Hercules Version 3: Configuration File

This page describes the configuration file for the Hercules S/370, ESA/390, and z/Architecture emulator.

The configuration file hercules.cnf contains the processor and device layout. It is roughly equivalent to the IOCDS on a real System/390. The configuration file is an ASCII text file.

Example configuration file



    ####################################################
    #     Hercules emulator configuration file         #
    ####################################################

    #
    # System parameters
    #

    ARCHMODE   ESA/390
    OSTAILOR   OS/390
    LOADPARM   0120....

    CPUSERIAL  000611
    CPUMODEL   3090
    CPUVERID   FD
    MAINSIZE   64
    XPNDSIZE   0
    NUMCPU     1
    NUMVEC     1
    SYSEPOCH   1900
    TZOFFSET   -0500

    ##HTTPROOT   /usr/local/share/hercules/
    HTTPPORT   8081 NOAUTH
    SHRDPORT   3990
    CNSLPORT   3270
    PANRATE    FAST
    CODEPAGE   default

    TODPRIO    -20
    HERCPRIO   0
    DEVPRIO    8
    CPUPRIO    15

    DIAG8CMD   disable

    #
    # Device definitions
    #

    000A    1442    adrdmprs.rdr
    000C    3505    jcl.txt     ascii  trunc
    000D    3525    pch00d.txt  ascii
    000E    1403    prt00e.txt

    001F    3270
    0200.4  3270

    0140    3370    dosres.140
    0141    3370    syswk1.141
    0300    3370    sysres.300

    0120    3380    mvsv5r.120
    0121    3380    mvsv5d.121
    0122    3380    mvswk1.122
    0123    3380    192.168.1.100

    0400    3088    CTCT  30880  192.168.100.2  30880  2048      
    0401    3088    CTCT  30881  192.168.100.2  30881  2048
    0420    3088    CTCI  192.168.200.1  192.168.200.2
    0440    LCS      -n   /dev/net/tun   192.168.200.2

    0580    3420    ickdsf.ipl
    0581    3420    /dev/st0
    0582    3420    /cdrom/tapes/uaa196.tdf
    0583-0587 3420  * maxsizeM=170 eotmargin=131072

Comment lines

Blank lines, and lines beginning with a pound sign ('#' - "hash" to Europeans) or an asterisk, are treated as comments.

System parameters

System parameters may appear in any order but they must precede all device records. Each system parameter must be on a separate line. The following system parameters may be specified:

CPUSERIAL xxxxxx
specifies the 6 hexadecimal digit CPU serial number stored by the STIDP instruction
CPUMODEL xxxx
specifies the 4 hexadecimal digit CPU model number stored by the STIDP instruction
CPUVERID xx
specifies the 2 hexadecimal digit CPU version code stored by the STIDP instruction. The default version code is FD when ARCHMODE S/370 or ARCHMODE ESA/390 is specified. For the ESAME architecture mode 00 is used as default.
MAINSIZE nnnn
specifies the main storage size in megabytes, where nnnn is a decimal number in the range 2 to 1024
XPNDSIZE nnnn
specifies the expanded storage size in megabytes, where nnnn is a decimal number in the range 0 to 1024
HTTPPORT nnnn [AUTH/NOAUTH] [userid password]
specifies the port number (in decimal) on which the HTTP server will listen. The port number must either be 80 or within the range 1024 - 65535 inclusive. If no HTTPPORT statement is present or an invalid port number is specified, then the HTTP server thread will not be activated.
AUTH indictates that a userid and password are required to access the HTTP server, whereas NOAUTH indicates that a userid and password are not required. The userid and password may be any valid string.
HTTPROOT directory
specifies the root directory where the HTTP server's files reside. If not specified, the default value for Win32 builds of Hercules is the directory where the Hercules executable itself is executing out of, and for non-Win32 builds it is the directory specified as the default package installation directory when the Hercules executable was built (which can vary depending on how the Hercules package was built, but is usually /usr/local/share/hercules/).
Note: Windows users of Hercules who do not have the complete Cygwin package installed (i.e. only have the required Cygwin DLLs installed instead) should specify this value in the form: "/cygdrive/x/pathname/" where 'x' is the Windows drive letter. For example, if the Windows directory where the http server's files reside is "K:\Hercules\html\", then you should specify "/cygdrive/k/Hercules/html/" on your HTTPROOT statement.
SHRDPORT nnnn
specifies the port number (in decimal) on which the Shared Device server will listen. Specifying SHRDPORT will allow other Hercules instances to access devices on this instance. (Currently only DASD devices may be shared). By default, the other Hercules instances (clients) will use port 3990. If you specify a different port number, then you will have to specify this port number on the device statement for the other Hercules clients. If no SHRDPORT statement is present then the Shared Device server thread will not be activated.
DIAG8CMD disable/enable
When set to enable, commands issued through diagnose 8 will be executed by hercules as hercules commands. When set to disable, commands issued through the diagnose 8 interface will be ignored. The default is disable. Note that when this feature is enabled, systems running under hercules can even issue host commands through the hercules sh command. Enabling this feature may have security consequences.
CNSLPORT nnnn
specifies the port number (in decimal) to which tn3270 and telnet clients will connect
The CNSLPORT statement may also have the form of host:port, where the telnet console server will bind to the specified address.
NUMCPU nn
specifies the number of emulated CPUs. Note: Multiprocessor emulation is only available when the definition of the compile-time variable MAX_CPU_ENGINES in the file config.h has a value of more than 1. Note: current versions of Hercules already have this value set to 2 by default, so all you need to do is specify NUMCPU 2 in your configuration file. If you wish to set a different value for MAX_CPU_ENGINES, use the --enable-multi-cpu=NUMBER option when you do your ./configure before doing your make. Multiprocessor emulation works best if your host system actually has more than one physical CPU, but you can still emulate multiple CPUs nervertheless even on a uniprocessor system (and you might even achieve a small performance benefit when you do). There is little point, however, in specifying NUMCPU greater than 1 unless your guest operating system (running under Hercules) is actually able to support multiple CPUs (and if you do not actually need multiprocessor emulation, then setting MAX_CPU_ENGINES to 1 at compile time might even produce a slight performance advantage too).
NUMVEC nn
specifies the number of emulated vector facilities. Default is one per CPU. Only available by default in ESA/390 mode.
HERCPRIO nn
specifies the process priority for Hercules. The default is 0. See "Process Priorities" below for more information.
CPUPRIO nn
specifies the priority of the CPU thread. Default is a nice value of 15, which means a low priority such that I/O can be scheduled and completed in favour of CPU cycles being burned. On Multi-CPU systems, a real CPU can be "dedicated" to Hercules, by giving the CPU thread a very high dispatching priority (-20). See "Thread Priorities" below for more information. Caution: CPUPRIO should not have a higher dispatching priority than the TOD Clock and timer thread.
DEVPRIO nn
specifies the priority of the device threads. The default value is 8. See "Thread Priorities" below for more information. Caution: DEVPRIO should not have a higher dispatching priority than the TOD Clock and timer thread.
TODPRIO nn
specifies the priority of the TOD Clock and timer thread. The default value is -20. See "Thread Priorities" below for more information. Caution: TODPRIO should be given a dispatching priority equal to or higher than any other thread within Hercules.
LOADPARM xxxxxxxx
specifies the eight-character IPL parameter which is used by some operating systems to select system parameters
SYSEPOCH yyyy
specifies the base date for the TOD clock. Use the default value (1900) for all systems except OS/360. OS/360 expects the base date to be 1960, but specifying this value causes an error because OS/360 regards 2000 as an invalid date. For OS/360, SYSEPOCH 1988 is recommended. This makes the year 2000 appear to be 1972.
TZOFFSET ±hhmm
specifies the hours and minutes by which the TOD clock will be offset from the current system time. For GMT, use the default value (0000). For timezones west of Greenwich, specify a negative value (example: -0500 for US Eastern Standard Time, -0800 for US Pacific Standard Time). For timezones east of Greenwich, specify a positive value (example: +0100 for Central European Time, +0930 for South Australian Time).
TODDRAG nn
specifies the TOD clock drag factor. This parameter can be used to slow down the TOD clock by a factor of nn, which can improve the performance of some operating systems which consume significant amounts of CPU time processing timer interrupts. Use of the TODDRAG parameter is no longer recommended.
OSTAILOR OS/390 | VM | VSE | LINUX
specifies the intended operating system. The effect of this parameter is to reduce control panel message traffic by selectively suppressing trace messages for program checks which are considered normal in the specified environment.
PANRATE SLOW | FAST | nn
specifies the panel refresh rate, in milliseconds between refreshes. SLOW is the same as 500, and FAST is the same as 50. A value less than the Linux system clock tick interval (10 on Intel, 1 on Alpha), or more than 5000, will be rejected. SLOW is the default.
ARCHMODE S/370 | ESA/390 | ESAME
specifies the initial architecture mode. Use S/370 for OS/360, VM/370, and MVS 3.8. Use ESA/390 for MVS/XA, MVS/ESA, OS/390, VM/ESA, VSE/ESA, Linux/390, and ZZSA. Use ESAME for z/OS and zLinux. When ESAME is specified, the machine will always IPL in ESA/390 mode, but is capable of being switched into z/Architecture mode after IPL. This is handled automatically by all z/Architecture operating systems.
DEVTMAX -1 | 0 | 1-n
specifies the maximum number of device threads allowed.

