Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!linus!philabs!prls!pyramid!pesnta!valid!sbs From: sbs@valid.UUCP (Steven Brian McKechnie Sargent) Newsgroups: net.unix,net.unix-wizards Subject: Re: Unix History Message-ID: <337@valid.UUCP> Date: Sat, 14-Jun-86 00:34:46 EDT Article-I.D.: valid.337 Posted: Sat Jun 14 00:34:46 1986 Date-Received: Sun, 15-Jun-86 04:19:51 EDT References: <212@butler.UUCP> <6780@utzoo.UUCP> <1345@oddjob.UUCP> Organization: Valid Logic, San Jose, CA Lines: 40 Xref: linus net.unix:7439 net.unix-wizards:15321 > In article <6780@utzoo.UUCP> henry@utzoo.UUCP (Henry Spencer) writes: > >> Could anyone give me a short run down on lineage > >> of the major lines of UNIX? Perhaps a brief narration > >> or a family tree showing how sys V and 4.3 and such > >> are all related... > > > >Between V6 and V7, draw a branch starting out "PWB" and > >proceeding on through "SysIII" and "SysV" to "SysV.3.2.4.etc". > > This raises the burning question: whatever happened to > Systems I and II, and, especially, IV? I never hear them > discussed. Were they ever released commercially, and if > not, why not? > -- > > Scott Anderson > ihnp4!oddjob!kaos!sra If memory serves, what you call Systems I and II existed as versions of the UNIX Time Sharing System and the Programmer's Workbench system (versions 1.0 and 2.0). System III was made commercially available about 1981, during which time System IV was in use inside the phone company -- but at the same time that 4BSD was in its first blush of youth. So they leapfrogged IV altogether, presumably to avoid confusing the UNIX(TM)-buying public. Friends tell me there is also a System VI, which has been ruthlessly crushed for internal political reasons; but that's vicious rumour. The 8th Edition system is based on 4.1BSD, and I hear there's a Version 9 as well; so I think we've gotten the 1-digit numbers pretty well nailed down and bleeding, and the phone company will iterate forever on the System V.3.1.4a.870422.9:33:04am.Rev3 naming scheme. "After changes upon changes we are more or less the same." - Paul Simon S. (TM) UNIX is a Footnote of AT&T Bell Laboratories.