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Unix System Laboratories

Unix System Laboratories (USL), sometimes written UNIX System Laboratories to follow relevant trademark guidelines of the time, was an American software laboratory and product development company that existed from 1989 through 1993. At first wholly, and then majority, owned by AT&T, it was responsible for the development and maintenance of one of the main branches of the Unix operating system, the UNIX System V Release 4 source code product. Through Univel, a partnership with Novell, it was also responsible for the development and production of the UnixWare packaged operating system for Intel architecture. In addition it developed Tuxedo, a transaction processing monitor, and was responsible for certain products related to the C++ programming language. USL was based in Summit, New Jersey, and its CEOs were Larry Dooling followed by Roel Pieper.

UNIX System Laboratories
USL logo as it appeared atop the headquarters building in Summit, New Jersey
TypePrivate
Industry
FoundedNovember 1989 (1989-11)
FateAcquired by Novell June 1993 (1993-06)
Headquarters,
United States
Number of locations
3
Key people
Products
  • Operating systems
  • transaction monitors
  • C++ language products
Revenue$100 million (1991, equivalent to $215 million today)
Number of employees
500 (1991)
Divisions
  • UNIX System V Software
  • Open Solutions Software

Created from earlier AT&T entities, USL was, as industry writer Christopher Negus has observed, the culmination of AT&T's long involvement in Unix, "a jewel that couldn't quite find a home or a way to make a profit."[1] USL was sold to Novell in 1993.

Origins as subsidiary of AT&T Edit

AT&T announced the creation of the UNIX Software Operation (USO) – a separate and distinct AT&T business unit responsible for the development, marketing, and licensing of UNIX System V software – in January 1989.[2] This was done, as a subsequent press release stated, "in order to separate AT&T's UNIX System source code business from its computer systems business,"[3] the latter a reference to AT&T Computer Systems. USO included the AT&T Data Systems Group organizations responsible for UNIX product planning and management, licensing, and marketing.[4] Peter J. Weinberger was named chief scientist of USO while also retaining his job in the computing science research center at Bell Labs; no other Bell Labs assets were transferred to USO.[4] The head of USO was Larry Dooling, who had been a vice-president in sales and marketing in the AT&T Data Systems Group.[4]

Unlike the original Unix work, which had been done in the Bell Labs facility in Murray Hill, USO and the commercialization work was done a few miles away in Summit, New Jersey.[1][5] This AT&T Bell Labs location was known as SF for Summit Facility.[6]

UNIX System Laboratories, Inc., came into being as a separate subsidiary of AT&T in November 1989 and was assigned all U.S.-based AT&T Unix and USO assets.[3] However USO continued to operate as USO until June 1990, when the reincorporation of AT&T's European and Asian Unix business operations as wholly owned subsidiaries of USL was completed.[2] At that point the UNIX Software Operation was publicly rebranded as UNIX System Laboratories.[3] Again, a point of emphasis was to separate the Unix-based business from AT&T's hardware-based business.[7] The subsidiaries were known as UNIX System Laboratories Europe, Ltd., sited near Ealing Broadway in London, and UNIX System Laboratories Pacific, Ltd., located in Shiba, Tokyo.[8] Dooling was named the initial president of USL, continuing from his position at USO.[3]

These organizational changes were taking place in the context of the open systems movement and the ongoing Unix wars. In consequence, the pro-AT&T side Unix International (as opposed to the anti-AT&T side Open Software Foundation) declared that "In the last 18 months AT&T has made good on its commitment to treat UNIX System as the industry asset it is and to open the UNIX System V development process to the entire industry."[3]

Unix System V work Edit

 
Multi-part room numbers were characteristic of the AT&T heritage of the USL office in Summit

One unit within USL, called the UNIX System V Software business unit and headed by Michael J. DeFazio, was responsible for the development of the UNIX System V base technology.[3] DeFazio had held a similar role within USO.[4] The USO/USL staff was heavily involved in the creation of UNIX System V Release 4, which shipped in 1989 and was a joint project with Sun Microsystems.[9] This work incorporated technology from a variety of Unix-based efforts, including UNIX System V, BSD, and Xenix.[9] There were additions and new innovations as well from both the AT&T and Sun sides. System V Release 4 debuted at the Unix Expo trade show in New York in November 1989, in the form of source code availability for it as well as demonstrations from Unix International of SVR4-based applications running on seventeen different vendor platforms.[10] End-user versions of Release 4 became available during 1990.[11]

Next USL engaged in an especially arduous effort into trying to satisfy the requirements of the National Computer Security Center's Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria ("Orange Book") to the B2 level.[12] This manifested itself in System V Release 4.1 ES (Enhanced Security), which also included generally useful features such as support for dynamic loading of kernel modules.[13]

Following that, USL worked on System V Release 4.2, which was released in June 1992.[14] InfoWorld characterized this effort as "at the core of an assault on the enterprise networking market," with a modular architecture that stressed improved support for enterprise- and network-level administration, drivers for both Token Ring and Ethernet, and a greater ability to run on low-end machine configurations.[14]

Multiprocessing became the focus of the final USL-based OEM release of System V, which was Release 4.2MP, released in December 1993.[9]

USL continued the publication of an early Unix standard, the System V Interface Definition (SVID).[11] Moreover, the SVID became one of the bases for the more important, vendor-independent POSIX standard for Unix, which System V Release 4 releases also conformed to, as well as the later Single UNIX Specification.[11]

