Difference between revisions of "Network UNIX"

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'''Network UNIX''' is the formal name for a version of [[UNIX]] produced in 1974-75 for use with the [[ARPANET]]. It was reportedly the first networked UNIX; it used the [[Network Control Protocol|NCP]] [[protocol]]. Work started with [[UNIX Fifth Edition|UNIX V5]], but it was initially distributed [[UNIX Sixth Edition|UNIX V6]]. I
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'''Network UNIX''' is the formal name for a version of [[UNIX]] produced in 1974-75 for use with the [[ARPANET]]. It was reportedly the first networked UNIX; it used the [[Network Control Protocol|NCP]] [[protocol]]. Work started with [[UNIX Fifth Edition|UNIX V5]], but it was initially distributed using [[UNIX Sixth Edition|UNIX V6]].
  
The work was at the Center for Advanced Computation at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was originally written mostly by Gary R. Grossman and Steve F. Holmgren; many others later contributed fixes and improvements. The code rapidly spread among computer science centers which were connected to the ARPANET.
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The work was done at the Center for Advanced Computation at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was originally written mostly by Gary R. Grossman and Steve F. Holmgren; many others later contributed fixes and improvements. The code rapidly spread among computer science centers which were connected to the ARPANET.
  
The code is divided into three main sections: code for the [[kernel]], which handled sending and receiving ordinary user data (further divided into [[device driver]]s, and code common to all methods of interfacing to the ARPANET); a [[daemon]] which ran as a [[process]], which handled the more complex, and rare protocol operations (e.g. listening for incoming connection requests; the Initial Connection Protocol used to open a [[connection]]; closing connections); and programs (also run as processes) to implement [[application]]s such as [[File Transfer Protocol|FTP]] and [[Telnet|TELNET]].
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The code is divided into three main sections: code for the [[kernel]], which handled sending and receiving ordinary user data (further divided into [[device driver]]s, and code common to all methods of interfacing to the ARPANET); a [[daemon]] which ran as a [[process]], which handled the more complex, and rare, protocol operations (e.g. listening for incoming connection requests; the Initial Connection Protocol used to open a [[connection]]; closing connections); and programs (also run as processes) to implement [[application]]s such as [[File Transfer Protocol|FTP]] and [[Telnet|TELNET]].
  
 
==Further reading==
 
==Further reading==

Latest revision as of 18:28, 16 October 2022

Network UNIX is the formal name for a version of UNIX produced in 1974-75 for use with the ARPANET. It was reportedly the first networked UNIX; it used the NCP protocol. Work started with UNIX V5, but it was initially distributed using UNIX V6.

The work was done at the Center for Advanced Computation at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was originally written mostly by Gary R. Grossman and Steve F. Holmgren; many others later contributed fixes and improvements. The code rapidly spread among computer science centers which were connected to the ARPANET.

The code is divided into three main sections: code for the kernel, which handled sending and receiving ordinary user data (further divided into device drivers, and code common to all methods of interfacing to the ARPANET); a daemon which ran as a process, which handled the more complex, and rare, protocol operations (e.g. listening for incoming connection requests; the Initial Connection Protocol used to open a connection; closing connections); and programs (also run as processes) to implement applications such as FTP and TELNET.

Further reading

External links