Specify -1 to cause 'one time only' temporary threads to be created to service each I/O request to a device. Once the I/O request is complete, the thread exits. Subsequent I/O to the same device will cause another worker thread to be created again.

Specify 0 to cause an unlimited number of 'semi-permanent' threads to be created on an 'as-needed' basis. With this option, a thread is created to service an I/O request for a device if one doesn't already exist, but once the I/O is complete, the thread enters an idle state waiting for new work. If a new I/O request for the device arrives before the timeout period expires, the existing thread will be reused. The timeout value is currently hard coded at 5 minutes. Note that this option can cause one thread (or possibly more) to be created for each device defined in your configuration. Specifying 0 means there is no limit to the number of threads that can be created.

Specify a value from 1 to n to set an upper limit to the number of threads that can be created to service any I/O request to any device. Like the 0 option, each thread, once done servicing an I/O request, enters an idle state. If a new request arrives before the timeout period expires, the thread is reused. If all threads are busy when a new I/O request arrives however, a new thread is created only if the specified maximum has not yet been reached. If the specified maximum number of threads has already been reached, then the I/O request is placed in a queue and will be serviced by the first available thread (i.e. by whichever thread becomes idle first). This option was created to address a threading issue (possibly related to the cygwin Pthreads implementation) on Windows systems.

The default for Windows is 8. The default for all other systems is 0.

PGMPRDOS RESTRICTED | LICENSED
specifies whether or not Hercules will run licensed program product ESA or z/Architecture operating systems. Specify RESTRICTED to make Hercules emulate an IFL (Integrated Facility for Linux) CPU. With this specified, licensed ESA or z/Architecture OSes will refuse to start. OS/390 and z/OS will enter an A7A wait state, with reason code 7, at IPL time. Specify LICENSED to allow these operating systems to run normally. This parameter has no effect on Linux/390, Linux for z/Series, or any 370-mode OS.

NOTE: It is YOUR responsibility to comply with the terms of your license for the software you intend to run on Hercules. If you specify LICENSED and run a licensed operating system in violation of that license, then don't come after the Hercules developers when the vendor sends his lawyers after you.

RESTRICTED is the default. Specifying LICENSED will produce a message at Hercules startup to remind you of your responsibility to comply with software license terms.

IODELAY usec
specifies the amount of time (in microseconds) to wait after an I/O interrupt is ready to be set pending. This value can also be set using the Hercules console. The purpose of this parameter is to bypass a bug in the Linux/390 and zLinux dasd.c device driver. The problem is more apt to happen under Hercules than on a real machine because we may present an I/O interrupt sooner than a real machine. This problem is being pursued with IBM linux. Meanwhile, if OSTAILOR LINUX is specified, then this value defaults to 800 otherwise the value defaults to 0.
CODEPAGE codepage
specifies the codepage conversion table used for ascii/ebcdic translation "default" specifies traditional hercules codepage, "437/037", "437/500" and "850/273" are also supported. Iconv single byte codepages may also be used. (eg."UTF8/EBCDIC-CP-NL") If no codepage is specified then the environment variable HERCULES_CP will be inspected. The default codepage used is "default"
ECPSVM YES | NO | LEVEL nn
specifies whether ECPS:VM (Extended Control Program Support : Virtual Machine) support is to be enabled. If YES is specified, then the support level reported to the operating system is 20. The purpose of ECPS:VM is to provide to the VM/370 Operating system a set of shortcut facilities to perform hypervisor functions (CP Assists) and virtual machine simulation (VM Assists). Although this feature does not affect VM Operating system products operating in XA, ESA or z/Architecture mode, it will affect VM/370 and VM/SP products running under VM/XA, VM/ESA or z/VM. Running VM/370 and VM/SP products under VM/XA, VM/ESA or z/VM should be done with ECPS:VM disabled. ECPS:VM should not be enabled in an AP or MP environment. ECPS:VM has no effect on non-VM operating systems. It is however recommended to disable ECPS:VM when running native non-VM operating systems. If a specific LEVEL is specified, this value will be reported to the operating system when it issues a Store ECPS:VM level, but it doesn't otherwise alter the ECPS:VM facility operations. This is a partial implementation.
LDMOD module list
specifies additional modules that are to be loaded by the hercules dynamic loader. The default search order is with the hercules directory in the default DLL search path. Most systems also support absolute filenames (ie names starting with '/' or '.') in which case the default search path is not taken.
Multiple LDMOD statements may be used.
MODPATH path
specifies the path where dynamic modules are loaded from. When a modpath statement is specified, the path on the modpath statement is searched before the default path is searched. When a relative path is specified is interpreted as a relative path within the default search path, if an absolute path is specified is interpreted as such.
The default MODPATH is hercules, which means modules are loaded from the directory hercules within the default LD_LIBRARY_PATH.