USL produced many books documenting various aspects of Unix System V.[15] USL also provided some training and consulting services for Unix systems.[16]

Chorus and Ouverture Edit

 
USL Europe's offices were in Ealing, London (in the building on the right side after the road bends, as seen here in 2009)

In 1991, USL forged an arrangement with the French company Chorus Systèmes SA to engage in cooperative work on the Chorus microkernel technology, with the idea of supporting SVR4 on a microkernel and thereby making it more scalable and better suited for parallel and distributed applications.[17][18] As part of this, USL took a $1 million stake in Chorus Systèmes.[17] Much of the USL Chorus work was done at the USL Europe facility in London.[19] By 1993 the work was still ongoing, with questions of industry standardization of interfaces arising.[20] Unisys was also part of the collaboration effort.[18] Announcements made during 1993 promised an OEM release in 1994 and a general availability release in 1995.[18]

This was part of the larger Ouverture project, a $14 million effort that was itself part of the European Strategic Program on Research in Information Technology (ESPRIT), overseen by the European Commission.[21]

Other software work Edit

 
USL had a library that was connected to the full AT&T/Bell Labs research system

Another unit within USL, called the Open Solutions Software business unit and headed by Joel A. Appelbaum, was responsible for other system software that in some way worked in conjunction with Unix.[3]

The Tuxedo transaction processing middleware had also been transferred from elsewhere in AT&T to USL. It had originated as the Loop Maintenance Operations System (LMOS) followed by the Unix Transaction System (UNITS) and was used for projects internally within AT&T. It was then renamed by USL and, as Release 4.0 of what was now called Tuxedo, in 1989 was offered for the first time as a commercial product.[22]

USL also developed and marketed the OSI Communications Platform, which was an implementation of the OSI protocols for Unix-based networking.[23]

C++ language work Edit

There was also a languages department at Unix System Laboratories, which was responsible for the C language compiler and development tools used to build Unix.[4] Moreover, it was responsible for commercial sales related to the C++ language, including development tools such as the Cfront compiler that had come from AT&T.[24] Indeed, the paper describing one of the first implementations of automatic instantiation of C++ templates in a C++ compiler had as lead author an engineer associated with Unix System Laboratories.[25][26] And Margaret A. Ellis, co-author with C++ creator Bjarne Stroustrup of The Annotated C++ Reference Manual, an important publication in the history of the language, was a USL software engineer.[24]

 
A software developer working in the Summit building

USL also continued the development of, and attempted to market, C++ Standard Components, an early instance of a C++ software foundation library that supported container classes and various other computer science-based functionality such as finite-state machines, graphs, and regular expressions.[27][28] The Standard Components originated in conjunction with early developments in the C++ language in Bell Labs and became widely used internally within AT&T,[24] by one estimate being used in hundreds of projects.[29] They represented an effort among early library writers there to design reusable code using C++ idioms.[26] Unlike its other offerings, which were sold to OEM vendors and resellers, here USL sold to end users.[28] The initial release of USL C++ Standard Components to the general computing industry was labelled as Release 2.0 and occurred in 1991;[30] it suffered from an awkward mechanism to get around the lack of templates in the container classes.[28] That was followed by Release 3.0, which added support for templates, in 1992.[30]

Some within USL believed that C++ Standard Components could become a language standard as well as a significant source of revenue,[24] but it had trouble gaining traction outside of AT&T. Stroustrup would later describe these goals as "a misguided belief".[24] In any case, all such libraries were soon eclipsed by the radically different Standard Template Library (STL), which became the standardized foundation library for the C++ language.[31] As it happens, one of the Standard Components, array_alg, was designed by the creator of STL, Alex Stepanov, and can be considered an early predecessor of STL.[32]

Partial spinoff from AT&T Edit

 
USL presentation folder, made starting 1991

In April 1991, USL became partly independent of AT&T when about 22 percent of it, worth about $65 million, was sold to eleven outside computer vendors: Amdahl, Motorola, Novell, Sun, ICL, Olivetti, Fujitsu, NEC, OKI Electric, Toshiba, and the Institute for Information Industry.[33] There was a stated goal to lessen the control AT&T had over Unix, which would lead to USL becoming a publicly owned company within three years.[33] An AT&T executive said, "AT&T is convinced that the best way to nurture the growth of the open systems movement and to share into it ourselves is to establish an independent Unix Systems Laboratory with the technical guidance of Unix International and the business advice of investors who will ensure that USL is run properly and profitably."[23]

By this point USL had some 500 employees, 2400 customers, and annual revenue around the $100 million mark.[33] AT&T said that USL had been profitable since its inception in 1989.[33]

USL got a new president and CEO in November 1991 when Dooling was replaced by the Dutchman Roel Pieper, formerly chief technical officer of Software AG.[34]

USL was aggressive in defending its perceived intellectual property rights, initiating as the plaintiff a lawsuit in 1992 against Berkeley Software Design makers of and the Regents of the University of California over copyrights and trademarks related to Unix.[35] The case was known as UNIX System Laboratories, Inc. v. Berkeley Software Design, Inc. and in it USL asked the court for a preliminary injunction that would bar the Berkeley firm and the university from distributing their Net/2 operating system release, which was implied to be Unix, until the case was concluded.[36] In response the university filed a countersuit against AT&T for alleged breaches in the licensing agreement the two parties had.[35] (The case was settled out of court in January 1994.[36])

