Access to UNIX-Related Standards
Moderator, John S. Quarterman
std-unix at uunet.uu.net
Wed May 18 08:03:26 AEST 1988
This is the latest in a series of similar comp.std.unix articles.
Corrections and additions to this article are solicited.
There are two companion articles, posted at the same time as this one
and with subjects ``Access to UNIX User Groups and Publications'' and
``Calendar of UNIX-related Events.''
Also note that Shane McCarron now writes a quarterly summary report for
USENIX soon after each IEEE 1003 meeting for posting in comp.std.unix
and in ;login:, the Newsletter of the USENIX Association.
Changes from last posting:
Dates for ANSI X3J11 and ISO TC97/SC22/WG14 added from an article
by Cornelia Boldyreff in the EUUG Newsletter, Vol. 7, No. 4, Winter 1987.
Access information is given in this article for the following standards:
IEEE 1003.1 (operating system interface), 1003.2 (shell and tools),
1003.3 (testing and verification), 1003.4 (real time),
1003.5 (ADA binding), 1003.6 (security), 1003.0 (POSIX guide).
NBS FIPS.
/usr/group Technical Committee Subcommittees on distributed file system,
network interface, graphics/windows, database, internationalization,
performance measurements, realtime, security, and super computing.
X3H3.6 (display committee)
X3J11 (C language)
/usr/group 1984 Standard
System V Interface Definition (SVID, or The Purple Book)
X/OPEN PORTABILITY GUIDE (The Green Book)
4.3BSD Manuals
UNIX is a Registered Trademark of AT&T.
IEEE is a trademark of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers,
Inc.: POSIX is no longer a trademark.
X/OPEN is a licensed trademark of the X/OPEN Group Members.
The IEEE P1003 Portable Operating System Interface for Computer
Environments Committee is sometimes known colloquially as the UNIX
Standards Committee. They published the 1003.1 "POSIX" Trial Use
Standard in April 1986. According to its Foreword:
The purpose of this document is to define a standard
operating system interface and environment based on the
UNIX Operating System documentation to support application
portability at the source level. This is intended for
systems implementors and applications software developers.
Published copies are available at $19.95, with bulk purchasing discounts
available. Call the IEEE Computer Society in Los Angeles
714-821-8380
and ask for Book #967. Unfortunately, this only works for multiple copies.
But the following mail address works for single copies:
IEEE Computer Society
P.O. Box 80452
Worldway Postal Center
Los Angeles, Ca. 90080
Include a check for $19.95 + $4 for shipping and handling. For UPS
shipping, add another $4. Or contact:
IEEE Service Center
445 Hoes Ln.
Piscataway, NJ 08854
and ask for "IEEE 1003.1 Trial Use Standard" - stock number SH10546.
The Trial Use Standard will be available for comments for a period such
as a year. The current target for a Full Use Standard is Summer 1988.
Initial balloting is completed, and ballot resolution is in progress:
it's too late to ballot if you haven't already.
IEEE has brought the 1003.1 effort brought into the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) arena. IEEE 1003.1 Draft 12
is also a ``Draft Proposed International Standard (ISO DP)'' under
SC22 WG15. The convenor is Jim Isaak: see below for his address.
There is a U.S. Technical Advisory Group (TAG) to ISO SC22 WG15:
the chair is Donn Terry of HP.
The National Bureau of Standards is producing a Federal Information
Processing Standard (FIPS) based on IEEE 1003.1. It will probably
be available before the Full Use Standard, and may reflect Draft 12,
rather than the final 1003.1 standard. For information, contact:
Roger Martin
National Bureau of Standards
Building 225
Room B266
Gaithersburg, MD 20899
(301)975-3295
NBS is also producing a FIPS based on IEEE 1003.2, probably from
the draft made by 1003.2 at their March meeting.
Machine readable copies of the IEEE 1003.1 Trial Use Standard are not
and will not be available. The same applies to copies of later drafts.
