Annotation of 43BSDTahoe/man/man0/preface.ms, revision 1.1.1.1

1.1       root        1: .\" Copyright (c) 1980 Regents of the University of California.
                      2: .\" All rights reserved.  The Berkeley software License Agreement
                      3: .\" specifies the terms and conditions for redistribution.
                      4: .\"
                      5: .\"    @(#)preface.ms  6.3 (Berkeley) 5/13/86
                      6: .\"
                      7: .nr PS 9
                      8: .nr VS 11
                      9: .vs 11p
                     10: .ps 9p
                     11: .TL
                     12: PREFACE
                     13: .OH 'Preface''- % -'
                     14: .EH '- % -''Preface'
                     15: .af % i
                     16: .LP
                     17: This update to the 4.2 distribution of August 1983 provides
                     18: substantially improved performance, reliability, and security,
                     19: the addition of Xerox Network System (NS) to the set of networking domains,
                     20: and partial support for the VAX 8600 and MICROVAXII.
                     21: .LP
                     22: We were greatly assisted by the DEC UNIX Engineering group who
                     23: provided two full time employees, Miriam Amos and Kevin Dunlap,
                     24: to work at Berkeley. They were responsible for developing and
                     25: debugging the distributed domain based name server
                     26: and integrating it into the mail system.
                     27: Mt Xinu provided the bug list distribution service as well as
                     28: donating their MICROVAXII port to 4.3BSD.
                     29: Drivers for the MICROVAXII were done by Rick Macklem
                     30: at the University of Guelph.
                     31: Sam Leffler provided valuable assistance and advice with many projects.
                     32: Keith Sklower coordinated with William Nesheim and J. Q. Johnson at Cornell, 
                     33: and Chris Torek and James O'Toole at the University of Maryland
                     34: to do the Xerox Network Systems implementation.
                     35: Robert Elz at the University of Melbourne contributed greatly
                     36: to the performance work in the kernel.
                     37: Donn Seeley and Jay Lepreau at the University of Utah
                     38: relentlessly dealt with a miriad of details;
                     39: Donn completed the unfinished performance work on Fortran 77
                     40: and fixed numerous C compiler bugs.
                     41: Ralph Campbell handled innumerable questions and problem reports
                     42: and had time left to write rdist.
                     43: George Goble was invaluable in shaking out the bugs on his
                     44: production systems long before we were confident enough to
                     45: inflict it on our users.
                     46: Bill Shannon at Sun Microsystems has been helpful in 
                     47: providing us with bug fixes and improvements.
                     48: Tom Ferrin, in his capacity as Board Member of Usenix Association,
                     49: handled the logistics of large-scale reproduction
                     50: of the 4.2BSD and 4.3BSD manuals.
                     51: Mark Seiden helped with the typesetting and indexing of the 4.3BSD manuals.
                     52: Special mention goes to Bob Henry for keeping ucbvax running
                     53: in spite of new and improved software and
                     54: an ever increasing mail, news, and uucp load.
                     55: .LP
                     56: Numerous others contributed their time and energy in creating
                     57: the user contributed software for the release.
                     58: As always, we are grateful to the UNIX user community for 
                     59: encouragement and support. 
                     60: .LP
                     61: Once again, the financial support of the Defense Advanced Research
                     62: Projects Agency is gratefully acknowledged.
                     63: .sp 1
                     64: .in 4i
                     65: .nf
                     66: M. K. McKusick
                     67: M. J. Karels
                     68: J. M. Bloom
                     69: .fi
                     70: .in 0
                     71: .sp 2
                     72: .ne 1i
                     73: .ce
                     74: \fIPreface to the 4.2 Berkeley distribution\fP
                     75: .sp 1
                     76: This update to the 4.1 distribution of June 1981 provides support
                     77: for the VAX 11/730, full networking and interprocess communication
                     78: support, an entirely new file system, and many other new features.
                     79: It is certainly the most ambitious release of software ever prepared
                     80: here and represents many man-years of work.
                     81: Bill Shannon (both at DEC and at Sun Microsystems)
                     82: and Robert Elz of the University
                     83: of Melbourne contributed greatly to this distribution
                     84: through new device drivers and painful debugging episodes.
                     85: Rob Gurwitz of BBN wrote the initial version of the code upon
                     86: which the current networking support is based.
                     87: Eric Allman of Britton-Lee donated countless hours to the mail system.
                     88: Bill Croft (both at SRI and Sun Microsystems) aided in the
                     89: debugging and development of the networking facilities.
                     90: Dennis Ritchie of Bell Laboratories also
                     91: contributed greatly to this distribution, providing
                     92: valuable advise and guidance.  Helge Skrivervik
                     93: worked on the device drivers which enabled
                     94: the distribution to be delivered with a TU58
                     95: console cassette and RX01 console flopppy disk, and
                     96: rewrote major portions of the standalone i/o system
                     97: to support formatting of non-DEC peripherals.
