Ubuntu does not impose hardware requirements beyond the requirements of the Linux kernel and the GNU tool-sets. Therefore, any architecture or platform to which the Linux kernel, libc, gcc, etc. have been ported, and for which an Ubuntu port exists, can run Ubuntu.
Rather than attempting to describe all the different hardware configurations which are supported for S/390, this section contains general information and pointers to where additional information can be found.
Ubuntu 18.04 supports six major architectures and several variations of each architecture known as “flavors”. One other architecture (IBM/Motorola PowerPC) has an unofficial port.
| Architecture | Ubuntu Designation | Subarchitecture | Flavor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intel x86-based | i386 | ||
| AMD64 & Intel 64 | amd64 | ||
| ARM with hardware FPU | armhf | multiplatform | generic |
| multiplatform for LPAE-capable systems | generic-lpae | ||
| 64bit ARM | arm64 | ||
| IBM POWER Systems | ppc64el | IBM POWER8 and newer machines | |
| IBM z/Architecture | s390x | IBM Z and IBM LinuxONE, no s390 (31-bit mode) support | zEC12 and newer machines |
The current product family name of the s390x architecture is IBM Z or the Linux-only variant IBM LinuxONE. Older and in between outdated names like z Systems, System z or zSeries can still be found, and the 64-bit IBM z/Architecture is sometimes still commonly referred to as S/390.
For Ubuntu the machine needs to support the z/Architecture, so 64-bit support is mandatory, and the minimal architectural level for Ubuntu support is IBM Z EC12/BC12 or IBM LinuxONE Rockhopper/Emperor. S/390 support software is included from the kernel 4.2 development stream. The most current information about IBM's Linux support can be found at the Linux on IBM Z and LinuxONE® page at developerWorks.
PAV and HyperPAV are supported transparently for DASD storage; multipathing is not needed to take advantage of these storage system features. Be sure to configure the devices during DASD device selection. The alias devices will not be offered neither for formatting, partitioning nor direct use.
Multiprocessor support — also called “symmetric multiprocessing” or SMP — is available for this architecture. Having multiple processors in a computer was originally only an issue for high-end server systems but has become common in recent years nearly everywhere with the introduction of so called “multi-core” processors. These contain two or more processor units, called “cores”, in one physical chip.
The standard Ubuntu 18.04 kernel image has been compiled with SMP support. It is also usable on non-SMP systems without problems.
Almost any network interface card (NIC) supported by the Linux kernel should also be supported by the installation system; drivers should normally be loaded automatically.
The list of supported network devices is:
Channel to Channel (CTC)
OSA-Express in QDIO mode, HiperSockets and Guest-LANs
RoCE Expresss, SMC-R adapter