Univel and UnixWare Edit

In December 1991, USL combined with Novell to form the Univel joint venture.[37] The goal was to make the "Destiny" desktop for Intel commodity hardware, which would be USL's first shrink-wrapped binary product, with the necessary resources for sales, marketing, and distribution being moved into the new entity.[38]Kanwal Rekhi, a Novell vice president who helped launch Univel, said the goal was to create a "Unix for the masses".[39]

A May 1992 InfoWorld interview with Pieper captured some of the ambitions of USL at the time, as Pieper said: "It is not just a new Unix version; rather it is the creation of an entire model change for Unix that says there are better ways to bring the benefits and features of Unix into a distributed PC environment. The earlier model did not allow Unix to play in the low-end market because of its size, complexity, and cost. The new model calls for business partnerships, such as the one with Novell, to deliver Unix to the commercial marketplace."[40] In another interview around the same time, Pieper predicted that if the new Unix became a success, USL revenue could increase ten-fold to $1 billion within five years.[41] Pieper acknowledged that similar Unix efforts had failed in the past, but said that the presence of Novell's PC presence and marketing experience as well as the interest of Intel would make the difference this time.[40] Indeed, Pieper had aspirations to be another Bill Gates: "I want to be in the same position."[41]

UnixWare 1.0, which is what Destiny became a product as, was announced on October 12, 1992.[42] It was based on the Unix System V release 4.2 kernel. The MoOLIT toolkit was used for the windowing system, allowing the user to choose between an OPEN LOOK or MOTIF-like look and feel at run time. In order to make the system more robust on commodity desktop hardware the Veritas VXFS journaling file system was used in place of the UFS file system used in SVR4. Networking support in UnixWare included both TCP/IP and interoperability with Novell's NetWare protocols of IPX/SPX.[43] The former were the standard among Unix users at the time of development, while PC networking was much more commonly based on the highly successful NetWare product; indeed, the base level of the Personal Edition of UnixWare did not even have TCP/IP included, while the Application Server version did.[43]

Initial sales of UnixWare were underwhelming, with Unix facing a difficult time in the PC market.[44] This was in part because Windows already had a stronghold there, in part because USL's third-party licensing payment obligations made low-cost sales uneconomical, and in part because of a lack of applications to run on UnixWare.[1]

Acquisition by Novell Edit

 
The Summit building in the Novell Unix Systems Group era

On December 21, 1992, it was announced that Novell would acquire Unix System Laboratories, and all of its Unix assets, including all copyrights, trademarks, and licensing contracts, for some $335 million in stock.[5] The news led to large headlines of the "NOVELL BUYS UNIX" variety.[45] The measure was intended to help Novell compete against Microsoft, which was on the verge of including networking as a built-in feature of Windows in conjunction with the Windows NT server.[5][44] It was also an outgrowth of Novell chief Ray Noorda's theories about coopetition in a technology industry.[46][47]

The move seemed like a long shot to analysts, with a commentary piece in Computerworld outlining the obstacles to success and stating, "Saying this deal has the technical potential to counter Windows NT is very different from predicting that it will do so."[44]

There was negative reaction to the acquisition from USL shareholders, USL employees, and members of Unix International.[46] Noorda had to emphasize that Novell had no plans to move USL operations from New Jersey to Utah, where Novell was based.[46] And Noorda and Pieper had to travel to Japan to reassure USL shareholders and investors there.[46]

Nonetheless, the deal was finalized in June 1993.[16] Novell created the Unix Systems Group to contain the new business, which also absorbed the Univel venture.[48] Rekhi was named as the head of the Unix Systems Group.[49] Pieper, who had been assigned under Rekhi with little role to play, soon departed, leaving Novell in August 1993.[50][49]

The USL Europe office in London was moved into Novell's facility in Bracknell, Berkshire.[51] The Chorus work it was doing became the basis for the Novell "SuperNOS", a project to create a microkernel-based, UnixWare–NetWare hybrid, network operating system.[52]

Legacy Edit

The acquisition of USL never really worked out for Novell,[45] and was followed by Novell's misguided acquisitions of WordPerfect and Quattro Pro in another attempt to compete head-to-head with Microsoft.[53] In particular, the "SuperNOS" project never achieved fruition.[54]

Novell announced the sale of Unix to the Santa Cruz Operation, coincident with a licensing arrangement with Hewlett-Packard, in September 1995.[55] Following another change of ownership, the renamed The SCO Group and the Unix System V source base became elements of the SCO–Linux disputes.[45] After The SCO Group went bankrupt, the SCO products using the Unix System V source base were purchased by UnXis, later renamed to Xinuos.[56]

Although it never took off within the industry, C++ Standard Components remained in the development kits for Novell UnixWare, later SCO UnixWare, into the 2000s.[27] Tuxedo was acquired by BEA Systems in the 1990s, and then upon that firm being acquired became part of Oracle Fusion Middleware.[57]

In the view of writer Christopher Negus, "The UNIX Laboratory was considered a jewel that couldn't quite find a home or a way to make a profit. As it moved between Bell Laboratories and other areas of AT&T, its name changed several times. It is probably best remembered by the name it had as it began its spin-off from AT&T: UNIX System Laboratories (USL)."[1] However Negus believes that in three crucial respects USL's actions – in continuing to release a source code product to its partners, in working to define industry standards such as POSIX, and in making decisions on the direction of Unix based on technical merit not corporate advantage – paved the way for the rise of a Unix-like entity such as the Linux operating system, and that this beneficial historical role has been obscured by the SCO–Linux controversies.[1]

