Unix in the 21st Century
Today, the specification of what makes a system “Unix” is embodied primarily in the POSIX standard, an international standard based on System V and BSD. Commercial Unix systems, such as Solaris from Sun Microsystems, AIX from IBM, and HP-UX from Hewlett Packard, are standard-adhering direct descendants of the original Unix systems.
A number of other systems are “spiritual” descendents of Unix, even though they contain none of the original Unix source code. The most notable of these systems is GNU/Linux, which has seen a meteoric rise in popularity. However, a large number of systems derived from the 4.4-BSD-Lite distribution are also popular. All of these systems offer standards compliance and compatibility with SVR4 and earlier versions of BSD.
This edition of Unix in a Nutshell attempts to define the cross-section of features and commands that “make a Unix system Unix.” To that end, it covers three of the most popular and representative systems now available.
- Solaris 10
Solaris 10 is a distributed computing environment from Sun Microsystems. Solaris includes the SunOS 5.10 operating system, plus additional features such as the Common Desktop Environment, GNOME, and Java tools. In addition, the kernel has received significant enhancement to support multiprocessor CPUs, multithreaded processes, kernel-level threads, and dynamic loading of device drivers and other kernel modules. Most of the user-level (and system administration) content comes from SVR4. As ...
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