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* [[XPEDITER]] from [[Compuware]] Corporation who in 1994 acquired the OLIVER product.<ref>[http://www.answers.com/topic/compuware-corporation Compuware Corp], [[Answers.com]].</ref>
* [[XPEDITER]] from [[Compuware]] Corporation who in 1994 acquired the OLIVER product.<ref>[http://www.answers.com/topic/compuware-corporation Compuware Corp], [[Answers.com]].</ref>


Eventually, [[CA, Inc.]] purchased Intertest from On-line software , renamed it CA-INTERTEST, and stopped selling CA/EZTEST.{{fact|date=September 2010}}
Eventually, [[CA, Inc.]] purchased Intertest from On-line software , renamed it CA-INTERTEST, and stopped selling CA/EZTEST [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CA_Technologies].{{fact|date=September 2010}}


==Early critical role==
==Early critical role==

Revision as of 09:50, 31 July 2011

CA/EZTEST was a CICS interactive test/debug software package distributed by Computer Associates and originally called EZTEST/CICS, produced by Capex Corporation of Phoenix, Arizona with assistance from Ken Dakin from England.[citation needed]

The product provided source level test and debugging features for programs written in COBOL, PL/1 and Assembler languages to complement their own existing COBOL optimizer product.[citation needed]

Competition

CA/EZTEST initially competed with two rival products:

and, much later, in the early 1990s

Eventually, CA, Inc. purchased Intertest from On-line software , renamed it CA-INTERTEST, and stopped selling CA/EZTEST [1].[citation needed]

Early critical role

Between them, these three products provided much needed third party system software support for IBM's "flagship" teleprocessing product CICS, which survived for more than 20 years as a strategic product without any memory protection of its own.[citation needed] A single "rogue" application program (frequently by a buffer overflow) could accidentally overwrite data almost anywhere in the address space causing "down-time" for the entire teleprocessing system, possibly supporting thousands of remote terminals. This was despite the fact that much of the world's banking and other commerce relied heavily on CICS for secure transaction processing between 1970 and early 1990s. The difficulty in deciding which application program caused the problem was often insurmountable and frequently the system would be restarted without spending many hours investigated very large (and initially unformatted) "core dump"s requiring expert system programming support and knowledge.

Early integrated testing environment

Additionally, the product (and its competitors) provided an integrated testing environment which was not provided by IBM for early versions of CICS and which was only partially satisfied with their later embedded testing tool — "Execution Diagnostic Facility" (EDF), which only helped newer "Command level" programmers and provided no protection.[citation needed]

Supported operating systems

The following operating systems were supported:[citation needed]

  • IBM MVS
  • IBM XA
  • IBM VSE (except XPEDITER)

References