                     98: .LP
                     99: Numerous others contributed their time and energy in organizing
                    100: the user software for release, while many groups of people on
                    101: campus suffered patiently through the low spots of development.
                    102: As always, we are grateful to the UNIX user community for 
                    103: encouragement and support. 
                    104: .LP
                    105: Once again, the financial support of the Defense Advanced Research
                    106: Projects Agency is gratefully acknowledged.
                    107: .sp 1
                    108: .in 4i
                    109: .nf
                    110: S. J. Leffler
                    111: W. N. Joy
                    112: M. K. McKusick
                    113: .fi
                    114: .in 0
                    115: .sp 2
                    116: .ne 1i
                    117: .ce
                    118: \fIPreface to the 4.1 Berkeley distribution\fP
                    119: .sp 1
                    120: This update to the fourth distribution of November 1980 provides
                    121: support for the VAX 11/750 and for the full interconnect architecture
                    122: of the VAX 11/780.  Robert Elz of the University of Melbourne contributed
                    123: greatly to this distribution especially in the boot-time system
                    124: configuration code;  Bill Shannon of DEC supplied us with the
                    125: implementation of DEC standard bad block handling.  The research
                    126: group at Bell Laboratories and DEC Merrimack provided us with access
                    127: to 11/750's in order to debug its support.
                    128: .LP
                    129: Other individuals too numerous to mention provided us with bug reports,
                    130: fixes and other enhancements which are reflected in the system.  We
                    131: are grateful to the UNIX user community for encouragement and
                    132: support.
                    133: .LP
                    134: The financial support of the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency
                    135: in support of this work is gratefully acknowledged.
                    136: .sp 1
                    137: .in 4i
                    138: .nf
                    139: W. N. Joy
                    140: R. S. Fabry
                    141: K. Sklower
                    142: .fi
                    143: .in 0
                    144: .sp 2
                    145: .ne 1i
                    146: .ce
                    147: \fIPreface to the Fourth Berkeley distribution\fP
                    148: .sp 1
                    149: This manual reflects the Berkeley system mid-October, 1980.
                    150: A large amount of tuning has been done in the system since the last release;
                    151: we hope this provides as noticeable an improvement for you as it did for us.
                    152: This release finds the system in transition; a number of facilities
                    153: have been added in experimental versions (job control, resource limits)
                    154: and the implementation of others is imminent (shared-segments, higher
                    155: performance from the file system, etc.).
                    156: Applications which use facilities that are in transition should be aware
                    157: that some of the system calls and library routines will change
                    158: in the near future.  We have tried to be conscientious and make it
                    159: very clear where this is likely.
                    160: .LP
                    161: A new group has been formed
                    162: at Berkeley, to assume responsibility for the future
                    163: development and support of a version of UNIX on the VAX.
                    164: The group has received funding from the
                    165: Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
                    166: to supply a standard version of the system to DARPA contractors.
                    167: The same version of the system will be made available to other licensees
                    168: of UNIX on the VAX for a duplication charge.
                    169: We gratefully acknowledge
                    170: the support of this contract.
                    171: .LP
                    172: We wish to acknowledge the contribution of a number of individuals to
                    173: the the system.
                    174: .LP
                    175: We would especially like to thank
                    176: Jim Kulp of IIASA,
                    177: Laxenburg Austria and his colleagues,
                    178: who first put job control facilities into UNIX;
                    179: Eric Allman, Robert Henry, Peter Kessler and Kirk McKusick, who
                    180: contributed major new pieces of software;
                    181: Mark Horton, who contributed to the improvement of facilities and
                    182: substantially improved the quality of our bit-mapped fonts,
                    183: our hardware support staff:
                    184: Bob Kridle,
                    185: Anita Hirsch,
                    186: Len Edmondson
                    187: and
                    188: Fred Archibald,
                    189: who helped us to debug a number of new peripherals;
                    190: Ken Arnold who did much of the leg-work in getting this version of the
                    191: manual prepared, and did the final editing of sections 2-6,
                    192: some special individuals within Bell Laboratories:
                    193: Greg Chesson,
                    194: Stuart Feldman,
                    195: Dick Haight,
                    196: Howard Katseff,
                    197: Brian Kernighan,
                    198: Tom London,
                    199: John Reiser,
                    200: Dennis Ritchie,
                    201: Ken Thompson,
                    202: and
                    203: Peter Weinberger
                    204: who helped out by answering questions;
                    205: our excellent local DEC field service people,
                    206: Kevin Althaus and Frank Chargois
                    207: who kept our machine running virtually all the time, and fixed it quickly
                    208: when things broke;
                    209: and,
                    210: Mike Accetta of Carnegie-Mellon University,
                    211: Robert Elz of the University of Melbourne,
                    212: George Goble of Purdue University,
                    213: and
                    214: David Kashtan of the Stanford Research Institute
                    215: for their technical advice and support.
