Definition of Berkeley software distribution

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Berkeley Software Distribution
<operating system> (BSD) A family of Unix versions for the DEC VAX and PDP-11, developed by Bill Joy and others at the University of California at Berkeley. BSD Unix incorporates paged virtual memoryTCP/IP networking enhancements, and many other features.
BSD UNIX 4.0 was released on 19 October 1980. The BSD versions (4.1, 4.2, and 4.3) and the commercial versions derived from them (SunOSULTRIXMt. XinuDynix) held the technical lead in the Unix world until AT&T's successful standardisation efforts after about 1986, and are still widely popular.
See also BerzerkeleyUSG Unix.
(1994-11-23)

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Berkeley Software Distribution definition was found in categories: Computer & Internet(1)  Encyclopedia(1)  

Berkeley Software Distribution Definition from Computer & Internet Dictionaries & Glossaries

Internetworking Terms
Berkeley Software Distribution
Implementation of the UNIX operating system and its utilities developed and distributed by the University of California at Berkeley. "BSD" is usually preceded by the version number of the distribution, e.g., "4.3 BSD" is version 4.3 of the Berkeley UNIX distribution. Many Internet hosts run BSD software, and it is the ancestor of many commercial UNIX implementations. [Source: NNSC]


Berkeley Software Distribution Definition from Encyclopedia Dictionaries & Glossaries

Wikipedia English - The Free Encyclopedia
Berkeley Software Distribution
Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD, sometimes called Berkeley Unix) is the UNIX derivative distributed by the University of California, Berkeley, starting in the 1970s.

Historically, BSD has been considered as a branch of UNIX — 'BSD UNIX', because it had shared the initial codebase and design with the original UNIX by AT&T and collaborated on the development in the pioneer days of UNIX. It was widely identified with the versions of UNIX available for workstation-class systems, that can be attributed to the ease with which it could be licensed and the familiarity it found among the founders of many technology companies during the 1980s. The familiarity often came from using similar systems — notably  DEC's ULTRIX and Sun Microsystems SunOS — during their education. Though BSD itself was largely superseded by the  System V Release 4 and OSF/1 systems in the 1990s (both of which incorporated BSD code), the modified codebase as open source — mostly derived from 4.4BSD-Lite have seen increasing use and development recently.


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