Not holding my breath.  I just know that we communicate with other systems 
(VisaNet, MasterCard etc.) and hardware (NCR ATMs) that are "non-CCA 
compliant", and while sharing keys with these systems is supported under CCA it 
is fairly minimally documented.  So I was just curious if there were "systems" 
outside of those by IBM that supported what I might call "CCA conforming 
sharing of keys".



>________________________________
> From: Phil Smith <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2013 7:43 PM
>Subject: Re: IBM Mainframe (1980's) on You tube
> 
>Frank Swarbrick wrote:
>>I don't mean the applications that use it, but rather the implementations of 
>>CCA itself.  I've only found ICSF and CCA for Linux on IBM System z.
>>Since CCA is meant to be "common" I was wondering if it was implemented by 
>>anyone outside of IBM itself.
>
>Ah. I don't see the argument for that for the vendor: it's a lot of work, and 
>they're unlikely to need all the functions, so they're doing more work to 
>enable other folks to be able to port their products to that platform more 
>easily. And since (as Todd notes) IBM supports CCA on the four main platforms, 
>this would also mean implementing it for some rare system like HP/UX or 
>Stratus or something.
>
>So the net would be a lot of work on a platform that isn't mainstream to 
>support something that helps others. I wouldn't hold my breath!
>
>...phsiii
>
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