Epstein Files Full PDF

CLICK HERE
Technopedia Center
PMB University Brochure
Faculty of Engineering and Computer Science
S1 Informatics S1 Information Systems S1 Information Technology S1 Computer Engineering S1 Electrical Engineering S1 Civil Engineering

faculty of Economics and Business
S1 Management S1 Accountancy

Faculty of Letters and Educational Sciences
S1 English literature S1 English language education S1 Mathematics education S1 Sports Education
teknopedia

  • Registerasi
  • Brosur UTI
  • Kip Scholarship Information
  • Performance
Flag Counter
  1. World Encyclopedia
  2. Version 7 Unix
Version 7 Unix
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1979 minicomputer operating system
This article is about the 1979 Research Unix Operating System. For the Single Unix Specification trademark, see UNIX V7.
Operating system
Version 7 Unix
Version 7 Unix for the PDP-11, running in the SIMH PDP-11 simulator
DeveloperAT&T Bell Laboratories
Written inC, assembly
OS familyUnix
Working stateHistoric
Source modelOriginally proprietary software, now open source
Initial release1979; 47 years ago (1979)
Marketing targetMinicomputers
Available inEnglish
Supported platformsDEC PDP-11, VAX (32v), x86
Kernel typeMonolithic
Default
user interface
Command-line interface (Bourne shell)
LicenseOriginally proprietary commercial software, now free software under a BSD-like license
Preceded byVersion 6 Unix
Succeeded byVersion 8 Unix

Version 7 Unix, also called Seventh Edition Unix, Version 7 or just V7, was an important early release of the Unix operating system. V7, released in 1979, was the last Bell Laboratories release to see widespread distribution before the commercialization of Unix by AT&T Corporation in the early 1980s. V7 was originally developed for Digital Equipment Corporation's PDP-11 minicomputers and was later ported to other platforms.

Overview

[edit]

Unix versions from Bell Labs were designated by the edition of the user's manual with which they were accompanied. Released in 1979, the Seventh Edition was preceded by Sixth Edition, which was the first version licensed to commercial users.[1] Development of the Research Unix line continued with the Eighth Edition, which incorporated development from 4.1BSD, through the Tenth Edition, after which the Bell Labs researchers concentrated on developing Plan 9.

V7 was the first readily portable version of Unix. As this was the era of minicomputers, with their many architectural variations, and also the beginning of the market for 16-bit microprocessors, many ports were completed within the first few years of its release. The first Sun workstations (then based on the Motorola 68000) ran a V7 port by UniSoft;[2] the first version of Microsoft Xenix for the Intel 8086 was derived from V7, and Onyx Systems soon produced a Zilog Z8000 computer running V7. The VAX port of V7, called UNIX/32V, was the direct ancestor of UNIX System V[disputed – discuss] and the popular 4BSD family of Unix systems.

The group at the University of Wollongong that had ported V6 to the Interdata 7/32 ported V7 to that machine as well. Interdata sold the port as Edition VII, making it the first commercial UNIX offering.[citation needed]

DEC distributed their own PDP-11 version of V7, called V7M (for modified). V7M, developed by DEC's original Unix Engineering Group (UEG), contained many enhancements to the kernel for the PDP-11 line of computers including significantly improved hardware error recovery and many additional device drivers.[3] UEG evolved into the group that later developed Ultrix.

Reception

[edit]

Due to its power yet elegant simplicity, many old-time Unix users remember V7 as the pinnacle of Unix development and have dubbed it "the last true Unix", an improvement over all preceding and following Unices. At the time of its release, though, its greatly extended feature set came at the expense of a decrease in performance compared to V6, which was to be corrected largely by the user community.[4]

The number of system calls in Version 7 was only around 50, while later Unix and Unix-like systems continued to add many more:[5]

Version 7 of the Research UNIX System provided about 50 system calls, 4.4BSD provided about 110, and SVR4 had around 120. The exact number of system calls varies depending on the operating system version. More recent systems have seen incredible growth in the number of supported system calls. As of December 2025 Linux 6.18 has 470, and FreeBSD 15 has 598.

Released as free software

[edit]
Screenshot of a PDP-11 booting Version 7 Unix in a simulator

In 2002, Caldera International released[6] V7 as FOSS under a permissive BSD-like software license.[7][8][9]

Bootable images for V7 can still be downloaded today, and can be run on modern hosts using PDP-11 emulators such as SIMH.