There is a paper mailing list by which interested parties may get
copies of drafts of the standard. To get on it, or to submit comments
directly to the committee, mail to:
James Isaak
Chairperson, IEEE/CS P1003
Tel.: (603)881-0480
Fax.: (603)881-0120
decvax!isaak
isaak at decvax.dec.com
Digital Equipment
ZK03-3/Y25
110 Spit Brook Rd.
Nashua, NH 03062-2698
Sufficiently interested parties may join the working group.
The term POSIX actually applies to all of the P1003 subcommittees:
group subject co-chairs
1003.0 POSIX Guide Al Hankinson (NBS), Kevin Lewis (DEC)
1003.1 Systems Interface Jim Isaak (DEC), Donn Terry (HP)
1003.2 Shell and Tools Interface Hal Jespersen (UniSoft), Don Cragun (Sun)
1003.3 Verification and Testing Roger Martin (NBS), Carol Raye (AT&T)
1003.4 Real Time Bill Corwin (Intel)
1003.5 Ada Binding for POSIX Terry Fong (USArmy), Stowe Boyd(Compass)
1003.6 Security Dennis Steinauer (NBS), Ron Elliot (IBM)
Inquiries regarding any of the subcommittees should go to the same address
as for 1003.1.
The next scheduled meetings of the P1003 working groups are:
1988 June 20-24 IEEE 1003.6 at USENIX, in San Francisco, CA
1988 July 11-15 Tech Center Hyatt, Denver, CO
1988 October 17-19,20-21 ISO SC22 Advisory Group & WG15 - Tokyo, Japan
1988 October 24-28 Hawaii
1989 January 9-13 Embassy Suites, Ft. Lauderdale, FL
1989 April 17(29?) Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN
1989 July 10-14 San Francisco, CA
1989 October 16-20 Brussels (or Amsterdam) (Thought: EC host)
1990 January 29 New Orleans, LA
1990 April Montreal, Quebec
Here are some details from Hal Jespersen regarding P1003.2:
The IEEE P1003.2 "Shell and Utilities" Working Group is developing a
proposed standard to complement the 1003.1 POSIX standard. It will
consist of
a shell command language (currently planned to be based on the
Bourne Shell),
groups of utility programs, or commands,
programmatic interfaces to the shell (system(), popen()) and
related facilities (regular expressions, file name expansion,
etc.)
defined environments (variables, file hierarchies, etc) that
applications may rely upon
utilities for installing application programs onto conforming
systems
which will allow application programs to be developed out of existing
pieces, in the UNIX tradition. The scope of the standard emphasizes
commands and features that are more typically used by shell scripts or
C language programs than those that are oriented to the terminal user
with windows, mice, visual shells, and so forth.
There has been some controversy in the Working Group about clarifying
the scope of the 1003.2 standard in regard to its relationship with
1003.1. The Working Group is attempting to produce a standard that
will assume the structure and philosophy of a POSIX system is
available, but it will not require a fully conforming implementation as
a base. For example, it should be feasible to eventually produce a
1003.2 interface on a V7 system, or on a system very close to POSIX,
but missing a few crucial features (as long as the shell and utilities
didn't need them). However, the proposed standard will *not* be
unnecessarily watered down simply to allow non-POSIX systems to conform.
The group is currently seeking proposals for groupings of commands that
may be offered by implementors. As groups are identified, command
descriptions will be solicited. There is no requirement that the commands
be in System V or BSD today, but they should realistically be commands
that are commonly found in most existing implementations.
There are three Institutional Representatives to P1003: John Quarterman
from USENIX, Heinz Lycklama from /usr/group, and Mike Lambert from X/OPEN.
The two from USENIX and /usr/group are also representatives to the U.S.
TAG to ISO SC22 WG15.
As the one from USENIX, one of my functions is to get comments from the
USENIX membership and the general public to the committee. One of the
ways I try to do that is by moderating this newsgroup, comp.std.unix
An article related to this one appeared in the September/October 1986
;login: (The USENIX Association Newsletter). I'm also currently on the
USENIX Board of Directors. Comments, suggestions, etc., may be sent to
John S. Quarterman
Texas Internet Consulting
701 Brazos, Suite 500
Austin TX 78701-3243
+1-512-320-9031
uunet!usenix!jsq
jsq at longway.tic.com
For comp.std.unix:
Comments: uunet!std-unix-request std-unix-request at uunet.uu.net
Submissions: uunet!std-unix std-unix at uunet.uu.net
The November/December 1987 issue of CommUNIXations (the /usr/group magazine)
contains a report by Heinz Lycklama on the /usr/group Technical Committee
working groups which met in June 1987.
