The so-called Columbus shared memory feature was in their system in the mid-1970s, along with a few other things such as semaphores and inter-process messages. I seem to recall the acronym MAUG, but I may have a letter or two wrong. Something like Multi Access User ____. The much later System V features had a completely different API.

Hey, Doug, do you remember this? In the early 1970s, there were a couple of UNIX meetings at Murray Hill, at which various Bell Labs groups presented on what they were doing with UNIX, and a group, perhaps Columbus, said that UNIX wasn't capable of doing what they wanted, so they had modified it. You asked the question, "Why are you using UNIX?"

To my knowledge, having witnessed another decade or so of groups trying to bend UNIX to their will, it was the last time the question was asked.

--Marc

On Wed, Feb 1, 2017 at 10:24 AM, Joerg Schilling <schily@schily.net> wrote:
Mary Ann Horton <mah@mhorton.net> wrote:

> I*'m not sure what you mean by CB3, but these features (shared memory,
> semaphores, IPC) were added to CB-UNIX (Bell Labs, Columbus) precisely
> because they were needed in real time telco systems and not preset in
> the versions from New Jersey.  This would have been in the early 1980s.
> When I got there in 1981 I think CB-UNIX was already well established
> and had these features.  (These would show up, ironically, in /usr/ucb,
> which did not stand for Berkeley.)

Wasn't shmget() and friends added vor SysV past 1982?

Jörg

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