An x86 port has been developed by Nordier & Associates.[10]

Paul Allen maintained[when?] several publicly accessible historic computer systems, including a PDP-11/70 running Unix Version 7.

New features in Version 7

[edit]

Many new features were introduced in Version 7.

  • Programming tools: lex, lint, and make.
The Portable C Compiler (pcc) was provided along with the earlier, PDP-11-specific, C compiler by Ritchie.
These first appeared in the Research Unix lineage in Version 7, although early versions of some of them had already been picked up by PWB/UNIX.[11]
  • New commands: the Bourne shell,[11] at, awk, calendar, f77, fortune, tar (replacing the tp command), touch
  • Networking support, in the form of uucp and Datakit[11]
  • New system calls: access, acct, alarm, chroot (originally used to test the V7 distribution during preparation[citation needed]), exece, ioctl, lseek (previously only 24-bit offsets were available), umask, utime
  • New library calls: The new stdio routines,[1] malloc, getenv, popen/system
  • Environment variables
  • A maximum file size of just over one gigabyte,[1] through a system of indirect addressing[12]

Multiplexed files

[edit]

A feature that did not survive long was a second way (besides pipes) to do inter-process communication: multiplexed files. A process could create a special type of file with the mpx system call; other processes could then open this file to get a "channel", denoted by a file descriptor, which could be used to communicate with the process that created the multiplexed file.[13] Mpx files were considered experimental, not enabled in the default kernel,[14] and disappeared from later versions, which offered sockets (BSD) or CB UNIX's IPC facilities (System V) instead[15] (although mpx files were still present in 4.1BSD[16]).

See also

[edit]
  • Version 6 Unix
  • Seventh Edition Unix terminal interface
  • Ancient UNIX

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Fiedler, David (October 1983). "The Unix Tutorial / Part 3: Unix in the Microcomputer Marketplace". BYTE. p. 132. ISSN 0360-5280. OCLC 854802500. Retrieved 2018-09-11.
  2. ^ James W. Birdsall. "The Sun Hardware Reference, Part II". Sun-1's were the very first models ever produced by Sun. The earliest ran Unisoft V7 UNIX; SunOS 1.x was introduced later.
  3. ^ Canter, Fred. "V7M 2.1 SPD" (PDF). Digital Equipment Corp. Retrieved 7 January 2012.
  4. ^ Salus, Peter H. (2005). The Daemon, the Gnu and the Penguin. Groklaw. Archived from the original on 2023-05-21. Retrieved 2015-09-10.
  5. ^ Stevens, W. Richard; Rago, Stephen A. (2013). Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment (3rd ed.). p. 21.
  6. ^ "Caldera releases original unices under BSD license". slashdot.org. 2002.
  7. ^ "UNIX is free!". lemis.com. 2002-01-24.
  8. ^ Broderick, Bill (January 23, 2002). "Dear Unix enthusiasts" (PDF). Caldera International. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 19, 2009.
  9. ^ Darwin, Ian F. (2002-02-03). "Why Caldera Released Unix: A Brief History". Linuxdevcenter. O'Reilly Media. Archived from the original on 2016-01-26. Retrieved 2016-01-19.
  10. ^ "Robert Nordier - UNIX v7/x86".
  11. ^ a b c McIlroy, M. Douglas (1987). A Research Unix reader: annotated excerpts from the Programmer's Manual, 1971–1986 (PDF) (Technical report). Bell Labs. CSTR 139. Retrieved 2018-07-22.
  12. ^ Thompson, Ken (1978). "UNIX Implementation". Bell System Technical Journal. 57 (6): 1931–1946. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1978.tb02137.x. S2CID 19423060.
  13. ^ mpx(2) – Version 7 Unix Programmer's Manual
  14. ^ mkconf(1) – Version 7 Unix Programmer's Manual
  15. ^ Leffler, Samuel J.; Fabry, Robert S.; Joy, William N.; Lapsley, Phil; Miller, Steve; Torek, Chris (1986). An Advanced 4.3 BSD Interprocess Communication Tutorial (Technical report). Computer Systems Research Group, University of California, Berkeley.
  16. ^ Ritchie, Dennis M. (1984). "A Stream Input-Output System". AT&T Bell Laboratories Technical Journal. 63 (8). AT&T: 1897–1910. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.48.3730. doi:10.1002/j.1538-7305.1984.tb00071.x. S2CID 33497669.