A comment preceded by a pound sign may be appended to any system parameter statement.

Process and Thread Priorities

Process Priorities

Note: Under Linux, a process is a thread and thread priority information applies instead.

For Windows, the following conversions are used for translating Unix process priorities to Windows process priority classes:


Unix Priority
Windows Priority Class
  -20  to  -16   Realtime
  -15  to  -9   High
  -8  to  -1   Above Normal
  0  to  7   Normal
  8  to  15   Below Normal
  16  to  20   Low

Thread Priorities

On a *ix (Linux/Unix) host, Hercules needs to be a setuid root program to allow it to reset its dispatching priority to a high (negative) value (i.e., chown root.root hercules; chmod +s hercules).

For Windows, the following conversions are used for translating Linux/Unix thread priorities to Windows thread priorities:


Unix Priority
Windows Priority
  -20  to  -16   Time Critical
  -15 to  -9   Highest
  -8  to  -1   Above Normal
  0  to  7   Normal
  8  to  15   Below Normal
  16  to  19   Lowest
  20       Idle

Device records

The remaining statements in the configuration file are device records. There must be one device record for each I/O device or group of identical I/O devices. The format of the device record is:

devnums devtype [arguments]

where:

devnums
is either a single devnum, a range of devnum (separated by a '-'), a count of devnum (separated by a '.') or a comma separated list of devnums. Examples would be 200-210 or 0300.10 or 0400,0403 or 0100,0110-011F. All devices defined when devnums specifies more than one device have identical caracteristics (except for the device number itself). All devices defined as a group must be defined on a single channel. A channel is defined as a contiguous group of 256 (or hexadecimal 100) devices. 0010 and 0020 are on the same channels. 0100 and 0210 are not. See devnum below for an explanation of how each device number is specified.
devnum
is a 1 to 4 digit hexadecimal number, in the range 0000 to FFFF (for ESA/390) or 0000 to 0FFF (for S/370). The device number uniquely identifies each device to the operating system.
devtype
is the device type. Valid device types are:

Device type Description Emulated by
3270, 3287 Local non-SNA 3270 display or printer TN3270 client connection
1052, 3215 Console printer-keyboards Telnet client connection
1442, 2501, 3505 Card readers Disk file(s) (ASCII or EBCDIC)
3525 Card punch Disk file (ASCII or EBCDIC)
1403, 3211 Line printers Disk file (ASCII)
3410, 3420, 3480
3490, 9347, 8809
3422, 3430
Tape drives Disk file, CDROM, or SCSI tape
3088 Channel-to-channel adapters TCP socket, TUN/TAP Driver
3310, 3370, 9332
9335, 9336, 0671
FBA direct access storage devices Disk file
2311, 2314, 3330
3340, 3350, 3375
3380, 3390, 9345
CKD direct access storage devices Disk file
2703 Communication Line TCP Socket

arguments
is a list of parameters whose meaning depends on the device type. The arguments required for each class of device are shown below.

Arguments required for each device type

Local non-SNA 3270 devices
No arguments are required for this device type. To use this device, a tn3270 client must connect to the host Linux machine via the port number specified in the CNSLPORT parameter. A valid tn3270 device type, such as IBM-3278, must be used. If your tn3270 client software allows you to specify a device type suffix (for example, IBM-3278@001F) then you can use the suffix to connect the client to a specific device number. If no suffix is specified, then the client will be connected to the first available 3270 device.

Console printer-keyboard devices
No arguments are required for this device type. To use this device, a telnet client must connect to the host Linux machine via the port number specified in the CNSLPORT parameter. If your telnet client software allows you to specify a device type suffix (for example, ansi@0009) then you can use the suffix to connect the client to a specific device number. If no suffix is specified, then the client will be connected to the first available 1052 or 3215 device. One optional argument may be specified: noprompt, if specified, will remove the message at the console prompting for input.

