Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Posting-Version: version B 2.10.1 exptools 1/6/84; site ih1ap.UUCP Path: utzoo!linus!decvax!harpo!ihnp4!ih1ap!pat From: pat@ih1ap.UUCP (Patrick A. Fargo) Newsgroups: net.unix Subject: UNIX History Message-ID: <270@ih1ap.UUCP> Date: Wed, 11-Jan-84 15:18:47 EST Article-I.D.: ih1ap.270 Posted: Wed Jan 11 15:18:47 1984 Date-Received: Fri, 13-Jan-84 04:01:20 EST Organization: AT&T Bell Labs, Naperville, IL Lines: 42 After reading the various responses to the history of UNIX within and outside AT&T Bell Laboratories, I decided to provide some other details of the development inside the labs. I ordered the 2nd PDP 11/70 at Indian Hill in 1976. I will try to give a list of important changes in perspective. After development of the first UNIX systems in research, Joe Maranzano of Murray Hill created a UNIX support group. This group would package, fix bugs, and enhance the research version periodically. A year after this new group was formed, Heiz Lacklama and Doug Bayer of Holmdel modified UNIX for a PDP 11/70 using the 3 memory management registers so that UNIX ran as a supervisor. This product, called MERT for Mult Environment Real-Time operating system, was eventually support by the same UNIX support group. The third major entry was UNIX/PWD. The programmers workbench contained programs which controlled remote job entry, and source control. These were developed at Piscataway N. J. In this time period, new PDP processors such as the PDP 11/34, and PDP 11/23 and even a PDP 11/55 were released and off- springs to UNIX developed for them. The PCC (Portable C Compiler) and satellite library for UNIX was generated and new MINI UNIX products arose. On the other hand, UNIX for a HONEYWELL and UNIVAC 1100 series was also started. Around 1978, the UNIX support group in conjunction with a computer task force decided to support two major releases. UNIX/TS and UNIX/RT. UNIX/TS was USG UNIX and PWD UNIX combined. The UNIX/RT was basically supported MERT. Columbus had modifyed a version of MERT extensively, and called their product CB UNIX. Another version of MERT formed the basis for DMERT, a Duplex operating system. The thrust of only two supported versions was that UNIX/RT showed very good promise as being the more used version and anything that could be done in UNIX/TS would work in UNIX/RT. The advent of the PDP VAX computer now created four products. UNIX/RT and UNIX/TS for both PDP 111/70 and VAX 780 computers. In 1979 UNIX/RT was announced as 1 year to freeze, with UNIX/RT VAX officially dead. The remaining UNIX/TS VAX was again modified by the Indian Hill computer center into another product called UNIX/TS Augmented. Finally, the product internal to AT&T Bell Labs call UNIX/TS was the only major product supported. I hope this little history was interesting. If you have further questions I will try and answer them within company constraints. Patrick A. Fargo