If you are interested in starting another /usr/group working group, contact
Heinz Lycklama:
Heinz Lycklama
Interactive Systems Corp.
2401 Colorado Ave., 3rd Floor
Santa Monica, CA 90404
(213)453-8649
decvax!cca!ima!heinz
Here is contact information for /usr/group working groups as taken from
the CommUNIXations article mentioned above.
/usr/group Working Group on Distributed File System:
Art Sabsevitz Frederick Glover
AT&T Information Systems MK02-1/H10
190 River Road Digital Equipment Corporation
Summit, NJ 07933 Continental Boulevard
201-522-6248 Merrimack, NH 03054-0430
attunix!bump 603-884-5111
decvax!fglover
/usr/group Working Group on Network Interface:
Steve Albert
AT&T Information Systems
190 River Road, Rm. A-114
Summit, NJ 07901
(201)522-6104
attunix!ssa
/usr/group Working Group on Internationalization:
John Wu Laurie Goudie
Charles River Data Systems Santa Cruz Operation
983 Concord St., 400 Encinal
Framingham, MA 01701 Santa Cruz, CA 95060
617-626-1000 408-458-1422
/usr/group Working Group on Graphics/Windows:
Tom Greene
Apollo Computer, Inc.
330 Billerica Road
Chelmsford, MA 01824
(617)256-6600, ext. 7581
/usr/group Working Group on Realtime:
Bill Corwin
Intel Corp.
5200 Elam Young Pkwy
Hillsboro, OR 97123
(503)681-2248
/usr/group Working Group on Database:
Val Skalabrin
Unify Corp.
1111 Howe Ave.
Sacramento, CA 95825
(916)920-9092
/usr/group Working Group on Performance Measurements:
Ram Chelluri Dave Hinnant
AT&T Computer Systems SCI Systems, Inc.
Room E15B Ste 325, Pamlico Bldg
4513 Western Ave. Research Triangle Pk, NC 27709
Lisle, IL 60532 (919)549-8334
(312)810-6223
/usr/group Working Group on Security:
Steve Sutton Ms. Jeanne Baccash
Consultant, Addamax AT&T UNIX Systems Engineering
1107 S. Orchard 190 River Road
Urbana, IL 61801 Summit, NJ 07901
217-344-0996 201-522-6028
attunix!jeanne
/usr/group Working Group on Super Computing:
Karen Sheaffer Robin O'Neill
Sandia National Laboratory Lawrence Livermore Laboratory
P.O. Box 969 P.O. Box 5509, L560
Livermore, CA 94550 Livermore, CA 94550
415-422-3431 415-422-0973
oneill#r%mfe at lll-mfe.arpa
The X3H3.6 display management committee has recently formed to develop
a model to support current and future window management systems, yet
is not based directly on any existing system. The chair solicits
help and participation:
Georges Grinstein
wanginst!ulowell!grinstein
The Abstract of the 1003.1 Trial Use Standard adds:
This interface is a complement to the C Programming Language
in the C Information Bulletin prepared by Technical Committee X3J11
of the Accredited Standards Committee X3, Information Processing
Systems, further specifying an environment for portable application
software.
X3J11 is sometimes known as the C Standards Committee. Their liaison to
P1003 is
Don Kretsch
AT&T
190 River Road
Summit, NJ 07901
A contact for information regarding publications and working groups is
Thomas Plum
Vice Chair, X3J11 Committee
Plum Hall Inc.
1 Spruce Avenue
Cardiff, New Jersey 08232
The current document may be ordered from
Global Engineering Documents
2805 McGaw
Irvine, CA 92714
USA
+1-714-261-1455
+1-800-854-7179
Ask for the X3.159 draft standard. The price is $65.