External links

[edit]
  • Unix Seventh Edition manual at Plan 9 from Bell Labs
  • Browsable source code at The Unix Heritage Society
  • PDP Unix Preservation Society at The Unix Heritage Society
  • Unix Archive Sites List at The Unix Heritage Society
  • v
  • t
  • e
Unix by Bell Labs
Research
  • Version 6 Unix (1975)
  • Version 7 Unix (1979)
  • UNIX/32V (1979)
Internal
  • CB UNIX (c. 1975)
  • PWB/UNIX (1977)
  • MERT/DMERT/UNIX-RT
Commercial
  • UNIX System III (1982)
  • UNIX System V (1983)
People
  • Stephen R. Bourne
  • Lorinda Cherry
  • Tom Duff
  • Stuart Feldman
  • Brian Kernighan
  • David Korn
  • Mike Lesk
  • John Mashey
  • Douglas McIlroy
  • Lee E. McMahon
  • Joe Ossanna
  • Rob Pike
  • Dennis Ritchie
  • Ken Thompson
Companies
  • AT&T Computer Systems
  • Unix System Laboratories
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Unix and Unix-like operating systems and compatibility layers
  • Architecture
  • Filesystem
  • History
  • Philosophy
  • Security
  • Shell
Operating
systems
BSD
  • 386BSD
    • FreeBSD
    • NetBSD
    • OpenBSD
    • DragonFly BSD
  • Darwin
    • macOS
    • iOS
    • audioOS
    • iPadOS
    • tvOS
    • watchOS
    • bridgeOS
  • DYNIX
  • NeXTSTEP
  • SunOS
  • Ultrix
Linux
  • Android
  • Arch
  • ChromeOS
  • Debian
  • Fedora
  • Gentoo
  • Red Hat
  • Slackware
  • SUSE
  • Ubuntu
  • Other distributions
System V
  • A/UX
  • AIX
  • HP-UX
  • IRIX
  • OpenServer
  • Solaris
    • OpenSolaris
    • Illumos
  • Tru64 UNIX
  • UnixWare
Other
  • Coherent
  • Domain/OS
  • GNU
    • Hurd
  • LynxOS
  • Minix
  • MOS
  • OSF/1
  • QNX
    • BlackBerry 10
  • Research Unix
  • SerenityOS
  • Xenix
  • more...
Compatibility
layers
  • Cygwin
  • Darling
  • Eunice
  • GNV
  • Interix
  • MachTen
  • Microsoft POSIX subsystem
  • MKS Toolkit
  • PASE
  • P.I.P.S.
  • PWS/VSE-AF
  • UNIX System Services
  • UserLAnd Technologies
  • Windows Services for UNIX
  • Windows Subsystem for Linux
  • Italics indicate discontinued systems. Category
  • Commons
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Version_7_Unix&oldid=1330424243"
Categories:
  • Bell Labs Unices
  • Berkeley Software Distribution
  • Discontinued operating systems
  • Free software operating systems
  • 1979 software
Hidden categories:
  • CS1: unfit URL
  • Articles with short description
  • Short description is different from Wikidata
  • All accuracy disputes
  • Articles with disputed statements from December 2025
  • All articles with unsourced statements
  • Articles with unsourced statements from December 2012
  • All articles with vague or ambiguous time
  • Vague or ambiguous time from August 2019
  • Articles with unsourced statements from March 2014

  • indonesia
  • Polski
  • العربية
  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Español
  • Français
  • Italiano
  • مصرى
  • Nederlands
  • 日本語
  • Português
  • Sinugboanong Binisaya
  • Svenska
  • Українська
  • Tiếng Việt
  • Winaray
  • 中文
  • Русский
Sunting pranala
url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url url
Pusat Layanan

UNIVERSITAS TEKNOKRAT INDONESIA | ASEAN's Best Private University
Jl. ZA. Pagar Alam No.9 -11, Labuhan Ratu, Kec. Kedaton, Kota Bandar Lampung, Lampung 35132
Phone: (0721) 702022
Email: pmb@teknokrat.ac.id