Card reader devices
The argument specifies a list of file names containing card images. Additional arguments may be specified after the file names:

sockdev
indicates the card reader is a socket device wherein the filename is actually a socket specification instead of a device filename. When used, there must only be one filename specified in the form: port or host:port or sockpath/sockname. The device then accepts remote connections on the given TCP/IP port or Unix Domain Socket, and reads data from the socket instead of from a device file. This allows automatic remote submission of card reader data. See the Hercules Socket Reader page for more details.
eof
specifies that unit exception status is presented after reading the last card in the file. This option is persistent, and will remain in effect until the reader is reinitialized with the intrq option.
intrq
specifies that unit check status with intervention required sense bytes is presented after reading the last card in the file. This option is persistent, and will remain in effect until the reader is reinitialized with the eof option.
multifile
specifies, when multiple input files are entered, to automatically open the next input file and continue reading whenever EOF is encountered on a given file. If not specified, then reading stops once EOF is reached on a given file and an attention interrupt is then required to open and begin reading the next file.
ebcdic
specifies that the file contains fixed length 80-byte EBCDIC records with no line-end delimiters.
ascii
specifies that the file contains variable length lines of ASCII characters delimited by LF (line feed) sequences or CRLF (carraige return line feed) sequences at the end of each line.

If neither EBCDIC nor ASCII is specified, then the device handler attempts to detect the format of the card image file when the device is first accessed. Auto-detection is not supported for socket devices, and the default is ASCII if sockdev is specified.

trunc
specifies, for ASCII files, that lines longer than 80 characters are truncated instead of producing a unit check error.
autopad
specifies, for EBCDIC files, that the file is automatically padded to a multiple of 80 bytes if necessary.

Card punch devices
The argument specifies the name of a file to which the punched output will be written. Additional arguments may be specified after the file name:

ascii
specifies that the file will be written as variable length lines of ASCII characters delimited by line feeds or carriage return line feed sequences at the end of each line. Trailing blanks are removed from each line. If the ascii argument is not specified, the file is written as fixed length 80-byte EBCDIC records with no line-end delimiters.
crlf
specifies, for ASCII files, that carriage return line feed sequences are written at the end of each line. If the crlf argument is not specified, then line-feeds only are written at the end of each line.

Line printer devices
The argument specifies the name of a file to which the printer output will be written. The output is written in the form of variable length lines of ASCII characters delimited by line feeds or by carriage return line feed sequences. Trailing blanks are removed from each line. Carriage control characters are translated to blank lines or ASCII form feed characters. If the file exists it will be overwritten. Additional arguments may be specified after the file name:

crlf
specifies, for ASCII files, that carriage return line feed sequences are written at the end of each line. If the crlf argument is not specified, then line-feeds only are written at the end of each line.

Emulated tape devices
Four types of emulation are supported:

SCSI tapes
The argument specifies the tape device name (usually /dev/st0). SCSI tapes are read and written using variable length EBCDIC blocks and filemarks exactly like a mainframe tape volume.

Optical Media Attach (OMA) virtual files
These are read-only files which usually reside on CDROM. OMA virtual tapes consist of one CDROM file corresponding to each physical file of the emulated tape. An ASCII text file called the tape descriptor file (TDF) specifies the names of the files which make up the virtual tape. The argument specifies the name of the tape descriptor file (for example /cdrom/tapes/uaa196.tdf)

Each file on the virtual tape can be in one of three formats:

TEXT
TEXT files consist of variable length ASCII records delimited by carriage return line feed sequences at the end of each record. Each record is translated to EBCDIC and presented to the program as one physical tape block.
FIXED nnnnn
FIXED files consist of fixed length EBCDIC blocks of the specified length (nnnnn)
HEADERS
HEADERS files consist of variable length EBCDIC blocks. Each block is preceded by a 12-byte header.

If you have any IBM manuals in Bookmanager format on CDROM, you can see some examples of TDF files in the \TAPES directory on the CDROM.

AWSTAPE files
These contain a complete tape in one file. AWSTAPE files consist of variable length EBCDIC blocks. Each block is preceded by a 6-byte header. Filemarks are represented by a 6-byte header with no data. This is the same format as is used by the P/390. The argument specifies the location of the AWSTAPE file (for example ickdsf.ipl)

HET files
These contain a complete tape in one file and have the same structure as the AWSTAPE format with the added ability to have compressed data. The first argument specifies the location of the HET file. The filename must end with ".het" to be recognized by Hercules as an HET file. (for example 023178.het)

Additional arguments that allow you to control various HET settings are:

