Katana VentraIP

Berkeley Software Distribution

The Berkeley Software Distribution or Berkeley Standard Distribution[1] (BSD) is a discontinued operating system based on Research Unix, developed and distributed by the Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of California, Berkeley. The term "BSD" commonly refers to its open-source descendants, including FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and DragonFly BSD.

"BSD" redirects here. For the Microsoft Windows error message abbreviated "BSOD", see Blue Screen of Death. For the family of free software licenses, see BSD licenses. For other uses, see BSD (disambiguation).

Developer

Discontinued

Originally source-available, later open-source

March 9, 1978 (1978-03-09)

4.4-Lite2 / June 1995 (1995-06)

English

BSD

BSD was initially called Berkeley Unix because it was based on the source code of the original Unix developed at Bell Labs. In the 1980s, BSD was widely adopted by workstation vendors in the form of proprietary Unix variants such as DEC Ultrix and Sun Microsystems SunOS due to its permissive licensing and familiarity to many technology company founders and engineers. These proprietary BSD derivatives were largely superseded in the 1990s by UNIX SVR4 and OSF/1.


Later releases of BSD provided the basis for several open-source operating systems including FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD, Darwin and TrueOS. These, in turn, have been used by proprietary operating systems, including Apple's macOS and iOS, which derived from them[2] and Microsoft Windows XP, which used (at least) part of its TCP/IP code, which was legal.[3] Code from FreeBSD was also used to create the operating systems for the PlayStation 5,[4] PlayStation 4,[5] PlayStation 3,[6] PlayStation Vita,[7] and Nintendo Switch.[8][9]

BSD Daemon

BSD licenses

Comparison of BSD operating systems

List of BSD operating systems

Lumina (desktop environment)

Unix wars

Marshall K. McKusick, Keith Bostic, Michael J. Karels, John S. Quartermain, The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System (Addison Wesley, 1996;  978-0-201-54979-9)

ISBN

Marshall K. McKusick, George V. Neville-Neil, The Design and Implementation of the FreeBSD Operating System (Addison Wesley, August 2, 2004;  978-0-201-70245-3)

ISBN

Samuel J. Leffler, Marshall K. McKusick, Michael J. Karels, , The Design and Implementation of the 4.3BSD UNIX Operating System (Addison Wesley, November 1989; ISBN 978-0-201-06196-3)

John S. Quarterman

(January 1999). "Twenty Years of Berkeley Unix – From AT&T-Owned to Freely Redistributable". In DiBona, Chris; Ockman, Sam; Stone, Mark (eds.). Open Sources: Voices from the Revolution (first ed.). O'Reilly. ISBN 978-1-56592-582-3.

McKusick, Marshall Kirk

The Daemon, the GNU & The Penguin (Reed Media Services, September 1, 2008; ISBN 978-0-9790342-3-7)

Peter H. Salus

A Quarter Century of UNIX (Addison Wesley, June 1, 1994; ISBN 978-0-201-54777-1)

Peter H. Salus

Casting the Net (Addison-Wesley, March 1995; ISBN 978-0-201-87674-1)

Peter H. Salus

at Curlie

Berkeley Software Distribution

A timeline of BSD and Research UNIX

 – History of UNIX and BSD using diagrams

UNIX History

The Design and Implementation of the 4.4BSD Operating System

The Unix Tree: Source code and manuals for old versions of Unix

an annual event in Europe in September, October or November, founded Archived June 20, 2020, at the Wayback Machine in 2001

EuroBSDCon

a conference in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, held annually in May since 2004, in June since 2015

BSDCan

a conference in Tokyo, held annually in March of each year, since 2007

AsiaBSDCon

a web-service written in nginx

mdoc.su – short manual page URLs for FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD and DragonFly BSD

a userland and kernel source code search engine based on OpenGrok and nginx

BXR.SU – Super User's BSD Cross Reference