CP-67

CP-67
DeveloperIBM Cambridge Scientific Center (CSC)
OS familyCP/CMS
Working stateHistoric
Marketing targetIBM mainframe computers
Available inEnglish
PlatformsIBM System/360-67
Default
user interface
Command-line interface
LicenseProprietary
Preceded byIBM CP-40
Succeeded byIBM CP-370 / VM/370

CP-67 is a hypervisor, or Virtual Machine Monitor, from IBM for its System/360 Model 67 computer.

CP-67 is the control program portion of CP/CMS, a virtual machine operating system developed by IBM's Cambridge Scientific Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was a reimplementation of their earlier research system CP-40, which ran on a one-off customized S/360-40. CP-67 was later reimplemented (again) as CP-370, which IBM released as VM/370 in 1972, when virtual memory was added to the System/370 series.[1]

CP and CMS are usually grouped together as a unit, but the "components are independent of each other. CP-67 can be used on an appropriate configuration without CMS, and CMS can be run on a properly configured System/360 as a single-user system without CP-67."[2]

  1. ^ Randal, Allison (February 2020). "The Ideal Versus the Real: Revisiting the History of Virtual Machines and Containers". ACM Computing Surveys. 53 (1). arXiv:1904.12226. doi:10.1145/3365199. S2CID 139100890. Retrieved March 9, 2023.
  2. ^ IBM Corporation (October 1970). Control Program-67/Cambridge Monitor System (CP-67/CMS) Version 3 Program Number 360D-05.2.005 User's Guide (PDF). p. 1. Retrieved March 9, 2023.