IBM Cross System Product
IBM's Cross System Product was an application generator intended to create online systems on IBM's mainframe platforms. Introduced in 1981, CSP consisted of a set of source code generators that allowed developers to interactively define, test, generate, and execute application programs. CSP was composed of two products:
- Cross System Product/Application Development - development environment.
- Cross System Product/Application Execution - runtime environment.
- DB2 support in CICS/OS/VS and MVS/TSO environment
- SQL/DS support in VSE and VM/SP environment
- MVS/XA support
The last version of CSP, version 4.1, went out of support at the end of 2001.
In 1994, IBM released a successor product called VisualGen which incorporated "the ability to develop client/server applications, the ability to access data from non-IBM vendors’ data stores, and the ability to execute application in operating environments beyond the mainframe." In 1996, this product was again renamed to VisualAge Generator. VisualAge Generator was withdrawn from service in 2009 and succeeded by Rational Business Developer.