[TUHS] UNIX System V Release 2.2 gdts Vax-780

Luther Johnson luther at makerlisp.com
Thu Mar 16 07:50:35 AEST 2023


I'm interested for certain versions of the Portable C Compiler, and 
maybe non-GNU implementations of other utilities, I'd like to license 
the source. I'm aware of the re-booted PCC, but I prefer the authentic 
versions.

On 03/15/2023 02:22 PM, Larry McVoy wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 15, 2023 at 02:18:30PM -0700, Seth Morabito wrote:
>> On Wed, Mar 15, 2023, at 2:08 PM, Clem Cole wrote:
>>> On Wed, Mar 15, 2023 at 5:03???PM Warren Toomey via TUHS <tuhs at tuhs.org> wrote:
>>>> I'm still worried about my legal butt :-(
>>> Probably a good idea.
>>>> But I'd be interested in the viewpoints of people here on the list.
>>> The Ancient UNIX license does not release anything beyond V7 - as the document you have on the site (https://www.tuhs.org/ancient.html) says:
>>>
>>>> 1.9 SUCCESSOR OPERATING SYSTEM means a SCO software offering that is (i) specifically designed for a 16-Bit computer, or (ii) the 32V version, and (iii) specifically excludes UNIX System V and successor operating systems.
>>> SVR4 is by definition System V.
>> Do we know with any certainty who currently owns the System V intellectual property? I think (probably) it's now the Canadian company OpenText, who just bought Micro Focus in January, who absorbed the Attachmate Group in 2014, who bought Novell in 2011, who gobbled up USL in 1992... what a tangled web. I don't even know where one would begin trying to track down someone to give permission to archive System V source code.
> Is there any market for System V at this point?  I would think it's
> Windows, MacOS, Linux and anything else is an also ran at this point.
>
> Can anyone point to a machine that was sold in the last few years that
> ran some System V based OS?
>



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