Introduction to UNIX
Karl Harrison September 2004
The UNIX Operating System
An operating system (or "OS") is a set
of programs that controls a computer It controls both the
hardware (things you can touchsuch as
keyboards, displays, and disk drives) software (application programs that you run, such as a word processor).
The UNIX Operating System
Some computers have a single-user OS,
which means only one person can use the computer at a time. They can also do only one job at a time. But if it has a multiuser, multitasking operating system like UNIX. Then these powerful OSes can let many people use the computer at the same time and let each user run several jobs at once.
Versions of UNIX
Now there are many different versions
of UNIX. At first there were two main versions:
The line of UNIX releases that started at
AT&T (the latest is System V Release 4), And from the University of California at Berkeley (the latest version is BSD 4.4).
Versions of UNIX
Now commercial versions include SunOS,
Solaris, SCO UNIX, SG IRIX, AIX, HP/UX The freely available versions include Linux and FreeBSD 5.2 (based on 4.4BSD)
Many Versions of Linux - Redhat, Fedroa, Debian,
SuSE and MandrakeSoft
Apple Mac OS X (FreeBSD 5.2)
What is different with UNIX
User Applications X Windows GUI
Commands & Shell
Services
UNIX Kernel
Hardware
UNIX GUIs -Apple OS X 10.4
UNIX GUIs -Apple OS X 10.4
UNIX GUIs -Fedora KDE
UNIX GUIs -Solaris
UNIX GUIs -SG IRIX
Remote UNIX log on
Oxford UNIX System
OUCS provides a general-purpose cluster of
computers running Debian GNU/Linux. The service is available to any University member who has a Herald account, and is accessed using Herald username and password on secure login to [Link].
[Link]
UNIX Tutorials
Maui High Performance Computing Centre [Link] ntro/[Link] Also [Link] ml
Vi Editor [Link]