I think the 'd' slipped in during some editing. I've removed it. cagbef it
is.
Don't confuse quiz answers with absolute truth. All history is fiction to
some extent.
-rob
On Thu, Jan 23, 2020 at 7:43 AM Clem Cole <clemc(a)ccc.com> wrote:
On Wed, Jan 22, 2020 at 2:42 PM Warner Losh <imp(a)bsdimp.com> wrote:
Berkeley's license was executed in January 74, so it might be on the
list, unless there was a big delay.
That makes sense.
In addition to the Nov 1975 CACM paper,
there's CAC 155, published by the
University of Illinois on 3/15/75 which pre-dates the 6th edition by a few
months. You can read it here
https://www.ideals.illinois.edu/bitstream/handle/2142/32547/networkunixsyst…
if
you'd like.
Thanks, that tells us it was 5th (BTW the PDF is missing page 1 in the
scan - although I suspect the missing info can be gleaned from RFC 681)
BTW: There is another hint in CAC 155/RFC 681. The line on page 2 that
reads: "since the user is allowed only sixteen open files." My memory
is V6 allowed more than 16, over 20 is my memory; but we would have to look
at the structure to see what it is defined as.
RFC 681, dated March 18th, 1975, is another instance of an edited CAC 155
report (it seems, I've not looked at them exactly, just a quick glance)
that talks about this work. It's the earliest mention of Unix in an RFC
(the next one isn't until 2 years later for an email address for Dave
Crocker DCrocker@Rand-Unix in RFC 724 in May 1977 after which it
explodes in references).
And that pretty much syncs with my memory of the time.