On Thu, 24 Apr 2014 12:32:32 +0800, Timothy Sipples wrote:

>I remember a school of thought that "thunking" might not have been a good
>idea because it encouraged developers to do what they do best: nothing. :-)

I never heard of "thunking" before. It sounds to me like a derogatory term 
for calling routines that run in different addressing modes. Is that what is
intended?

>That is, developers would use thunking as a means to achieve the bare
>minimum for a too-timid leap to the next addressing width when what they
>really should have done (for their customers' and end users' benefit) is
>brought their whole product/program over to the new width -- or at least
>continued their efforts in subsequent releases to complete the move to the
>next width. I don't know if I'd agree with that school of thought, but I
>remember it, and there's a certain logic to it.

I hope that you are not suggesting that z/OS should not have been 
released until everything ran AMODE 64. We might still be waiting.

>I wonder if thunking is an area a third party and/or the open source
>community would find interesting -- a standard set of callable thunking
>services. And I wonder if it'd be technically possible as such, and how
>difficult.

I don't see what you mean. It is not difficult for any program to call any 
other, regardless of addressing mode.

-- 
Tom Marchant

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