From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eunice
Original author(s)David Kashtan
Developer(s) SRI International,
The Wollongong Group
Operating system DEC VAX/VMS
Platform VAX computers
Type Compatibility layer
License Proprietary commercial software

Eunice was a Unix-like working environment for VAX computers running DEC's VAX/VMS, based on the BSD version of Unix. It was originally developed ca. 1981 by David Kashtan at SRI, [1] and later maintained and marketed by The Wollongong Group. [2]

Eunice was one of several Unix compatibility packages developed during the 1980s. It provided VMS binary versions of Unix tools, a VMS object library emulating the Unix API (including the system call interface) and an assembler that produced VMS binaries. [3] Eunice was criticized for its performance problems and not quite complete Unix compatibility. [1] Eunice's reputation for poor compatibility inspired the "Congratulations. You aren't running Eunice." message included in the Perl configure script. [4] [5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Caplinger, Michael (1987). ϕnix: a Unix emulator for VAX/VMS (Technical report). Rice University. hdl: 1911/101549. MASC TR82-8.
  2. ^ "The Wollongong Group upgrades its Eunice Unixalike operating system". Computer Business Review. 19 July 1988.
  3. ^ "Kermit Software Source Code Archive". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2023-12-22.
  4. ^ Packard, Keith (2020-01-16). A Political History of X. LCA 2020.
  5. ^ Perl Configure script on GitHub


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Eunice
Original author(s)David Kashtan
Developer(s) SRI International,
The Wollongong Group
Operating system DEC VAX/VMS
Platform VAX computers
Type Compatibility layer
License Proprietary commercial software

Eunice was a Unix-like working environment for VAX computers running DEC's VAX/VMS, based on the BSD version of Unix. It was originally developed ca. 1981 by David Kashtan at SRI, [1] and later maintained and marketed by The Wollongong Group. [2]

Eunice was one of several Unix compatibility packages developed during the 1980s. It provided VMS binary versions of Unix tools, a VMS object library emulating the Unix API (including the system call interface) and an assembler that produced VMS binaries. [3] Eunice was criticized for its performance problems and not quite complete Unix compatibility. [1] Eunice's reputation for poor compatibility inspired the "Congratulations. You aren't running Eunice." message included in the Perl configure script. [4] [5]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Caplinger, Michael (1987). ϕnix: a Unix emulator for VAX/VMS (Technical report). Rice University. hdl: 1911/101549. MASC TR82-8.
  2. ^ "The Wollongong Group upgrades its Eunice Unixalike operating system". Computer Business Review. 19 July 1988.
  3. ^ "Kermit Software Source Code Archive". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2023-12-22.
  4. ^ Packard, Keith (2020-01-16). A Political History of X. LCA 2020.
  5. ^ Perl Configure script on GitHub



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