AWSTAPE
The AWSTAPE argument causes HET files to be written in AWSTAPE format. This basically, disables the additional features provided by the HET format.
COMPRESS=n
IDRC=n
COMPRESS and IDRC control whether compression should be used when writing to HET files. The value n can be 1 to turn on compression (the default) or 0 to turn it off. IDRC is a currently a synonym for COMPRESS, but may be used in the future to control other emulated tape drive features.
METHOD=n
The METHOD option allows you to specify which compression method to use. You may specify 1 for ZLIB compression or 2 for BZIP2 compression. The default is 1.
LEVEL=n
The LEVEL option controls the level of compression. It ranges from 1 for fastest compression to 9 for best compression. The default is 4.
CHUNKSIZE=nnnnn
The CHUNKSIZE option allows you to create HET files that contain different chunk sizes. The AWSTAPE (and therefore the HET) format allows each tape block to be logically broken up into smaller chunks. For instance, if your S/3x0 application creates tapes with a block size of 27998, those blocks would be broken down into nnnnn sized chunks. To be honest, I can't think of a reason you'd want to change this since decreasing it may reduce compression performance, but it's there if you want it. The range is from 4096 to 65535. The latter being the default.

The following parameters apply to both AWS and HET emulation files :

MAXSIZE|MAXSIZEK|MAXSIZEM=n
Specifies the maximum number of bytes (specified in bytes, Kilobytes or Megabytes) for the emulated file. This parameter defaults to 0, meaning there is no limit on the file size.
EOTMARGIN=n
Specifies the number of bytes remaining before reaching maxsize at which point the tape device will signal the presence of the 'End Of Tape' marker, thus allowing the program to switch to the next tape.

Additionally, if the file name starts with the '@' character (at sign), the file really describes a list of tape emulation files to be loaded in succession.
The syntax of each line is identical to the information specified that can be specified after the device type when the emulation file is specified directly after the device type in the configuration file.
If the emulation file filename in the file list is the '*' character, then this specifies a set of options to be applied to all additional emulation files specified in the file list.
Parameters are appended in succession. In all cases, is the same parameter is specified more than once, the last instance takes precedence.
Therefore, it is possible to specify a set of parameters in the base configuration file, Another set on a '*' line, and another set for each individual lines. Parameter are then appended in that order.

An SCSI tape device should *NOT* be given in a file list.

See the README.TAPE file for additional information, system and application programming for tape devices.

Channel-to-channel adapters
The first argument defines the emulation type, and the remaining arguments depend on the chosen emulation type. If the first argument is not a recognized emulation type, then the driver will operate as in Hercules Version 1, using Willem Konynenberg's vmnet package, as described in Axel Schwarzer's CTCA 3088 document.

The following are the emulation types currently supported:

CTCI     (Channel to Channel link to TCP/IP stack)

A point-to-point IP connection with the TCP/IP stack of the driving system on which Hercules is running. See the Hercules TCP/IP page for details.

(Note: The CTCI protocol is only for the Linux version of Hercules. For Windows, use the below CTCI protocol instead).

CTCI     (Channel to Channel link to Win32 TCP/IP stack)

A modified Win32 version of the CTCI protocol for the Windows crowd. Note that the protocol name (CTCI) is the same, even though the actual implementation is very different. See Fish's CTCI-W32 page for further details and information.

Required for both Linux and Windows:

guestip
specifies the IP address of the guest operating system running under Hercules.
hostip
specifies the IP address of the host (Linux or Windows) side of the point-to-point link. This may or may not be the same as your system's regular IP address. For Windows, if the host system is configured with DHCP, this should instead be the MAC address of the Ethernet adapter you wish to use to have Hercules communicate with the outside world.

Optional for Linux:
If these arguments are specified, they must precede the required arguments.

-n name  or --dev name
specifies the name of the tunnel device to use. The default is /dev/net/tun, which is correct for version 2.4 and above of the Linux kernel.
-d or --debug
specifies that debugging output is to be produced on the Hercules control panel. This should normally be left unspecified.

Optional for Windows:
If these arguments are specified, they must precede the required arguments. See Fish's CTCI-W32 page for further details and information.

CTCT     (Channel to Channel Emulation via TCP connection)

An emulated CTCA to another Hercules system. Four arguments are required:

lport
specifies the local TCP port. This is the TCP port that Hercules will listen on for this CTCA.
rhost
specifies the remote host. This is the name or IP address of the remote system that Hercules is running on, not the name or IP address of the OS running on that copy of Hercules.
rport
specifies the remote TCP port. The rport parameter on this system must match the lport parameter on the remote system, and vice versa.
bufsize
specifies the buffer size for the link. If this link is used for IP traffic, this parameter should be more than the MTU of the interface definition in the OS.
Note : CTCT currently only supports IP traffic, so it cannot be used to transport NJE, SNA, PVM, etc.. payload. This may change in the future.

