn't as hard as it sounds. You'll actually be doing it in a UNIX environment since USS (UNIX System Services, the renamed OpenMVS) comes with z/OS as part of the Base Operating System software. And it allows you to access both USS files and z/OS datasets/members transparently.

Then, you'll need to convince the mainframe shops that your started task is not a security risk. Let me know how that works out for you :-)

You may find it easier to just make NFS a pre-requisite of your software. Then, at least, it's IBM's security problem, not yours.

link|flag
Great. Just like IBM, to promulgate an "open standard" such as Eclipse, and then very carefully ensure that file system access is made through a proprietary interface. I suppose I can abuse Eclipse to offer a remote procedure call with file services (the world in which I need to do I/O to mainframe files is one in which RDZ is very common). Thanks for the facts. – Ira Baxter Aug 24 at 7:21
I suppose I should ask: just how hard is for a competent System Z manager to technically configure NFS (an hour? a day? a month?) Do shops in your experience object for security reasons, as I've heard? – Ira Baxter Aug 24 at 7:29
Ira, my involvement was on the SCLM (source control) side which wouldn't benefit from openness at all, it may be different for general file/member access - check out Remote Systems Explorer which may be better (i.e., openly) documented. Most of the shops I'm involved in don't use USS at all, or use it sparingly. They run z/VM which in turn runs zLinux (SLES/RHEL) instances for UNIX workloads and multiple z/OS LPARs for the grunt work. NFS could be configured on z in an hour, tops, I would think. IBM make their instructions very well detailed (once you can find them). – paxdiablo Aug 24 at 7:39
But zLinux LPARs are like separate machines (albeit with incredibly fast network connections, since they're in-memory, not over the wire). So you won't get access to the z/OS members or datasets. Seriously, RSE is your best bet, I think: eclipse.org/dsdp/tm . – paxdiablo Aug 24 at 7:43
vote up 0 vote down

RDz talks to z/OS via Remote Systems Explorer (RSE). z/OS offers SMB, NFS, FTP, and SCP, as well as other remote access methods.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.