We report on the FormoSat-3/Constellation Observing System for Meteorology, Ionosphere and Climate (FS3/COSMIC) limb-viewing observations of GPS L-band scintillations since mid-2006 and propose to study global F-layer irregularity morphology. The FS3/COSMIC has generally performed more than 1000 ionospheric radio occultation (RO) observations per day. We reprocess 1-Hz amplitude data and obtain complete limb-viewing profiles of the undersampling (sampling frequency lower than Fresnel frequency) S4 scintillation index from about 80% of the RO observations. There are a few percent of FS3/COSMIC RO observations having greater than 0.09 undersampling S4max values on average. However, seven identified areas, Central Pacific Area (-20A degrees to 20A degrees dip latitude, 160A degrees E-130A degrees W), South American Area (-20A degrees to 20A degrees dip latitude, 100A degrees W-30A degrees W), African Area (-20A degrees to 20A degrees dip latitude, 30A degrees W-50A degrees E), European Area (30A degrees-55A degrees N, 0A degrees-55A degrees E), Japan Sea Area (35A degrees-55A degrees N, 120A degrees-150A degrees E), Arctic Area (> 65A degrees dip latitude), and Antarctic Area (<-65A degrees dip latitude), have been designated to have a much higher percentage of strong limb-viewing L-band scintillations. During the years in most of the last sunspot cycle from mid-2006 to the end 2014, the scintillation climatology, namely, its variations with each identified area, season, local time, magnetic activity, and solar activity, have been documented.