See also Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ a b "Signals". Signals. 1991. pp. 61–66.
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  6. ^ Wagner, Neal R.; Putter, Paul S. (January 1989). "Error Detecting Decimal Digits". Communications of the ACM. 32 (1): 106–110. doi:10.1145/63238.63246. S2CID 805863.
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  22. ^ Andrade, Juan M.; Carges, Mark T.; Dwyer, Terence J.; Felts, Stephen D. (1996). The TUXEDO System: Software for Constructing and Managing Distributed Business Applications. Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley. pp. xxxiii–xxxvi. ISBN 9780201634938.
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  25. ^ McCluskey, Glen; Murray, Robert B. (December 1992). "Template Instantiation For C++". SIGPLAN Notices. 27 (12): 47–56. doi:10.1145/142181.142195. S2CID 27330199.
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  28. ^ a b c Leggett, Bill (June 1992). "Product Review: The USL C++ Standard Components Release 2 (end user package)". C++ Report. pp. 69–73.
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  32. ^ "Alexander A. Stepanov". stepanovpapers.com. October 6, 2016. from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved December 15, 2017. and "No More Array Errors (Part II) - Array_alg(C++)". The SCO Group. June 2, 2005. from the original on September 10, 2018. Retrieved April 28, 2018.
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  38. ^ "Unix Labs and Novell plan join venture, reveal bones of mass distribution alliance". Computergram International. Computer Business Review. October 24, 1991.
  39. ^ Wylie, Margie (April 13, 1992). "Univel developing user-friendly Unix". Network World. p. 13. from the original on July 26, 2020. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  40. ^ a b "USL's Pieper readies Unix for the PC network market". InfoWorld. May 11, 1992. p. 106. from the original on March 28, 2021. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  41. ^ a b Schwartz, Evan I. (June 22, 1992). "A Unix For The Masses?". Bloomberg News. from the original on June 24, 2018. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  42. ^ Gerber, Cheryl (September 28, 1992). "Novell sees the future in Unix; OS/2 rebuffed". InfoWorld. p. 1. from the original on March 28, 2021. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  43. ^ a b Radding, Alan (June 28, 1993). "UnixWare: Bringing shrink-wrapped Unix to the masses". InfoWorld. pp. 65–66. from the original on February 27, 2017. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  44. ^ a b c Babcock, Charles (January 11, 1993). "Novell's long shot". Computerworld. p. 34. from the original on March 28, 2021. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  45. ^ a b c Strom, David (November 5, 2003). "Novell Buys Unix, Again". CRN. from the original on November 28, 2020. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  46. ^ a b c d "Novell, Unix Labs Try to Reassure Japanese on the Merger". Computergram International. Computer Business Review. March 4, 1993.
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  50. ^ "News Shorts: Pieper bids adieu". Computerworld. September 6, 1993. p. 16. from the original on March 28, 2021. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  51. ^ "Novell Continues Restructuring". Telecompaper. September 10, 1993. from the original on December 3, 2020. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  52. ^ "Novell ready to embark on the road to object orientation". Computergram International. Computer Business Review. April 11, 1995.
  53. ^ Fisher, Lawrence M. (February 1, 1996). "Novell to Sell Wordperfect for $115 Million". The New York Times. from the original on June 22, 2019. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
  54. ^ Politis, David L. (March 29, 2004). "Novell regaining prior glory". Deseret News. from the original on March 28, 2021. Retrieved March 28, 2021.
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  57. ^ "Oracle Tuxedo". Oracle. from the original on May 5, 2018. Retrieved May 5, 2018.

