Difference between revisions of "UNIX"
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− | Unix (officially trademarked as UNIX®) is a computer [[operating system]] originally developed in the 1960s and 1970s by a group of AT&T employees at Bell Labs including Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie and Douglas McIlroy. Today's Unix systems are split into various branches, developed over time by AT&T as well as various commercial vendors and non-profit organizations. | + | Unix (officially trademarked as UNIX® - the documentation switched from using 'UNIX' to 'Unix' as of V7) is a computer [[operating system]] originally developed in the 1960s and 1970s by a group of AT&T employees at Bell Labs including Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie and Douglas McIlroy. |
+ | |||
+ | Today's Unix systems are split into various branches, developed over time by AT&T as well as various commercial vendors and non-profit organizations. | ||
Versions of relevance for hobbyists include: | Versions of relevance for hobbyists include: | ||
* [[Unix System 1]] - The first version of UNIX that has been recently made to run on the [[PDP-11]] | * [[Unix System 1]] - The first version of UNIX that has been recently made to run on the [[PDP-11]] | ||
− | * [[ | + | * [[UNIX Fifth Edition|UNIX V5]] - One of first version with known source and binaries available. |
− | * [[ | + | * [[UNIX Sixth Edition|UNIX V6]] - The last version before branches started to appear |
− | * [[Unix | + | * [[Unix Seventh Edition|Unix V7]] - One of the most complete and the last generally available and [[PDP-11]] version of Research UNIX |
* [[32v|Unix/32V]] - A 32bit port of System 7 to the VAX 11/780. | * [[32v|Unix/32V]] - A 32bit port of System 7 to the VAX 11/780. | ||
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==See also== | ==See also== | ||
+ | * [[UNIX file system]] | ||
+ | * [[BSD Fast File System]] | ||
* [[Installing UNIX Sixth Edition]] | * [[Installing UNIX Sixth Edition]] | ||
* [[Installing UNIX Seventh Edition]] | * [[Installing UNIX Seventh Edition]] | ||
{{Nav Unix}} | {{Nav Unix}} |
Revision as of 21:43, 7 August 2017
Unix | |
Type: | Time-sharing |
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Creator: | Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie and Douglas McIlroy at Bell Labs |
Multitasking: | Multitasking with paging/swap |
Architecture: | Originally PDP-7, then PDP-11 now cross-platform. |
Date Released: | 1969 |
Unix (officially trademarked as UNIX® - the documentation switched from using 'UNIX' to 'Unix' as of V7) is a computer operating system originally developed in the 1960s and 1970s by a group of AT&T employees at Bell Labs including Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie and Douglas McIlroy.
Today's Unix systems are split into various branches, developed over time by AT&T as well as various commercial vendors and non-profit organizations.
Versions of relevance for hobbyists include:
- Unix System 1 - The first version of UNIX that has been recently made to run on the PDP-11
- UNIX V5 - One of first version with known source and binaries available.
- UNIX V6 - The last version before branches started to appear
- Unix V7 - One of the most complete and the last generally available and PDP-11 version of Research UNIX
- Unix/32V - A 32bit port of System 7 to the VAX 11/780.
Unix then went commercial and was sold. Below is an early ad for AT&T UNIX.
CSRG releases
Meanwhile the CSRG kept on releasing newer BSD UNIX's derived from 32v.
- 2.11 BSD - A still-maintained version for PDP-11s
- 3.0 BSD - Derived from 32v, including a real virtual memory system
- 4.0 BSD - A vastly improved 3.0
- 4.1 BSD - These were mostly betas testing new filesystems & the TCP/IP protocol.
- 4.2 BSD - The first shipping version of BSD with TCP/IP, FFS & termcap for the VAX.
- 4.3 BSD - A version of pre-POSIX BSD, for the VAX.
- 4.4 BSD - Did this version ever ship?
- Net/1 - The TCP/IP source, and other programs free of the AT&T copyrite
- Net/2 - Almost an entire release of all the source. This was the contention in the AT&T vs CSRG lawsuit.
- 4.4 BSD Lite - This was the result of the aformentioned lawsuit. This was 'lite' in that it removed the offending 6 files.
386 BSD This is the first Net/2 derived OS that then spawned the Net/FreeBSD os's.
FreeBSD focuses on providing a system geared towards a single user.
NetBSD will run on a variety of 32-bit older systems from the VAX to the Amiga.
OpenBSD derived from the NetBSD project will run on all kinds of systems.
See also
v • d • e UNIX Versions, Vendors and Related |
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Research Unix PDP-7 UNIX • V1 • V2 • V3 • V4 • V5 • V6 • V7 • V8 • V9 • V10 • LSX • MINI-UNIX • Unix/32V
AT&T - CB-UNIX • PWB/UNIX • USG UNIX • System III • System IV • System V BSD - 2.9 BSD • 2.10 BSD • 2.11 BSD • 3BSD • 4BSD • 4.1 BSD • 4.2 BSD • 4.3 BSD • 4.4 BSD BSD Descendants 386BSD • NetBSD • FreeBSD • OpenBSD • NeXTSTEP • Darwin |
Other - xv6 • AMIX • SunOS • Solaris • ULTRIX • A/UX • XENIX • AIX • Dell UNIX |