OK, just remembered. That acronym for the Columbus shared memory was MAUS,
pronounced "mouse". Multi Access User Space.
--Marc
On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 11:01 AM, Clem Cole <clemc(a)ccc.com> wrote:
On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 12:24 PM, Joerg Schilling <schily(a)schily.net>
wrote:
Wasn't shmget() and friends added vor SysV
past 1982?
AT&T Unix naming get's weird as they hire marketing people that don't
quite get it.
V6 -> PWB [1.0 ~77] ---|
| |
+ UNIX/TS[~79] -- + PWB 2.0 [~79] ----- PWB 3.0[~80] <--
internal name of release
The "UNIX Support Group" - aka Summit - is supposed to be creating UNIX
flavors for the different labs and operating companies and Research is to
go back to doing research. Thus PWB 3.0 is supposed to start to be a
"superset" of the features added by the different labs, Columbus, IH,
*etc*... But it took a few spins before all the different hacks,
additions were agreed too and added. There was much fighting inside of
BTL as we see outside.
IIRC an unreleased version of PWB 4.0 had the Columbus features in it as
Horton points out.
Note that AT&T Marketing renames PWB 3.0 -- System III thinking that
"Programmer's Workbench" would be a bad name to sell against IBM, and
this
it the first non-research system for License outside of the the labs. If
you look at the documentation set, et al - it all says PWB 3.0 on the cover
and throughout Also, the BSD vs AT&T wars basically start around this
time....
Roll the clock forward and here is an new problem the PWB 4.0 moniker was
used internally, but AT&T marketing want to get rid of the PWB term - so
the decree comes down the next release is to be called System V.
Certainly by this point, the Columbus changes had been folded into the
main line kernel in Summit by then. But as I said, my memory is what made
it into SystemV and what was in CB-UNIX were similar but a little different.
Clem