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All modern operating systems implement a version of the Berkeley socket interface. It became the standard interface for applications running in the Internet. Even the Winsock implementation for MS Windows, created by unaffiliated developers, closely follows the standard. The BSD sockets API is written in the C programming language.
This led to Networking Release 1 (Net/1), which was made available to non-licensees of AT&T code and was freely redistributable under the terms of the BSD license. It was released in June 1989. After Net/1, BSD developer Keith Bostic proposed that more non-AT&T sections of the BSD system be released under the same license as Net/1. To this end ...
Until its 3.0 version, Kylin was using FreeBSD as an operating system project in China. [6] Mindbridge, a software company, announced in September 2007 that it had migrated a large number of Windows servers onto a smaller number of Linux servers and a few BSD servers. It claims to have saved "bunches of money." [7]
CRUX is a Linux distribution mainly targeted at expert computer users. It uses BSD-style initscripts and utilizes a ports system similar to a BSD-based operating system. Chimera Linux: Chimera Linux is a Linux distribution created by Daniel Kolesa, a semi-active contributor to Void Linux. It uses a userland and core utilities based on FreeBSD.
With their 1.4 release, DragonFly BSD announced that they would be adopting pkgsrc as their official package management system. [5] DragonFly BSD however built their own ports implementation called dports with the release 3.4 [6] and switched over to it completely with 3.6. The development is done via their git.
NextBSD, new BSD distribution derived from FreeBSD 10.1 and various macOS components. FreeNAS a free network-attached storage server based on a minimal version of FreeBSD. NAS4Free fork of 0.7 FreeNAS version, Network attached storage server. Nokia IPSO (IPSO SB variant), the FreeBSD-based OS used in Nokia Firewall Appliances.
OpenBSD is a security-focused, free software, Unix-like operating system based on the Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD). Theo de Raadt created OpenBSD in 1995 by forking NetBSD 1.0. [ 4 ] The OpenBSD project emphasizes portability , standardization , correctness , proactive security , and integrated cryptography .
Internet Direct, also known as "Indy", is a free software / open source socket library written in Object Pascal, an object-oriented version of Pascal.It includes clients, servers, TCP, UDP, and raw sockets, as well as over 100 higher level protocols implementations such as SMTP, POP3, NNTP, and HTTP. [1]