12 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
wosch
ac11598c99 I've taken a pass through to add NetBSD and OpenBSD release dates,
and to shuffle the NetBSD and OpenBSD entries in the tree to line
the dates up with FreeBSD.

Submitted by: David Brownlee <abs@anim.dreamworks.com>
1999-04-05 21:51:32 +00:00
wosch
ae75250df3 Misspelt Eighth Edition.
The Eighth Edition is *not* descended from the Seventh Edition.

Submitted by: Greg Lehey <grog@lemis.com>
              and Dennis Ritchie

Here's a quote from Dennis Ritchie, posted to Warren Toomey:
[January 1999]
----- Forwarded message from dmr -----

I also got mail from Norman Wilson today about the discussion.

This is mainly to confirm and fill out details of Wilson's account.

The Eighth Edition system started with (I believe) BSD 4.1c and
the work was done on VAX 11/750s -- our group did not get
a 780 until a while later.

Most of the operating system superstructure of BSD was retained
(in particular no one (even the indefatigable Norman)
wanted to get much into the paging code.  Norman is also
right that the competitor was John Reiser's (and Tom London's)
32V descendant from another group at the Labs.  In structure
this system had a lot to offer (in particular the buffer cache and the page
pool were unified, but it was clear that their work was not being
supported by their own management.  It was used for a while on
our first 750 and also our first 11/780 ("alice", a name that lives
in netnews fame preceding  the reach of Dejanews).

The big change leading to V8 was the scooping-out and replacement of
the character-device and networking part by the streams mechanism.  Later,
Peter Weinberger added the file-system switch that enabled
remote file systems and prescient things ideas like /proc).  Weinberger,
as Norman said, also did a simple-minded FFS.

The TCP/IP stack wasn't very important to us then and it has a mixed and
murky history.  Much of it came from early CSRG work, but it was converted
to a streams approach by Robert Morris and subsequently fiddled over a lot.

Likewise, as Norman said, the applications (/bin and whatnot) were somewhat
of a mixture.  Many were the locally-done versions, some were taken
from BSD in some incarnation, some from System V.

        Dennis

----- End of forwarded message from dmr -----
1999-01-15 17:21:39 +00:00
wosch
0df7b422a9 Added FreeBSD 2.2.8, FreeBSD 3.0, FreeBSD 3.1
Added NetBSD 1.3.3, OpenBSD 2.4
Update URL & Copyright
1999-01-12 16:14:24 +00:00
jkh
63da8b3c12 Adjust family tree to list some freebsd dates as well. 1998-08-19 12:58:38 +00:00
wosch
f6b94f030e Update URL of BSD Hypertext Man Pages. 1998-08-13 10:10:10 +00:00
wosch
cf33162fa6 Add upcoming NetBSD 1.3.2
Submitted by: Sune Stjerneby <stjerneby@usa.net>
1998-05-12 14:33:37 +00:00
wosch
5759523a09 Add upcoming FreeBSD 2.2.7 and FreeBSD 2.2.8
Add NetBSD-1.3.1.
1998-05-12 08:04:27 +00:00
wosch
3d0db0c385 Sync: add FreeBSD 2.2.6, OpenBSD 2.3; Correct 4.4BSD Lite2 integreation links. 1997-12-30 19:27:30 +00:00
wosch
4604acd104 Sync with original source: add FreeBSD 2.2.5, NetBSD 1.3, and OpenBSD 2.2 1997-12-09 22:53:06 +00:00
wosch
198572e61a Sync with original source:
Add Steven M. Schultz for providing 2.11 BSD manual pages.
	Add OpenBSD 2.1, FreeBSD 2.2.2, BSDI 2.0.1 releases.
1997-07-02 14:06:45 +00:00
wosch
c570f5093d Sync with original source.
BTW, the BSD family tree has been reviewed by:
John S. Quarterman, Keith Bostic, Kirk McKusick, Peter H. Salus.
1997-04-19 20:25:36 +00:00
wosch
758b1dfa68 The Unix system family tree, BSD part. This is a local copy of
http://www.de.freebsd.org/de/ftp/unix-stammbaum
1997-03-31 00:06:03 +00:00