Unix-like

A Unix-like operating system is one that behaves in a manner similar to the UNIX system, while not necessarily conforming to or being certified to any version of the Single UNIX Specification. The term can include open source operating systems inspired by UNIX or designed to emulate its features, commercial and proprietary work-alikes, and even licensed versions of UNIX (deemed so "Unix-like" that they are certified to bear the UNIX trademark). There is no formal standard for defining the term, and some difference of opinion is possible as to whether a certain OS is "Unix-like" or not.

The term "Unix-like" and the UNIX trademark

The Open Group, which owns the UNIX® trademark and administers the Single UNIX Specification, considers "Unix-like" to be a misuse of the name, and believes that a better alternative term would be "POSIX-conforming system", referring to the original standard established to facilitate compatibility between Unix-like systems. However, the term "POSIX-conforming" has its own problems. For example, there are systems which conform to at least the key POSIX standards (e.g., Microsoft Windows) and therefore can claim to be POSIX-conforming, but that are nevertheless not considered Unix-like and many applications written to compile and run on Unix will not work on them. Furthermore, operating systems that are generally considered "Unix-like" may not comply with the full POSIX specification.

Development of Unix-like systems

The first "Unix-like" operating systems were developed because of AT&T's licensing of Unix, which prevented the sale of Unix for commercial purposes. These systems were intended to provide businesses with the features available to academic users of UNIX. The proprietary Unix-like operating systems that were available in the 1980s and early 1990s included Idris, Coherent, and UniFlex. When AT&T later allowed commercial licensing of UNIX in the 1980s, a variety of proprietary systems developed, including AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, Solaris, Ultrix, and Xenix; these largely displaced the clones. Meanwhile, non-commercial Unix-like operating systems were developed to serve as inexpensive or free substitutes for UNIX. These include BSD, GNU, Minix, and Linux.

Unix-like open source operating systems

The term is most often used as a simple way of referring to the Unix-like open source operating systems:

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
university of washington
ucb
uc
ultrasound
unit
uyghur
uppsala
utilitarianism
university of pennsylvania
university
ultramagnetic mcs
university of cambridge
university of oxford
ume university
university of bergen
university of oslo
uppsala university
universal access
trinity college, cambridge
colleges of the university of cambridge
christ's college, cambridge
peterhouse, cambridge
jesus college
u
user friendly
unidentified flying object
uganda
geography of ukraine
demographics of ukraine
politics of ukraine
economy of ukraine
communications in ukraine
transportation in ukraine
military of ukraine
foreign relations of ukraine
history of the united arab emirates
geography of the united arab emirates
demographics of the united arab emirates
politics of the united arab emirates
economy of the united arab emirates
communications in the united arab emirates
transportation in the united arab emirates
military of the united arab emirates
foreign relations of the united arab emirates