                    216: .LP
                    217: Special thanks to Bill Munson of DEC who helped by augmenting
                    218: our computing facility
                    219: and to Eric Allman for carefully proofreading the
                    220: ``last'' draft of the manual and finding the bugs which we knew were
                    221: there but couldn't see. 
                    222: .LP
                    223: We dedicate this to the memory of David Sakrison, late chairman of our
                    224: department, who gave his support to the establishment of our VAX
                    225: computing facility, and to our department as a whole.
                    226: .sp 1
                    227: .in 4i
                    228: .nf
                    229: W. N. Joy
                    230: \v'-3p'\h'2p'\*:\v'3p'\h'-2p'O. Babao\*~glu
                    231: R. S. Fabry
                    232: K. Sklower
                    233: .fi
                    234: .in 0
                    235: .sp 2
                    236: .ne 1i
                    237: .ce
                    238: \fIPreface to the Third Berkeley distribution\fP
                    239: .sp 1
                    240: This manual reflects the state of the Berkeley system, December 1979.
                    241: We would like to thank all the people at Berkeley who have contributed to
                    242: the system, and particularly thank
                    243: Prof. Richard Fateman for creating and administrating a hospitable environment,
                    244: Mark Horton who helped prepare this manual, and
                    245: Eric Allman, Bob Kridle, Juan Porcar
                    246: and Richard Tuck for their contributions to the kernel.
                    247: .LP
                    248: The cooperation of Bell Laboratories in providing us with an early version of
                    249: \s-2UNIX\s0/32V is greatly appreciated.  We would especially like to thank
                    250: Dr. Charles Roberts of Bell Laboratories for helping us obtain this release,
                    251: and acknowledge
                    252: T. B. London,
                    253: J. F. Reiser,
                    254: K. Thompson,
                    255: D. M. Ritchie,
                    256: G. Chesson and
                    257: H. P. Katseff
                    258: for their advice and support.
                    259: .sp 1
                    260: .in 4i
                    261: W. N. Joy
                    262: .br
                    263: \v'-3p'\h'2p'\*:\v'3p'\h'-2p'O. Babao\*~glu
                    264: .in 0
                    265: .sp 2
                    266: .ne 1i
                    267: .ce
                    268: \fIPreface to the UNIX/32V distribution\fP
                    269: .sp 1
                    270: The
                    271: .UX
                    272: operating system for the VAX*-11
                    273: .FS
                    274: *VAX and PDP are Trademarks of Digital Equipment Corporation.
                    275: .FE
                    276: provides substantially the same facilities as the
                    277: \s-2UNIX\s0
                    278: system for the PDP*-11.
                    279: .LP
                    280: We acknowledge the work of many who came before us, and particularly thank
                    281: G. K. Swanson, W. M. Cardoza, D. K. Sharma, and J. F. Jarvis for assistance
                    282: with the implementation for the VAX-11/780.
                    283: .sp 1
                    284: .in 4i
                    285: T. B. London
                    286: .br
                    287: J. F. Reiser
                    288: .in 0
                    289: .sp 2
                    290: .ne 1i
                    291: .ce
                    292: \fIPreface to the Seventh Edition\fP
                    293: .sp 1
                    294: .LP
                    295: Although this Seventh Edition no longer bears their byline,
                    296: Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie remain the fathers
                    297: and preceptors of the
                    298: \s-2UNIX\s0
                    299: time-sharing system.
                    300: Many of the improvements here described bear their mark.
                    301: Among many, many other people who have contributed to
                    302: the further flowering of
                    303: \s-2UNIX\s0,
                    304: we wish especially to
                    305: acknowledge the contributions of
                    306: A. V. Aho,
                    307: S. R. Bourne,
                    308: L. L. Cherry,
                    309: G. L. Chesson,
                    310: S. I. Feldman,
                    311: C. B. Haley,
                    312: R. C. Haight,
                    313: S. C. Johnson,
                    314: M. E. Lesk,
                    315: T. L. Lyon,
                    316: L. E. McMahon,
                    317: R. Morris,
                    318: R. Muha,
                    319: D. A. Nowitz,
                    320: L. Wehr,
                    321: and
                    322: P. J. Weinberger.
                    323: We appreciate also 
                    324: the effective advice and criticism of
                    325: T. A. Dolotta,
                    326: A. G. Fraser,
                    327: J. F. Maranzano,
                    328: and
                    329: J. R. Mashey;
                    330: and we remember the important work of
                    331: the late Joseph F. Ossanna.
                    332: .sp 1
                    333: .in 4i
                    334: B. W. Kernighan
                    335: .br
                    336: M. D. McIlroy
                    337: .in 0

unix.superglobalmegacorp.com

This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.