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OS-9

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For the Macintosh operating system, see Mac OS 9.
OS-9 is a family of real-time, process-based, multitasking, multi-user, Unix-like operating systems, developed in the 1980s, originally by Microware Systems Corporation. It is currently owned by RadiSys Corporation.

The OS-9 family was popular for general-purpose computing and remains in use in commercial embedded systems and amongst hobbyists. Today, OS-9 is a product name used by both the machine language 68K OS and the non-68K (PowerPC, X86, etc.) version written in C, originally known as OS-9000.

21st century uses

Comparisons with Unix

OS-9's notion of processes and I/O paths is quite similar to that of Unix in nearly all respects, but there are some significant differences:
The module structure requires more explanation:
*OS-9 keeps a "module directory", a memory-resident list of all modules that are in memory either by having been loaded, or by having been found in ROM during an initial scan at boot time.
*When one types a command to the OS-9 shell, it will look first in the current module directory for a module of the specified name and will use it (and increase its link count) if found, or it will look on disk for an appropriately named file if not.
*In OS-9/6809 and OS-9/68000, the module directory is flat, but OS-9000 made the module directory tree-structured. The OS-9000 shell looks in one's alternate module directory for a MODPATH environment variable, analogous to the PATH variable in all versions, indicating the sequence of module directories in which to look for pre-loaded modules.
*Modules are not only used to hold programs, but can also be created on the fly to hold data, and are the way in which OS-9 supports shared memory.
  • OS-9/non-68000 supports POSIX threads. A single process can start any number of threads.
  • History

    The first version ("level one") , which dates back to 1979-80, was written in assembly language for the Motorola 6809 CPU, and provided a single 64KB address space in which all processes ran. It was developed as a supporting operating system for the BASIC09 project, contracted for by Motorola as part of the 6809 development. A later 6809 version ("level two") takes advantage of memory mapping hardware, supported up to 1MB of memory (ca 1980!) in most implementations, included a GUI on some platforms, and so on.

    In 1983, OS-9/6809 was ported to Motorola 68000 assembly language and extended (called OS-9/68K); and a still later (1989) version was rewritten mostly in C for further portability. The portable version was initially called OS-9000 and was released for 80386 PC systems around 1989, then ported to PowerPC around 1995. These later versions lack the memory mapping facilities of OS-9/6809 Level Two simply because they do not need them. They used a single flat address space that all processes share; memory mapping hardware, if present, is mostly used to ensure that processes access only that memory they have the right to access. The 680x0 and 80386 (and later) MPUs all directly support far more than 1MB of memory in any case.

    As a consequence of early pervasive design decisions reflecting the easily used reentrant code capabilities of the 6809 processor, programs intended for OS-9 use reentrant code exclusively. OS-9 also uses position independent code and data because the OS-9 kernel loads programs (including shared code) and allocates data wherever sufficient free space is available. This allows the entire OS and all applications to be placed in ROM or Flash memory, and eases memory management requirements when programs are loaded into RAM, and run. Programs, device drivers, and I/O managers under OS-9 are all 'modules' and can be dynamically loaded and unloaded (subject to link counts) as needed.

    OS-9/6809 ran on Motorola EXORbus systems using the Motorola 6809, SS-50 and SS-50C bus systems from companies such as SWTPC, Tano, Gimix, Midwest Scientific, and Smoke Signal Broadcasting, STD-bus 6809 systems from several suppliers, personal computers such as the Fujitsu FM-7 and FM-77, and many others.

    The best known hardware (due to its low price and broad distribution) was the TRS-80 Color Computer (CoCo) and its clones such as the British Dragon series. Even on the CoCo, a quite minimalist hardware platform, it was possible under OS-9/6809 Level One to have more than one interactive user running concurrently (eg, one on the console keyboard, another in the background, and perhaps a third interactively via a serial connection) as well as several other non-interactive processes. The major limitations (in both access time and maximum capacity) is that no mass storage other than floppy disk were supported by Radio Shack, nor did Radio shack ever release a version of the CoCo with better hardware (ie, more hardware resources). Hard disks were only available from 3rd party sources. Radio Shack retained the games orientation of the machine until it was discountinued.

    On a computer like an SS-50 Gimix, which had more memory, and I/O controllers that did not load the CPU as did the CoCo, multiple users were common, even with only 64KB of RAM (ie, Level One). With hardware supporting memory management circuits (ie, address translation) and OS-9 Level 2, GUI use was successfully routine, even on the minimal resourced CoCo. This was several years prior to successful GUIs on the 16-bit IBM PC class machines, and many years prior to properly working multi-tasking, multi-user, access-controlled operating systems on IBM PC type machines or on any of Apple's machines.

    OS-9's multi-user and multi-tasking capabilities make it usable as a general-purpose interactive computer system. Many third-party interactive applications have been written for it, such as the Dynacalc spreadsheet, the VED text formatter, and the Stylograph and Screditor-3 WYSIWYG word processors. TSC's nroff emulating formatter was ported to OS-9 by MicroWay, as well.

    In 1999, nineteen years after the first release of OS-9, Apple Computer released Mac OS 9. Microware sued Apple that year for trademark infringement, but a judge rejected the claim, dismissing the suit in the following year. The judge said that there is little chance for confusion, but one still periodically finds postings to the news://comp.os.os9 newsgroup from Macintosh users who are, at the very least, confused about the purpose of that group.

    Trivia/Easter Eggs

    The OS-9 version 2.4 manual had this entry describing UNIX in the Glossary of Appendix C of "Using Professional OS-9":

    UNIX:
    An operating system similar to OS-9, but with less functionality and
    special features designed to soak up excess memory, disk space and CPU
    time on large, expensive computers.
    
    This entry was, curiously, removed in the version 3.0 manual.

    The OS-9 shell had an Easter egg in its command history function, invoked by CTRL-A. Upon a fresh boot, the command history was supposedly empty, but if the user typed a single space followed by a backspace, then hit CTRL-A, the names of the authors would be displayed: 'by K. Kaplan, L. Crane, R. Doggett'.

    External links

     


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