That's an impressive display of misinformation.
Present day Z machines are not emulators.  They have their own CPU chips which 
are different from the CPU chips used for Power and I.
The storage separation of logical partitions is done via a mechanism that is 
not storage keys.   The LPAR support for Z is distinct from
the LPAR support for Power/I.

Jim Mulder z/OS Diagnosis, Design, Development, Test  IBM Corp. Poughkeepsie NY

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List <[email protected]> On Behalf Of 
Paul Gorlinsky
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2022 12:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Storage protection keys

Present day z/Arch machines are the combination of several POWER PC chips 
working together. With the inclusion of LPAR as the only mode to operate the 
machine, logically, the storage management is more than just the old storage 
keys, there are also additional KEYS to manage the LPARs themselves and PREVENT 
one LPAR from looking into the storage of another LPAR. The machine complex is 
a large emulator of the z/ARCH instruction set, memory/storage subsystem and IO 
processors. In other words, it's a very fast emulator. 

With very little change, the hardware is zServer, iServer and pServer, all 
running different instruction set emulation, but sharing a lot of functionally, 
like LPAR support in all three.

The expert on this would be Lynn Wheeler... so the rest I'll defer to the 
experts.

Paul

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