| Developer | Tymshare (Norm Hardy, Bill Frantz, Charlie Landau) McDonnell Douglas Key Logic | 
|---|---|
| Written in | C | 
| OS family | Capability-based | 
| Working state | Discontinued | 
| Initial release | 1977 | 
| Latest release | Final / 1988 | 
| Marketing target | Research | 
| Available in | English | 
| Update method | Compile from source code | 
| Platforms | S/370 mainframe | 
| Kernel type | Microkernel | 
| Default user interface | Command-line interface | 
| Preceded by | GNOSIS | 
| Succeeded by | Extremely Reliable Operating System (EROS), CapROS, Coyotos | 
| Official website | cap-lore | 
KeyKOS is a persistent, pure capability-based operating system for the IBM S/370 mainframe computers. It allows emulating the environments of VM, MVS, and Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX). It is a predecessor of the Extremely Reliable Operating System (EROS), and its successor operating systems, CapROS, and Coyotos. KeyKOS is a nanokernel-based operating system.[1]
In the mid-1970s, development of KeyKOS began at Tymshare, Inc., under the name GNOSIS. In 1984, McDonnell Douglas (MD) bought Tymshare. A year later MD spun off Key Logic, which bought GNOSIS and renamed it KeyKOS.[2]
References
- ↑ The KeyKOS Nanokernel Architecture Archived 2011-06-21 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "Roots of KeyKOS". Cap-lore.com.
External links
- Official website, Norman Hardy
- GNOSIS: A Prototype Operating System for the 1990s, a 1979 paper, Tymshare Inc.
- KeyKOS - A Secure, High-Performance Environment for S/370, a 1988 paper, Key Logic, Inc.
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