- Net
BSD is a free and open-source Unix-like
operating system based on the
Berkeley Software Distribution (
BSD). It was the
first open-source
BSD descendant...
-
early 2000s[update],
there are four
major BSD operating systems–Free
BSD, Net
BSD, Open
BSD and
DragonFly BSD, and an
increasing number of
other OSs forked...
- Open
BSD is a security-focused, free and open-source, Unix-like
operating system based on the
Berkeley Software Distribution (
BSD). Theo de
Raadt created...
- Berkeley. The term "
BSD"
commonly refers to its open-source descendants,
including Free
BSD, Open
BSD, Net
BSD, and
DragonFly BSD.
BSD was
initially called...
-
Distribution (
BSD)
series of Unix
variant options. The
three most
notable descendants in
current use are Free
BSD, Open
BSD, and Net
BSD,
which are all...
- was soon
succeeded by Free
BSD and Net
BSD. Open
BSD emerged in 1995 as a fork of Net
BSD, and
DragonFly BSD as a fork from Free
BSD in 2003. Mac OS X v10.5...
-
Compiler Collection,
which was
initially published in 1987. The
original BSD license is also one of the
first free-software licenses,
dating to 1988....
-
being closer to
BSD than they were to UNIX
System V,
which also
included some
BSD code:
Research Unix 8th
Edition started from (I think)
BSD 4.1c, but with...
- The
wheel group is a
special user
group used on some Unix systems,
mostly BSD systems,[citation needed] to
control access to the su or sudo command, which...
-
Source Definition,
published in 1998. The
BSD-based
operating systems, such as Free
BSD, Open
BSD, and Net
BSD, do not have
their own
formal definitions...