UNIX Past
Since it began to escape from AT&T's Bell Laboratories in the early
1970's, the success of the UNIX operating system has led to many different
versions: recipients of the (at that time free) UNIX system code all began
developing their own different versions in their own, different, ways for use
and sale. Universities, research institutes, government bodies and computer
companies all began using the powerful UNIX system to develop many of the
technologies which today are part of a UNIX system.
Computer aided design, manufacturing control systems, laboratory
simulations, even the Internet itself, all began life with and because of UNIX
systems. Today, without UNIX systems, the Internet would come to a screeching
halt. Most telephone calls could not be made, electronic commerce would grind to
a halt and there would have never been "Jurassic Park"!
By the late 1970's, a ripple effect had come into play. By now the under- and
post-graduate students whose lab work had pioneered these new applications of
technology were attaining management and decision-making positions inside the
computer system suppliers and among its customers. And they wanted to continue
using UNIX systems.
Soon all the large vendors, and many smaller ones, were marketing their own,
diverging, versions of the UNIX system optimized for their own computer
architectures and boasting many different strengths and features. Customers
found that, although UNIX systems were available everywhere, they seldom were
able to interwork or co-exist without significant investment of time and effort
to make them work effectively. The trade mark UNIX was ubiquitous, but it was
applied to a multitude of different, incompatible products.
In the early 1980's, the market for UNIX systems had grown enough to be
noticed by industry analysts and researchers. Now the question was no
longer "What is a UNIX system?" but "Is a UNIX system suitable
for business and commerce?"
Throughout the early and mid-1980's, the debate about the strengths and
weaknesses of UNIX systems raged, often fuelled by the utterances of the vendors
themselves who sought to protect their profitable proprietary system sales by
talking UNIX systems down. And, in an effort to further differentiate their
competing UNIX system products, they kept developing and adding features of
their own.
In 1984, another factor brought added attention to UNIX systems. A group of
vendors concerned about the continuing encroachment into their markets and
control of system interfaces by the larger companies, developed the concept of
"open systems."
Open systems were those that would meet agreed specifications or standards.
This resulted in the formation of X/Open Company Ltd whose remit was, and today
in the guise of The Open Group remains, to define a comprehensive open systems
environment. Open systems, they declared, would save on costs, attract a wider
portfolio of applications and competition on equal terms. X/Open chose the UNIX
system as the platform for the basis of open systems.
Although UNIX was still owned by AT&T, the company did little
commercially with it until the mid-1980's. Then the spotlight of X/Open showed
clearly that a single, standard version of the UNIX system would be in the wider
interests of the industry and its customers. The question now was,
"which version?".
In a move intended to unify the market in 1987, AT&T announced a pact
with Sun Microsystems, the leading proponent of the Berkeley derived strain of
UNIX. However, the rest of the industry viewed the development with considerable
concern. Believing that their own markets were under threat they clubbed
together to develop their own "new" open systems operating system.
Their new organization was called the Open Software Foundation (OSF). In
response to this, the AT&T/Sun faction formed UNIX International.
The ensuing "UNIX wars" divided the system vendors between these
two camps clustered around the two dominant UNIX system technologies: AT&T's
System V and the OSF system called OSF/1. In the meantime, X/Open Company
held the center ground. It continued the process of standardizing the APIs
necessary for an open operating system specification.
In addition, it looked at areas of the system beyond the operating system
level where a standard approach would add value for supplier and customer alike,
developing or adopting specifications for languages, database connectivity,
networking and mainframe interworking. The results of this work were published
in successive X/Open Portability Guides.
XPG 4 was released in October 1992. During this time, X/Open had put in place
a brand program based on vendor guarantees and supported by testing. Since the
publication of XPG4, X/Open has continued to broaden the scope of open systems
specifications in line with market requirements. As the benefits of the X/Open
brand became known and understood, many large organizations began using X/Open
as the basis for system design and procurement. By 1993, over $7 billion had
been spent on X/Open branded systems. By the start of 1997 that figure has risen
to over $23 billion. To date, procurements referencing the Single UNIX
Specification amount to over $5.2 billion.
In early 1993, AT&T sold it UNIX System Laboratories to Novell which was
looking for a heavyweight operating system to link to its NetWare product range.
At the same time, the company recognized that vesting control of the definition
(specification) and trademark with a vendor-neutral organization would further
facilitate the value of UNIX as a foundation of open systems. So the constituent
parts of the UNIX System, previously owned by a single entity are now quite
separate
In 1995 SCO bought the UNIX Systems business from Novell, and UNIX system
source code and technology continues to be developed by SCO.
In 1995 X/Open introduced the UNIX 95 brand for computer systems guaranteed
to meet the Single UNIX Specification. The Single UNIX Specification brand
program has now achieved critical mass: vendors whose products have met the
demanding criteria now account for the majority of UNIX systems by value.
For over ten years, since the inception of X/Open, UNIX had been closely
linked with open systems. X/Open, now part of The Open Group, continues to
develop and evolve the Single UNIX Specification and associated brand program on
behalf of the IT community. The freeing of the specification of the interfaces
from the technology is allowing many systems to support the UNIX philosiphy of
small, often simple tools , that can be combined in many ways to perform often
complex tasks. The stability of the core interfaces preserves existing
investment, and is allowing development of a rich set of software tools. The Open
Source movement is building on this stable foundation and is creating a
resurgence of enthusiasm for the UNIX philosiphy. In many ways Open Source can
be seen as the true delivery of Open Systems that will ensure it continues to go
from strength to strength.
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