External links Edit

  • History and Timeline from The Open Group

unix, system, laboratories, sometimes, written, unix, system, laboratories, follow, relevant, trademark, guidelines, time, american, software, laboratory, product, development, company, that, existed, from, 1989, through, 1993, first, wholly, then, majority, o. Unix System Laboratories USL sometimes written UNIX System Laboratories to follow relevant trademark guidelines of the time was an American software laboratory and product development company that existed from 1989 through 1993 At first wholly and then majority owned by AT amp T it was responsible for the development and maintenance of one of the main branches of the Unix operating system the UNIX System V Release 4 source code product Through Univel a partnership with Novell it was also responsible for the development and production of the UnixWare packaged operating system for Intel architecture In addition it developed Tuxedo a transaction processing monitor and was responsible for certain products related to the C programming language USL was based in Summit New Jersey and its CEOs were Larry Dooling followed by Roel Pieper UNIX System LaboratoriesUSL logo as it appeared atop the headquarters building in Summit New JerseyTypePrivateIndustrySoftware productsInformation technology consultingFoundedNovember 1989 1989 11 FateAcquired by Novell June 1993 1993 06 HeadquartersSummit New Jersey United StatesNumber of locations3Key peopleRoel PieperMichael J DeFazioLarry DoolingProductsOperating systemstransaction monitorsC language productsRevenue 100 million 1991 equivalent to 215 million today Number of employees500 1991 DivisionsUNIX System V SoftwareOpen Solutions SoftwareCreated from earlier AT amp T entities USL was as industry writer Christopher Negus has observed the culmination of AT amp T s long involvement in Unix a jewel that couldn t quite find a home or a way to make a profit 1 USL was sold to Novell in 1993 Contents 1 Origins as subsidiary of AT amp T 2 Unix System V work 3 Chorus and Ouverture 4 Other software work 5 C language work 6 Partial spinoff from AT amp T 7 Univel and UnixWare 8 Acquisition by Novell 9 Legacy 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksOrigins as subsidiary of AT amp T EditSee also History of Unix and Unix Wars AT amp T announced the creation of the UNIX Software Operation USO a separate and distinct AT amp T business unit responsible for the development marketing and licensing of UNIX System V software in January 1989 2 This was done as a subsequent press release stated in order to separate AT amp T s UNIX System source code business from its computer systems business 3 the latter a reference to AT amp T Computer Systems USO included the AT amp T Data Systems Group organizations responsible for UNIX product planning and management licensing and marketing 4 Peter J Weinberger was named chief scientist of USO while also retaining his job in the computing science research center at Bell Labs no other Bell Labs assets were transferred to USO 4 The head of USO was Larry Dooling who had been a vice president in sales and marketing in the AT amp T Data Systems Group 4 Unlike the original Unix work which had been done in the Bell Labs facility in Murray Hill USO and the commercialization work was done a few miles away in Summit New Jersey 1 5 This AT amp T Bell Labs location was known as SF for Summit Facility 6 UNIX System Laboratories Inc came into being as a separate subsidiary of AT amp T in November 1989 and was assigned all U S based AT amp T Unix and USO assets 3 However USO continued to operate as USO until June 1990 when the reincorporation of AT amp T s European and Asian Unix business operations as wholly owned subsidiaries of USL was completed 2 At that point the UNIX Software Operation was publicly rebranded as UNIX System Laboratories 3 Again a point of emphasis was to separate the Unix based business from AT amp T s hardware based business 7 The subsidiaries were known as UNIX System Laboratories Europe Ltd sited near Ealing Broadway in London and UNIX System Laboratories Pacific Ltd located in Shiba Tokyo 8 Dooling was named the initial president of USL continuing from his position at USO 3 These organizational changes were taking place in the context of the open systems movement and the ongoing Unix wars In consequence the pro AT amp T side Unix International as opposed to the anti AT amp T side Open Software Foundation declared that In the last 18 months AT amp T has made good on its commitment to treat UNIX System as the industry asset it is and to open the UNIX System V development process to the entire industry 3 Unix System V work Edit nbsp Multi part room numbers were characteristic of the AT amp T heritage of the USL office in SummitMain article UNIX System V One unit within USL called the UNIX System V Software business unit and headed by Michael J DeFazio was responsible for the development of the UNIX System V base technology 3 DeFazio had held a similar role within USO 4 The USO USL staff was heavily involved in the creation of UNIX System V Release 4 which shipped in 1989 and was a joint project with Sun Microsystems 9 This work incorporated technology from a variety of Unix based efforts including UNIX System V BSD and Xenix 9 There were additions and new innovations as well from both the AT amp T and Sun sides System V Release 4 debuted at the Unix Expo trade show in New York in November 1989 in the form of source code availability for it as well as demonstrations from Unix International of SVR4 based applications running on seventeen different vendor platforms 10 End user versions of Release 4 became available during 1990 11 Next USL engaged in an especially arduous effort into trying to satisfy the requirements of the National Computer Security Center s Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria Orange Book to the B2 level 12 This manifested itself in System V Release 4 1 ES Enhanced Security which also included generally useful features such as support for dynamic loading of kernel modules 13 Following that USL worked on System V Release 4 2 which was released in June 1992 14 InfoWorld characterized this effort as at the core of an assault on the enterprise networking market with a modular architecture that stressed improved support for enterprise and network level administration drivers for both Token Ring and Ethernet and a greater ability to run on low end machine configurations 14 Multiprocessing became the focus of the final USL based OEM release of System V which was Release 4 2MP released in December 1993 9 USL continued the publication of an early Unix standard the System V Interface Definition SVID 11 Moreover the SVID became one of the bases for the more important vendor independent POSIX standard for Unix which System V Release 4 releases also conformed to as well as the later Single UNIX Specification 11 USL produced many books documenting various aspects of Unix System V 15 USL also provided some training and consulting services for Unix systems 16 Chorus and Ouverture Edit nbsp USL Europe s offices were in Ealing London in the building on the right side after