The current X3J11 meeting schedule is:
1988 June 13-14 London, England ISO TC97/SC22/WG14
1988 August 15-19 Cupertino, CA
1988 December 12-16 Seattle, WA
1989 April 10-11 Phoenix, AZ
The /usr/group Standard is a principal ancestor of P1003.1, X/OPEN,
and X3J11. It may be ordered for $15.00 from:
/usr/group Standards Committee
4655 Old Ironsides Drive, Suite 200
Santa Clara, California 95054
Tel: (408)986-8840
Fax: (408)986-1645
/usr/group also publishes an eight page document, ``Your Guide to POSIX,''
explaining what IEEE 1003 is, and a nineteen page document, ``POSIX Explored,''
about technical aspects of IEEE 1003.1, and its relations to other standards
and historical implementations. Contact /usr/group at the above address
for details.
The System V Interface Definition (The Purple Book, or SVID).
This is the AT&T standard and is one of the most frequently-used
references of the IEEE 1003 committee.
AT&T Customer Information Center
Attn: Customer Service Representative
P.O. Box 19901
Indianapolis, IN 46219
U.S.A.
800-432-6600 (Inside U.S.A.)
800-255-1242 (Inside Canada)
317-352-8557 (Outside U.S.A. and Canada)
System V Interface Definition, Issue 2
should be ordered by the following select codes:
Select Code: Volume: Topics:
320-011 Volume I Base System
Kernel Extension
320-012 Volume II Basic Utilities Extension
Advanced Utilities Extension
Software Development Extension
Administered System Extension
Terminal Volume Interface Extension
320-013 Volume III Base System Addendum
Terminal Interface Extension
Network Services Extension
307-131 I, II, III (all three volumes)
The price is about 37 U.S. dollars for each volume or $84 for all three.
Major credit cards are accepted for telephone orders: mail orders
should include a check or money order, payable to AT&T.
The X/OPEN PORTABILITY GUIDE (The Green Book)
is another reference frequently used by IEEE 1003.
The X/OPEN Group is "Ten of the world's major information system
suppliers" (at time of publication, Bull, DEC, Ericsson, Hewlett-Packard,
ICL, NIXDORF, Olivetti, Philips, Siemens and Unisys and subsequently
augmented by AT&T) who have produced a document intended to promote
the writing of portable applications. They closely follow both SVID
and POSIX, and cite the /usr/group standard as contributing, but
X/OPEN's books cover a wider area than any of those.
The book is published by
Elsevier Science Publishers B.V.
Book Order Department
P.O. Box 1991
1000 BZ Amsterdam
The Netherlands
and distributed in the U.S.A. and Canada by:
Elsevier Science Publishing Company, Inc.
52 Vanderbilt Avenue
New York, NY 10017
U.S.A.
There are currently five volumes:
1) System V Specification Commands and Utilities
2) System V Specification System Calls and Libraries
3) System V Specification Supplementary Definitions
4) Programming Languages
5) Data Management
They take a large number of credit cards and other forms of payment.
Comments, suggestions, error reports, etc., for Issue 2 of the Green Book
may be mailed directly to:
xpg2 at xopen.co.uk
uunet!mcvax!inset!xopen!xpg2
Information about X/OPEN can be requested from:
Mike Lambert
Technical Director
X/OPEN Ltd
c/o ICL BRA01
Lovelace Road
Bracknell
Berkshire
England
+44 344 42 48 42
mgl at xopen.co.uk
uunet!mcvax!inset!xopen!mgl
Finally, 4.2BSD and 4.3BSD have influenced POSIX in a number of areas.
The best reference on them is the 4.3BSD manuals, published by USENIX.
An order form may be obtained from:
Howard Press
c/o USENIX Association
P.O. Box 2299
Berkeley, CA 94710
415-528-8649
{ucbvax,decvax}!usenix!office
4.3BSD User's Manual Set (3 volumes) $25.00
User's Reference Manual
User's Supplementary Documents
Master Index
4.3BSD Programmer's Manual Set (3 volumes) $25.00
Programmer's Reference Maual
Programmer's Supplementary Documents, Volume 1
Programmer's Supplementary Documents, Volume 2
4.3BSD System Manager's Manual (1 volume) $10.00
Unfortunately, there are some license restrictions.
Contact the USENIX office for details.
Volume-Number: Volume 14, Number 14
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