Developer | Siemens |
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Written in | SPL, C |
Working state | Current |
Initial release | 1975 |
Latest release | BS2000/OSD v10.0 / 2016 |
Marketing target | Mainframe computers |
Platforms | Siemens 7.700 and 7.500 mainframes, /370, MIPS, SPARC, x86 - Fujitsu Technology Solutions S-Series |
Official website | BS2000 Mainframes |
BS2000 (renamed BS2000/OSD in 1992) is a mainframe computer operating system developed in the 1970s by Siemens (Data Processing Department EDV) and from early 2000s onward by Fujitsu Technology Solutions.
Unlike other mainframe systems, BS2000/OSD provides exactly the same user and programming interface in all operating modes (batch, interactive and online transaction processing) and regardless of whether it is running natively or as a guest system in a virtual machine. This uniformity of the user interface and the entire BS2000 software configuration makes administration and automation particularly easy.
It's mainly used in Germany with a share of 83%, United Kingdom(8%), Belgium(4.8%) and other European countries(4.2%).
BS2000/OSD had its roots in the Time Sharing Operating System (TSOS) first developed by RCA for the /46 model of the Spectra/70 series, a computer family of the late 1960s related in its architecture to IBM’s /360 series. It was an early operating systems which used virtual addressing and a segregated address space for the programs of different users. From the outset TSOS also allowed data peripherals to be accessed only via record- or block-oriented file interfaces, thereby preventing the necessity to implement device dependencies in user programs. The same operating system was also sold to Sperry Univac when it bought most of RCA's computer division. Univac's "fork" of TSOS would become VS/9, which used many of the same concepts.
In 1973 BS2000 V1.0 was a port of the TSOS operating system to models of the Siemens system 7.700 In June 1975, Siemens shipped the enhanced BS2000 V2.0 version of the TSOS operating system for the models of the Siemens 7.700 mainframe series for the first time under the name BS2000. This first version supported disk paging and three different operating modes in the same system: interactive dialog, batch, and transaction mode, a precursor of online transaction processing. In 1977 the TRANSDATA communication system used computer networking.