the road bends as seen here in 2009 In 1991 USL forged an arrangement with the French company Chorus Systemes SA to engage in cooperative work on the Chorus microkernel technology with the idea of supporting SVR4 on a microkernel and thereby making it more scalable and better suited for parallel and distributed applications 17 18 As part of this USL took a 1 million stake in Chorus Systemes 17 Much of the USL Chorus work was done at the USL Europe facility in London 19 By 1993 the work was still ongoing with questions of industry standardization of interfaces arising 20 Unisys was also part of the collaboration effort 18 Announcements made during 1993 promised an OEM release in 1994 and a general availability release in 1995 18 This was part of the larger Ouverture project a 14 million effort that was itself part of the European Strategic Program on Research in Information Technology ESPRIT overseen by the European Commission 21 Other software work Edit nbsp USL had a library that was connected to the full AT amp T Bell Labs research systemMain article Tuxedo software Another unit within USL called the Open Solutions Software business unit and headed by Joel A Appelbaum was responsible for other system software that in some way worked in conjunction with Unix 3 The Tuxedo transaction processing middleware had also been transferred from elsewhere in AT amp T to USL It had originated as the Loop Maintenance Operations System LMOS followed by the Unix Transaction System UNITS and was used for projects internally within AT amp T It was then renamed by USL and as Release 4 0 of what was now called Tuxedo in 1989 was offered for the first time as a commercial product 22 USL also developed and marketed the OSI Communications Platform which was an implementation of the OSI protocols for Unix based networking 23 C language work EditSee also C History There was also a languages department at Unix System Laboratories which was responsible for the C language compiler and development tools used to build Unix 4 Moreover it was responsible for commercial sales related to the C language including development tools such as the Cfront compiler that had come from AT amp T 24 Indeed the paper describing one of the first implementations of automatic instantiation of C templates in a C compiler had as lead author an engineer associated with Unix System Laboratories 25 26 And Margaret A Ellis co author with C creator Bjarne Stroustrup of The Annotated C Reference Manual an important publication in the history of the language was a USL software engineer 24 nbsp A software developer working in the Summit buildingUSL also continued the development of and attempted to market C Standard Components an early instance of a C software foundation library that supported container classes and various other computer science based functionality such as finite state machines graphs and regular expressions 27 28 The Standard Components originated in conjunction with early developments in the C language in Bell Labs and became widely used internally within AT amp T 24 by one estimate being used in hundreds of projects 29 They represented an effort among early library writers there to design reusable code using C idioms 26 Unlike its other offerings which were sold to OEM vendors and resellers here USL sold to end users 28 The initial release of USL C Standard Components to the general computing industry was labelled as Release 2 0 and occurred in 1991 30 it suffered from an awkward mechanism to get around the lack of templates in the container classes 28 That was followed by Release 3 0 which added support for templates in 1992 30 Some within USL believed that C Standard Components could become a language standard as well as a significant source of revenue 24 but it had trouble gaining traction outside of AT amp T Stroustrup would later describe these goals as a misguided belief 24 In any case all such libraries were soon eclipsed by the radically different Standard Template Library STL which became the standardized foundation library for the C language 31 As it happens one of the Standard Components array alg was designed by the creator of STL Alex Stepanov and can be considered an early predecessor of STL 32 Partial spinoff from AT amp T Edit nbsp USL presentation folder made starting 1991In April 1991 USL became partly independent of AT amp T when about 22 percent of it worth about 65 million was sold to eleven outside computer vendors Amdahl Motorola Novell Sun ICL Olivetti Fujitsu NEC OKI Electric Toshiba and the Institute for Information Industry 33 There was a stated goal to lessen the control AT amp T had over Unix which would lead to USL becoming a publicly owned company within three years 33 An AT amp T executive said AT amp T is convinced that the best way to nurture the growth of the open systems movement and to share into it ourselves is to establish an independent Unix Systems Laboratory with the technical guidance of Unix International and the business advice of investors who will ensure that USL is run properly and profitably 23 By this point USL had some 500 employees 2400 customers and annual revenue around the 100 million mark 33 AT amp T said that USL had been profitable since its inception in 1989 33 USL got a new president and CEO in November 1991 when Dooling was replaced by the Dutchman Roel Pieper formerly chief technical officer of Software AG 34 USL was aggressive in defending its perceived intellectual property rights initiating as the plaintiff a lawsuit in 1992 against Berkeley Software Design makers of and the Regents of the University of California over copyrights and trademarks related to Unix 35 The case was known as UNIX System Laboratories Inc v Berkeley Software Design Inc and in it USL asked the court for a preliminary injunction that would bar the Berkeley firm and the university from distributing their Net 2 operating system release which was implied to be Unix until the case was concluded 36 In response the university filed a countersuit against AT amp T for alleged breaches in the licensing agreement the two parties had 35 The case was settled out of court in January 1994 36 Univel and UnixWare EditSee also Univel and UnixWare In December 1991 USL combined with Novell to form the Univel joint venture 37 The goal was to make the Destiny desktop for Intel commodity hardware which would be USL s first shrink wrapped binary product with the necessary resources for sales marketing and distribution being moved into the new entity 38 Kanwal Rekhi a Novell vice president who helped launch Univel said the goal was to create a Unix for the masses 39 A May 1992 InfoWorld interview with Pieper captured some of the ambitions of USL at the time as Pieper said It is not just a new Unix version rather it is the creation of an entire model change for Unix that says there are better ways to bring the benefits and features of Unix into a distributed PC environment The earlier model did not allow Unix to play in the low end market because of its size complexity and cost The new model calls for business partnerships such as the one with Novell to deliver Unix to the commercial marketplace 40 In another