LCS     (LAN Channel Station Emulation)

An emulated Lan Channel Station Adapter. This emulation mode appears to the operating system running in the Hercules machine as an IBM 8232 LCS device, an IBM 2216 router, a 3172 running ICP (Interconnect Communications Program), the LCS3172 driver of a P/390, or an IBM Open Systems Adapter.
Rather than a point-to-point link, this emulation creates a virtual ethernet adapter through which the guest operating system running in the Hercules machine can communicate. As such, this mode is not limited to TCP/IP traffic, but in fact will handle any ethernet frame.

A single device should be declared for all LCS device numbers. The LCS emulator will create all the additional devices necessary for LCS operations. Also, the 1st declared device should be an even numbered device. The configuration statement for LCS is as follows:

NOTE :
There are no required parameters for the LCS emulation, however there are several options that can be specified on the config statement:

NOTE :
On the MAC OS X Platform, the long option format (--xxx) is not supported. Only the short option format (-x : One dash, one letter) should be used.

-n devname or --dev devname
where devname is:
*nix
the name of the TUN/TAP special character device, normally /dev/net/tun.
[Windows]
is either the IP or MAC address of the driving systems network card. TunTap32 will automatically select the first network card it finds if this option is omitted, this may not be desirable for some users.
-o filename or --oat filename
where filename specifies the filename of the Address Translation file. If this option is specified, the optional --mac and guestip entries are ignored in preference to statements in the OAT. (See below for the format of the OAT)
-m MAC Address or --mac MAC address
where MAC Address is the optional hardware address of the interface in the format: xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx. If you use the --oat option, do not specify an address here.
guestip
is an optional IP address of the Hercules (guest OS) side. Note: This is only used to establish a point-to-point routing table entry on driving system. If you use the --oat option, do not specify an address here.

OAT File

The syntax for the Address Translation file is as follows:

*********************************************************
* Dev Mode Port Entry specific information              *
*********************************************************
0400  IP   00  PRI 172.021.003.032
0402  IP   00  SEC 172.021.003.033
0404  IP   00  NO  172.021.003.038
0406  IP   01  NO  172.021.002.016
040E  SNA  00

HWADD 00 02:00:FE:DF:00:42
HWADD 01 02:00:FE:DF:00:43
ROUTE 00 172.021.003.032 255.255.255.224
where:

Dev
is the base device address
Mode
is the operation mode - IP or SNA
Port
is the virtual (relative) adapter number.

For IP modes, the entry specific information is as follows:

PRI|SEC|NO
specifies where a packet with an unknown IP address is forwarded to. PRI is the primary default entry, SEC specifies the entry to use when the primary is not available, and NO specifies that this is not a default entry.
nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn
specifies the home IP address

When the operation mode is IP, specify only the even (read) device number dev. The odd (write) address will be create automatically.

Note: SNA is currently NOT implemented.

Additionally, two other statements can be included in the address translation file. The HWADD and ROUTE statements.

Use the HWADD to specify a hardware (MAC) address for a virtual adapter. The first parameter after HWADD specifies with relative adapter for which the address is applied.

The ROUTE statement is included for convenience. This allows the hercifc program to create a network route for this specified virtual adapter. Please note that it is not necessary to include point-to-point routes for each IP address in the table. This is done automatically by the emulation module.

Up to 4 virtual (relative) adapters 00-03 are currently supported.

If no Address Translation file is specified, the emulation module will create the following:

An ethernet adapter (port 0) for TCP/IP traffic only.
Two device addresses will be defined (devnum and devnum + 1).

FBA DASD devices
The argument specifies the name of a file which contains the FBA DASD image or the INET address of a Hercules shared device server.

The file consists of fixed length 512-byte records, each of which represents one physical block of the emulated disk.

To allow access to a minidisk within a full-pack FBA DASD image file, two additional arguments may be specified after the file name:

origin
specifies the relative block number within the DASD image file at which the minidisk begins. The number must be less than the number of blocks in the file. The default origin is zero.
numblks
specifies the number of 512-byte blocks in the minidisk. This number must not exceed the number of blocks in the file minus the origin. If omitted, or if specified as an asterisk, then the minidisk continues to the end of the DASD image file.

