And, just to be clear, the referring to the platform as an AS/400 is
like calling an iPhone an Apple Newton...current implementation of the
IBM i operating system (used to be OS/400) is on Power (AKA PowerPC
64bit). There might be ancient machines running a RISC chipset or even
the CISC processor but it would only be as a museum piece.
My IBM i runs on a 4-core Power 9 chip. My IBM i operating system hosts
a few Tomcat instances and a Liferay Application stack which runs on
Tomcat on one core. It also runs OpenSUSE on one core and an additional
core is carved out for Redhat.
Best computing platform on the planet (IMHO...)
Pete Helgren
www.petesworkshop.com
GIAC Secure Software Programmer-Java
GIAC Cloud Penetration Tester
AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner
Microsoft Certified: Azure Fundamentals
On 1/19/2023 7:10 AM, Christopher Schultz wrote:
James,
On 1/18/23 20:05, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
On 1/18/23 3:11 PM, Christopher Schultz wrote:
Tomcat is pure-Java (okay, except for tcnative, which you evidently
don't need) and therefore should run on either x86-84 Java via
Rosetta 2 or aarch64 Java natively. You do not need any special
distribution of Tomcat to run on native aarch64.
It also runs very nicely on AS/400s.
Hah, right.
I'm curious: which architecture are your machine actually running?
AS/400 had multiple architectures.
-chris
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