interview around the same time Pieper predicted that if the new Unix became a success USL revenue could increase ten fold to 1 billion within five years 41 Pieper acknowledged that similar Unix efforts had failed in the past but said that the presence of Novell s PC presence and marketing experience as well as the interest of Intel would make the difference this time 40 Indeed Pieper had aspirations to be another Bill Gates I want to be in the same position 41 UnixWare 1 0 which is what Destiny became a product as was announced on October 12 1992 42 It was based on the Unix System V release 4 2 kernel The MoOLIT toolkit was used for the windowing system allowing the user to choose between an OPEN LOOK or MOTIF like look and feel at run time In order to make the system more robust on commodity desktop hardware the Veritas VXFS journaling file system was used in place of the UFS file system used in SVR4 Networking support in UnixWare included both TCP IP and interoperability with Novell s NetWare protocols of IPX SPX 43 The former were the standard among Unix users at the time of development while PC networking was much more commonly based on the highly successful NetWare product indeed the base level of the Personal Edition of UnixWare did not even have TCP IP included while the Application Server version did 43 Initial sales of UnixWare were underwhelming with Unix facing a difficult time in the PC market 44 This was in part because Windows already had a stronghold there in part because USL s third party licensing payment obligations made low cost sales uneconomical and in part because of a lack of applications to run on UnixWare 1 Acquisition by Novell Edit nbsp The Summit building in the Novell Unix Systems Group eraOn December 21 1992 it was announced that Novell would acquire Unix System Laboratories and all of its Unix assets including all copyrights trademarks and licensing contracts for some 335 million in stock 5 The news led to large headlines of the NOVELL BUYS UNIX variety 45 The measure was intended to help Novell compete against Microsoft which was on the verge of including networking as a built in feature of Windows in conjunction with the Windows NT server 5 44 It was also an outgrowth of Novell chief Ray Noorda s theories about coopetition in a technology industry 46 47 The move seemed like a long shot to analysts with a commentary piece in Computerworld outlining the obstacles to success and stating Saying this deal has the technical potential to counter Windows NT is very different from predicting that it will do so 44 There was negative reaction to the acquisition from USL shareholders USL employees and members of Unix International 46 Noorda had to emphasize that Novell had no plans to move USL operations from New Jersey to Utah where Novell was based 46 And Noorda and Pieper had to travel to Japan to reassure USL shareholders and investors there 46 Nonetheless the deal was finalized in June 1993 16 Novell created the Unix Systems Group to contain the new business which also absorbed the Univel venture 48 Rekhi was named as the head of the Unix Systems Group 49 Pieper who had been assigned under Rekhi with little role to play soon departed leaving Novell in August 1993 50 49 The USL Europe office in London was moved into Novell s facility in Bracknell Berkshire 51 The Chorus work it was doing became the basis for the Novell SuperNOS a project to create a microkernel based UnixWare NetWare hybrid network operating system 52 Legacy EditThe acquisition of USL never really worked out for Novell 45 and was followed by Novell s misguided acquisitions of WordPerfect and Quattro Pro in another attempt to compete head to head with Microsoft 53 In particular the SuperNOS project never achieved fruition 54 Novell announced the sale of Unix to the Santa Cruz Operation coincident with a licensing arrangement with Hewlett Packard in September 1995 55 Following another change of ownership the renamed The SCO Group and the Unix System V source base became elements of the SCO Linux disputes 45 After The SCO Group went bankrupt the SCO products using the Unix System V source base were purchased by UnXis later renamed to Xinuos 56 Although it never took off within the industry C Standard Components remained in the development kits for Novell UnixWare later SCO UnixWare into the 2000s 27 Tuxedo was acquired by BEA Systems in the 1990s and then upon that firm being acquired became part of Oracle Fusion Middleware 57 In the view of writer Christopher Negus The UNIX Laboratory was considered a jewel that couldn t quite find a home or a way to make a profit As it moved between Bell Laboratories and other areas of AT amp T its name changed several times It is probably best remembered by the name it had as it began its spin off from AT amp T UNIX System Laboratories USL 1 However Negus believes that in three crucial respects USL s actions in continuing to release a source code product to its partners in working to define industry standards such as POSIX and in making decisions on the direction of Unix based on technical merit not corporate advantage paved the way for the rise of a Unix like entity such as the Linux operating system and that this beneficial historical role has been obscured by the SCO Linux controversies 1 See also EditHistory of UnixReferences Edit a b c d e Negus Christopher 2015 Linux Bible The Comprehensive Tutorial Resource Ninth ed Indianapolis John Wiley amp Sons pp 10 11 a b Signals Signals 1991 pp 61 66 a b c d e f g AT amp T Renames Unix Software Unix System Laboratories Press release PR Newsire June 25 1990 Archived from the original on January 19 2017 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c d e AT amp T Names President Of Unix Software Operation Press release PR Newswire January 4 1989 Archived from the original on January 19 2017 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c Technology Los Angeles Times December 22 1992 Archived from the original on January 16 2017 Retrieved March 28 2021 Wagner Neal R Putter Paul S January 1989 Error Detecting Decimal Digits Communications of the ACM 32 1 106 110 doi 10 1145 63238 63246 S2CID 805863 Ambrosio Johanna July 23 1990 AT amp T s Unix unit spun off Computerworld p 10 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 AUUG Conference Proceedings 1992 Australian Open Systems Users Group Summer 1992 p 39 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c History and Timeline The Open Group Archived from the original on April 8 2011 Retrieved December 1 2017 Marshall Martin December 18 1989 Hopes of Reunification Highlight Eventful Year for Unix Community InfoWorld p 41 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c Stevens W Richard Rago Stephen A 2013 Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment Third ed Upper Saddle River New Jersey Addison Wesley pp 32 33 Ambrosio Johanna October 1 1990 AT amp T Unix to gain enhanced security Computerworld p 32 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 Fellows William August 13 1992 Unix International reviews the Unix System V 4 story so far Computergram International Computer Business Review a b McCarthy Vance Corcoran