V7
-
Version 7, the ancestral UNIX from Bell Labs.
- 4.2BSD
-
This is an implementation standard defined by the
4.2 release of the Berkeley
Software Distribution, released by the
University of California at Berkeley. This was the
first Berkeley release that contained a TCP/IP stack
and the sockets API. 4.2BSD was released in 1983.
Earlier major BSD releases included 3BSD (1980), 4BSD (1980), and 4.1BSD (1981).
- 4.3BSD
-
The successor to 4.2BSD, released in 1986.
- 4.4BSD
-
The successor to 4.3BSD, released in 1993. This was
the last major Berkeley release.
- System
V
-
This is an implementation standard defined by
AT&T's milestone 1983 release of its commercial
System V (five) release. The previous major AT&T
release was System
III, released in 1981.
- System
V release 2 (SVr2)
-
This was the next System V release, made in 1985.
The SVr2 was formally described in the System V Interface Definition version
1 (SVID
1) published in 1985.
- System
V release 3 (SVr3)
-
This was the successor to SVr2, released in 1986.
This release was formally described in the System V Interface Definition version
2 (SVID
2).
- System
V release 4 (SVr4)
-
This was the successor to SVr3, released in 1989.
This version of System V is described in the
"Programmer's Reference Manual: Operating System API
(Intel processors)" (Prentice-Hall 1992, ISBN
0-13-951294-2) This release was formally described in
the System V Interface
Definition version 3 (SVID 3), and is considered
the definitive System V release.
SVID4
-
System V Interface Definition version 4, issued in
1995. Available online at
http://www.sco.com/developers/devspecs/ .
C89
-
This was the first C language standard, ratified by
ANSI (American National Standards Institute) in 1989
(X3.159-1989). Sometimes
this is known as ANSI
C, but since C99 is also an ANSI standard,
this term is ambiguous. This standard was also ratified
by ISO (International Standards Organization) in 1990
(ISO/IEC
9899:1990), and is thus occasionally
referred to as ISO
C90.
C99
-
This revision of the C language standard was
ratified by ISO in 1999 (ISO/IEC 9899:1999).
- POSIX.1-1990
-
"Portable Operating System Interface for Computing
Environments". IEEE 1003.1-1990 part 1, ratified by ISO
in 1990 (ISO/IEC
9945-1:1990). Further information can be
found in Donald Lewine's "POSIX Programmer's Guide"
(O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 1991, ISBN
0-937175-73-0). The term "POSIX" was coined by Richard
Stallman.
- POSIX.2
-
IEEE Std 1003.2-1992, describing commands and
utilities, ratified by ISO in 1993 (ISO/IEC 9945-2:1993).
POSIX.1b (formerly known
as POSIX.4)
-
IEEE Std 1003.1b-1993 describing real-time
facilities for portable operating systems, ratified by
ISO in 1996 (ISO/IEC
9945-1:1996). For further information, see
"POSIX.4: Programming for the real world" by Bill O.
Gallmeister (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. ISBN
1-56592-074-0).
- POSIX.1c
-
IEEE Std 1003.1c-1995 describing the POSIX threads
interfaces.
- POSIX.1d
-
IEEE Std 1003.1c-1999 describing additional
real-time extensions.
- POSIX.1g
-
IEEE Std 1003.1g-2000 describing networking APIs
(including sockets).
- POSIX.1j
-
IEEE Std 1003.1j-2000 describing advanced real-time
extensions.
- POSIX.1-1996
-
A 1996 revision of POSIX.1 which incorporated
POSIX.1b and POSIX.1c.
XPG3
-
Released in 1989, this was the first significant
release of the X/Open
Portability Guide, produced by the X/Open
Company, a multi-vendor consortium. This multi-volume
guide was based on the POSIX standards.
XPG4
-
A revision of the X/Open Portability Guide, released
in 1992.
- XPG4v2
-
A 1994 revision of XPG4. This is also referred to as
Spec 1170, where
1170 referred to the number of interfaces defined by
this standard.
- SUS
(SUSv1)
-
Single UNIX Specification. This was a repackaging of
XPG4v2 and other X/Open standards (X/Open Curses Issue
4 version 2, X/Open Networking Service (XNS) Issue 4).
Systems conforming to this standard can be branded
UNIX 95.
- SUSv2
-
Single UNIX Specification version 2. Sometimes also
referred to as XPG5. This
standard appeared in 1997. Systems conforming to this
standard can be branded UNIX
98. See also
http://www.UNIX-systems.org/version2/ .)
- POSIX.1-2001,
SUSv3
-
This was a 2001 revision and consolidation of the
POSIX.1, POSIX.2, and SUS standards into a single
document, conducted under the auspices of the Austin
group (http://www.opengroup.org/austin/ .) The standard
is available online at
http://www.unix-systems.org/version3/ , and the
interfaces that it describes are also available in the
Linux manual pages package under sections 1p and 3p
(e.g., "man 3p open").
The standard defines two levels of conformance:
POSIX
conformance, which is a baseline set of
interfaces required of a conforming system; and
XSI Conformance,
which additionally mandates a set of interfaces (the
"XSI extension") which are only optional for POSIX
conformance. XSI-conformant systems can be branded
UNIX 03. (XSI
conformance constitutes the Single UNIX Specification version
3 (SUSv3).)
The POSIX.1-2001 document is broken into four
parts:
XBD: Definitions,
terms and concepts, header file specifications.
XSH: Specifications of
functions (i.e., system calls and library functions in
actual implementations).
XCU: Specifications of
commands and utilities (i.e., the area formerly
described by POSIX.2).
XRAT: Informative text
on the other parts of the standard.
POSIX.1-2001 is aligned with C99, so that all of the
library functions standardised in C99 are also
standardised in POSIX.1-1001.
Two Technical Corrigenda (minor fixes and
improvements) of the original 2001 standard have
occurred: TC1 in 2003 (referred to as POSIX.1-2003), and TC2
in 2004 (referred to as POSIX.1-2004).