Paradigm | Dataflow programming |
---|---|
Designed by | John P. Hartmann (IBM) |
Developer | IBM |
First appeared | 1986 |
Stable release | 1.1.12/0012
/ 2020-06-03 |
Platform | IBM z Systems |
OS | z/VM 7.1 |
Website | http://vm.marist.edu/~pipeline |
Influenced by | |
Pipeline (Unix) |
CMS Pipelines is a feature of the VM/CMS operating system that allows the user to create and use a pipeline. The programs in a pipeline operate on a sequential stream of records. A program writes records that are read by the next program in the pipeline. Any program can be combined with any other because reading and writing is done through a device independent interface.
CMS Pipelines provides a CMS command, PIPE
. The argument string to the PIPE
command is the pipeline specification. PIPE selects programs to run and chains them together in a pipeline to pump data through.
Because CMS programs and utilities don't provide a device independent stdin and stdout interface, CMS Pipelines has a built-in library of programs that can be called in a pipeline specification. These built-in programs interface to the operating system, and perform many utility functions.
Data on CMS is structured in logical records rather than a stream of bytes. For textual data a line of text corresponds to a logical record. In CMS Pipelines the data is passed between the stages as logical records.
CMS Pipelines users issue pipeline commands from the terminal or in EXEC procedures. Users can write programs in REXX that can be used in addition to the built-in programs.
A simple example that reads a disk file, separates records containing the string "Hello" from those that do not. The selected records are modified by appending the string "World!" to each of them; the other records are translated to upper case. The two streams are then combined and the records are written to a new output file.
PIPE (end ?) < input txt | a: locate /Hello/ | insert / World!/ after | i: faninany | > newfile txt a ? a: | xlate upper | i:
In this example, the <
stage reads the input disk file and passes the records to the next stage in the pipeline. The locate
stage separates the input stream into two output streams. The primary output of locate
(records containing Hello) passes the records to the insert
stage. The insert
stage modifies the input records as specified in its arguments and passes them to its output. The output is connected to faninany
that combines records from all input streams to form a single output stream. The output is written to the new disk file.
The secondary output of locate
(marked by the second occurrence of the a:
label) contains the records that did not meet the selection criterion. These records are translated to upper case (by the xlate
stage) and passed to the secondary input stream of faninany
(marked by the second occurrence of the i:
label).
The pipeline topology in this example consists of two connected pipelines. The end character (the ?
in this example) separates the individual pipelines in the pipeline set. Records read from the input file pass through either of the two routes of the pipeline topology. Because neither of the routes contain stages that need to buffer records, CMS Pipelines ensures that records arrive at faninany
in the order in which they passed through locate
.
The example pipeline is presented in 'portrait form' with the individual stages on separate lines. When a pipeline is typed as a CMS command, all stages are written on a single line.
The concept of a simple pipeline is extended in these ways:
CMS Pipelines offers several features to improve the robustness of programs:
John Hartmann, of IBM Denmark, started development of CMS Pipelines in 1980.[1] The product was marketed by IBM as a separate product during the 80's and integrated in VM/ESA late 1991. With each release of VM, the CMS Pipelines code was upgraded as well until it was functionally frozen at the 1.1.10 level in VM/ESA 2.3 in 1997. Since then, the latest level of CMS Pipelines has been available for download from the CMS Pipelines homepage for users who wish to explore new function.
The current level of CMS Pipelines is included in the z/VM releases again since z/VM 6.4, available since November 11, 2016.
An implementation of CMS Pipelines for TSO was released in 1995 as BatchPipeWorks in the BatchPipes/MVS product. The up-to-date TSO implementation has been available as a Service Offering from IBM Denmark until 2010.
Both versions are maintained from a single source code base and commonly referred to as CMS/TSO Pipelines. The specification is available in the Author's Edition.[2]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CMS Pipelines.
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Categories: [Concurrent programming languages] [Concatenative programming languages] [Dynamic programming languages] [Function-level languages] [Functional languages] [Inter-process communication] [Multi-paradigm programming languages] [Specification languages] [VM (operating system)]