Cate May 11 1992 Univel targets UnixWare release for early fall InfoWorld pp 1 103 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 Identities UNIX System Laboratories WorldCat Archived from the original on May 7 2018 Retrieved May 6 2018 WorldCat lists 122 works in 297 publications in 1 language and 1 849 library holdings from USL a b Novell completes acquisition of UNIX System Laboratories from AT amp T Press release Business Wire June 14 1993 Archived from the original on July 7 2017 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Khermouch Gerry November 25 1991 USL backs French firm s Microkernel Electronic News p 13 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 via Gale General OneFile a b c Foley Mary Jo June 14 1993 USL Chorus outline plans for microkernel release of Unix SVR4 PC Week p 60 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 via Gale General OneFile An Industry Project to Progress Microkernel based Open Operating Systems for the 1990s Resultados de investigaciones de la UE Community Research and Development Information Service June 17 1994 Archived from the original on November 30 2020 Retrieved May 21 2020 Chorus Systemes takes the initiative in establishing a microkernel compatibility effort Computergram International Computer Business Review June 16 1993 Van Tyle Sherry October 15 1992 PC fault tolerant Unix based system runs on a modular microkernel architecture Electronic Design p 34 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 via Gale General OneFile Andrade Juan M Carges Mark T Dwyer Terence J Felts Stephen D 1996 The TUXEDO System Software for Constructing and Managing Distributed Business Applications Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley pp xxxiii xxxvi ISBN 9780201634938 a b Messmer Ellen April 15 1991 Novell buys into AT amp T unit to gain Unix net know how Network World p 9 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c d e Stroustrup Bjarne 1994 The Design and Evolution of C Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley pp 124 125 126 127 184 Bibcode 1994dec book S McCluskey Glen Murray Robert B December 1992 Template Instantiation For C SIGPLAN Notices 27 12 47 56 doi 10 1145 142181 142195 S2CID 27330199 a b Carroll Martin D Ellis Margaret A 1995 Designing and Coding Reusable C Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley pp x 231 a b C Standard Components The SCO Group June 2 2005 Archived from the original on September 10 2018 Retrieved December 1 2017 See also Relationship to the C Standard Library Archived November 25 2020 at the Wayback Machine at the same site a b c Leggett Bill June 1992 Product Review The USL C Standard Components Release 2 end user package C Report pp 69 73 Alam M Afshar Padenga Tendai 2010 Application Software Reengineering Delhi Pearson p 146 a b Product History The SCO Group June 2 2005 Archived from the original on September 10 2018 Retrieved April 28 2018 Stroustrup Bjarne June 2007 Evolving a language in and for the real world C 1991 2006 Proceedings of the third ACM SIGPLAN conference on history of programming languages ACM pp 4 8 4 11 Alexander A Stepanov stepanovpapers com October 6 2016 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved December 15 2017 and No More Array Errors Part II Array alg C The SCO Group June 2 2005 Archived from the original on September 10 2018 Retrieved April 28 2018 a b c d Ambrosio Johanna April 8 1991 AT amp T s Unix sell off won t sway OSF Computerworld p 12 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 Roel Pieper ist neuer Chef der USL Computerwoche von IDG in German December 6 1991 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Toomey Warren November 28 2011 The Strange Birth and Long Life of Unix IEEE Spectrum Archived from the original on March 14 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Bretthauer David December 26 2001 Open Source Software A History University of Connecticut Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved March 28 2021 Nash Jim December 16 1991 Unix Labs Novell tighten ties Computerworld p 115 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 Unix Labs and Novell plan join venture reveal bones of mass distribution alliance Computergram International Computer Business Review October 24 1991 Wylie Margie April 13 1992 Univel developing user friendly Unix Network World p 13 Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b USL s Pieper readies Unix for the PC network market InfoWorld May 11 1992 p 106 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Schwartz Evan I June 22 1992 A Unix For The Masses Bloomberg News Archived from the original on June 24 2018 Retrieved March 28 2021 Gerber Cheryl September 28 1992 Novell sees the future in Unix OS 2 rebuffed InfoWorld p 1 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Radding Alan June 28 1993 UnixWare Bringing shrink wrapped Unix to the masses InfoWorld pp 65 66 Archived from the original on February 27 2017 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c Babcock Charles January 11 1993 Novell s long shot Computerworld p 34 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c Strom David November 5 2003 Novell Buys Unix Again CRN Archived from the original on November 28 2020 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b c d Novell Unix Labs Try to Reassure Japanese on the Merger Computergram International Computer Business Review March 4 1993 Fisher Lawrence M March 29 1992 Preaching Love Thy Competitor The New York Times Archived from the original on December 23 2019 Retrieved March 28 2021 Novell formally announces the Unix Systems Group Computergram International Computer Business Review July 7 1993 Archived from the original on February 16 2020 Retrieved March 28 2021 a b Novell Unix Official Out The New York Times August 31 1993 p 57 Archived from the original on June 24 2018 Retrieved March 28 2021 News Shorts Pieper bids adieu Computerworld September 6 1993 p 16 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 Novell Continues Restructuring Telecompaper September 10 1993 Archived from the original on December 3 2020 Retrieved March 28 2021 Novell ready to embark on the road to object orientation Computergram International Computer Business Review April 11 1995 Fisher Lawrence M February 1 1996 Novell to Sell Wordperfect for 115 Million The New York Times Archived from the original on June 22 2019 Retrieved March 28 2021 Politis David L March 29 2004 Novell regaining prior glory Deseret News Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 UnixWare survives through sale licensing deal Network World September 25 1995 p 134 Archived from the original on March 28 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 UnixWare The OS Files Archived from the original on January 10 2021 Retrieved January 8 2021 Oracle Tuxedo Oracle Archived from the original on May 5 2018 Retrieved May 5 2018 External links EditHistory and Timeline from The Open Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Unix System Laboratories amp oldid 1151978716, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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