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Date:      Thu, 13 Jan 2000 06:39:09 -0800
From:      Cy Schubert <cschuber@uumail.gov.bc.ca>
To:        obrien@NUXI.com
Cc:        Cy Schubert - ITSD Open Systems Group <Cy.Schubert@uumail.gov.bc.ca>, freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Next release should be called 5.0 (was:4.4 BSD forever?) 
Message-ID:  <200001131439.GAA49551@passer.osg.gov.bc.ca>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Wed, 12 Jan 2000 21:23:12 PST." <20000112212312.F17687@dragon.nuxi.com> 

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In message <20000112212312.F17687@dragon.nuxi.com>, "David O'Brien" writes:
> On Tue, Jan 11, 2000 at 08:48:08AM -0800, Cy Schubert - ITSD Open Systems Gro
> up wrote:
> > 
> > UCB and AT&T had agreed that there were to be no new releases of BSD 
> > and that 4BSD was the final release.  4.1BSD - 4.4BSD were named such 
> > because they were "officially" only modifications to 4BSD and as such 
> > were not full releases.  In fact they contained more new features than 
> > previous releases and were modifications to 4BSD in name only.
> 
> This is a quote from McKusick on a previous post.  It doesn't seem to
> back up your statements.
> 
>     > As I understood it, 4BSD was to be the last release based on 32V
>     > and AT&T wouldn't license anything newer on agreeable terms, so
>     > Berkeley released 4.1.  4.1c (later renamed to 4.2) was released to
>     > fullfil their contractual obligation to DARPA.  At least that's the
>     > scuttlebutt at the time, which likely suffered from at least some
>     > "telephone game" syndrome.                                            
> 
>     AT&T kept wanting Berkeley to move forward to a newer license, but
>     we resisted because the newer licenses were considerably more
>     expensive. That had nothing to do with the naming. The 4.1 release
>     was called that because AT&T was concerned that there would be
>     confusion in the marketplace if there were System V and 5BSD, so
>     we agreed to call it 4.1 instead of 5.0. The 4.1c release was never
>     renamed 4.2. The 4.2 release followed 4.1c. The 4.1c release was
>     what would probably be called an alpha release of 4.2 today.
> 
>  
> > It's all in Kirk's book the Design and Implementation of 4.4BSD.
> 
> What page numbers?

Rereading the first 17 pages where Kirk discusses BSD history, he doesn't
even mention any licensing issues between UCB and AT&T until 4.4BSD.  
As a matter of fact page 9 discusses 4BSD as a project which had a number
of releases.

I obvously stand corrected.  It's been a while since I read the book.
If I've fogotten this much, I should read it again.

>  
> -- 
> -- David    (obrien@NUXI.com)

You argue like Tom Leykis.  Because of that you've earned my respect.


Regards,                       Phone:  (250)387-8437
Cy Schubert                      Fax:  (250)387-5766
Sun/DEC Team, UNIX Group    Internet:  Cy.Schubert@uumail.gov.bc.ca
ITSD
Province of BC            
                      "e**(i*pi)+1=0"



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