If you specify an INET address the format is:

ip-name-or-addr:port:devnum
ip-name-or-addr specifies the internet name or address where the Hercules shared device server is running.

port specifies the port number the shared device server is listening on. If omitted, the default is 3990.

devnum specifies the device number on the shared device server. If omitted, the default is the current device number.

CKD DASD devices
The argument specifies the name of a file containing the disk CKD DASD image or the INET address of a Hercules shared device server.

The file consists of a 512-byte device header record followed by fixed length track images. The length of each track image depends on the emulated device type, and is always rounded up to the next multiple of 512 bytes.

Volumes larger than 2GB (for example, the 3390 model 3) can be supported by spreading the data across more than one file. Each file contains a whole number of cylinders. The first file (which contains cylinders 0-2518 in the case of a 3390) usually has _1 as the last two characters of its name. The ckddasd driver allocates the remaining files by replacing the last character of the file name by the characters 2, 3, etc.

When CKD DASD images are spread across multiple files, you must specify only the first file name (the file with suffix _1) in the configuration statement!

If your operating system supports large file sizes or 64 bit offsets then volumes larger than 2G can be kept in a single file.

Alternatively, the argument may specify the name of a file containing a compressed CKD DASD image. The CKD driver will automatically detect whether the file contains a regular CKD image or a compressed CKD image. Refer to the CCKD page for details on how to create and use compressed CKD DASD images.

If you specify an INET address the format is:

ip-name-or-addr:port:devnum
ip-name-or-addr specifies the internet name or address where the Hercules shared device server is running.

port specifies the port number the shared device server is listening on. If omitted, the default is 3990.

devnum specifies the device number on the shared device server. If omitted, the default is the current device number.

Communication Adapter
Describes a BSC emulation line entry to either link 2 hercules engines or a custom made program emulating a 2780, 3780 or 3x74, or a custom made program interfacing to a real BSC line.

The communication is emulated over a TCP connection. All bytes are transfered as-is (except for doubling DLE in transparent mode) just like it would over a real BSC link. Emulated EIA (DCD, DTR, CTS, etc..) or X.21/V.11 leads (C, T, etc..) are treated differently depending on the DIAL option selected.

The line emulates a point-to-point BSC link. There is no point-to-multipoint handling.

The following options define the line emulation behaviour :
DIAL=IN|OUT|INOUT|NO
Specifies call direction (if any). If DIAL=NO is specified, the TCP outgoing connection is attempted as soon as an 'ENABLE' CCW is executed. Also, in this mode, an incoming connection will always be accepted. If DIAL=IN|INOUT is specified, a TCP incoming call is accepted ONLY if an 'ENABLE' CCW is currently executing on the device. If DIAL=OUT, the 'ENABLE' CCW is rejected. When DIAL=IN|INOUT is specified, a DIAL CCW allows the application to establish a TCP connection to a specific host. For other DIAL values, the DIAL CCW is rejected.
lhost=hostname|ip address|*
Specifies which IP address to listen on. This also conditions the network interface from which incoming calls will be accepted. Specifying '*' means all incoming TCP calls are accepted, regardless of the destination IP address or call origin. This is the default value. Specifying a specific IP address when DIAL=OUT is specified has no effect.
lport=service name|port number
Specifies the TCP port for which to listen to incoming TCP calls. This value is mandatory for DIAL=IN|INOUT|NO. It is ignored for DIAL=OUT.
rhost=hostname|ip address
rport=service name|port number
Specifies the remote host and port to which to direct a TCP connection on a DIAL=NO line when an 'ENABLE' CCW is executed. This option is mandatory when DIAL=NO is specified. It is ignored for other DIAL values.
The following options are tuning options. In most cases, using the default values give the best results
rto=0|-1|nnn|3000
Specifies the number of miliseconds before terminating a read on a timeout, when no read termination control character is received. Specifying 0 means the READ ends immediatly. -1 specifies there is no timeout.
pto=0|-1|nnn|3000
Specifies the number of miliseconds before terminating a POLL on a timeout, when no ACK or NACK sequence is received. Specifying 0 means the POLL ends immediatly. -1 specifies there is no timeout.
eto=0|-1|nnn|10000
Specifies the number of miliseconds before terminating an ENABLE operation on a timeout. the timeout applies when DIAL=NO|IN|INOUT is specified, the outgoing TCP call fails (DIAL=NO) and there is no previously or currently established TCP connection for this line. When DIAL=NO is specified, the timeout defaults to 10 seconds. for DIAL=IN|INOUT, the timeout defaults to -1.

A comment preceded by a pound sign may be appended to any device definition statement.


If you have a question about Hercules, see the Hercules Frequently-Asked Questions page.


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Last updated 30 November 2003