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| From: | Joe Buehler <jbuehler AT hekimian DOT com> |
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| Subject: | Re: The Korn Shell [was: Re: What's Up With That (KSH)?] |
| Date: | Thu, 13 Jun 2002 14:20:42 -0400 |
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Thomas Baker wrote: > It is great news that this is in the pipeline. Not sure if > it is off-topic, but can someone explain in 25 words or less > how "AST", "INIT", and "UWIN" relate to the Cygwin effort? > My vague impression is that "UWIN" is a parallel universe to > Cygwin -- a freely available WIN32 Unix-lookalike based on > AT&T work, and that AST and INIT are something like the RPM > formats of the UWIN world. Is that at all close? AST is a toolkit that provides a portability layer on top of UNIX. It allows you to code to a single API and run on various flavors of UNIX. U/WIN (proper spelling) is the same idea as Cygwin. David Korn at AT&T research is the architect/chief developer. It's not free for commercial purposes, though there are downloadable versions on the web. What he has done in U/WIN is write a UNIX layer on top of Windows, then use AST for much of the libraries and utilities. The INIT stuff is packaging software, as far as I can tell. AT&T research (Bell labs) has a boatload of good software tools that don't really make it outside of AT&T, unfortunately. Joe Buehler -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Bug reporting: http://cygwin.com/bugs.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/
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