Difference between revisions of "UNIX Sixth Edition"

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This was one of the more popular research versions to leave Bell Labs.  
 
This was one of the more popular research versions to leave Bell Labs.  
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{{Infobox OS
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| image = v6unix.png
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| caption = Logging into a v6 unix system
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| name = Unix v6
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| creator = AT&T/Western Electric
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| current version = v6
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| year introduced = 1975
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| type = Multitasking, multiuser
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| architecture = [[PDP-11]], [[Interdata 32b]] theoretically portable
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}}
  
  
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v6 Unix is perhaps famous because of the "[[Lions book]]".  [[John Lions]] ( bio: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lions ) wrote up an excellent disection of the unix kernel, and taught it in his OS classes.  The book became *the* guide to the unix internals, and was photocopied over & over...
 
v6 Unix is perhaps famous because of the "[[Lions book]]".  [[John Lions]] ( bio: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lions ) wrote up an excellent disection of the unix kernel, and taught it in his OS classes.  The book became *the* guide to the unix internals, and was photocopied over & over...
  
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v6 is also important, because it was the first non AT&T port of unix, when it was ported to the Interdata 32b.
  
  

Revision as of 21:07, 11 February 2009

This was one of the more popular research versions to leave Bell Labs.


Unix v6
V6unix.png
Logging into a v6 unix system
Type: Multitasking, multiuser
Creator: AT&T/Western Electric
Architecture: PDP-11, Interdata 32b theoretically portable
This Version: v6
Date Released: 1975


Platforms

These are the known platforms to run Unix v6

PDP-11

the PDP-11 was the primary platform which Unix v6 was written on. All other v6's can trace themselves back to this version.

Interdata 32b

The Interdata 32b was the first port to a 32 bit platform outside of Bell Labs.

Folk Lore

v6 Unix is perhaps famous because of the "Lions book". John Lions ( bio: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Lions ) wrote up an excellent disection of the unix kernel, and taught it in his OS classes. The book became *the* guide to the unix internals, and was photocopied over & over...

v6 is also important, because it was the first non AT&T port of unix, when it was ported to the Interdata 32b.