Dasd 620 -
4/5 Stars (Deducted one star for the lack of a dark mode on the console). Have you deployed a DASD 620 in your environment? Or are you still nursing a 3390-9? Let us know in the comments below.
April 14, 2026 Topic: Legacy Storage Architecture dasd 620
The 620 supports up to 16 channel paths. In our benchmark, we yanked a live Fibre Channel cable during a batch job. The system didn't stutter. The secondary path took over within one I/O cycle. For banks processing end-of-day settlements, this is the difference between a footnote and a lawsuit. 4/5 Stars (Deducted one star for the lack
Here is our hands-on look at why this "vintage" architecture is finding a second life in high-security and mainframe modernization projects. At its core, the 620 is a mid-range enterprise storage controller. It bridges the old world (ECKD, CKD tracking, FICON channels) with the new world (Fibre Channel, SCSI, and even limited S3 object staging). Let us know in the comments below
There is a quiet revolution happening in the data center basement. While everyone else is chasing NVMe-over-Fabrics and petabyte-scale object storage, a handful of architects are asking a different question: What if reliability looked like the 1980s, but performance looked like the 2020s?
Think of it as a Rosetta Stone for data. It allows a z/OS environment to talk directly to modern flash media without emulation overhead, while simultaneously allowing a Linux on Z instance to treat the same disk as a block device. 1. The "Cold Start" Guarantee Modern SSDs are fast, but they hate sitting on a shelf for ten years. The DASD 620 was designed for archival resilience. We tested a unit that had been powered off for six years. After a 45-minute actuator calibration sequence (nostalgic, loud, and terrifying), it came online with zero data corruption. Try that with your average M.2 drive.