- IBM AIX (operating system)
Infobox OS
name = AIX
caption =
developer =IBM
source_model =Closed source
kernel_type = Dynamic Extendable
supported_platforms =ROMP ,IBM POWER ,PowerPC ,IBM PS/2 ,System/370 ,ESA/390
ui =Common Desktop Environment
family =UNIX System V
latest_release_version = 6.1
latest_release_date = November, 2007
marketing_target = Workstation, Server
programmed_in = C
prog_language = C
language = English
updatemodel =
package_manager =
working_state = Current
license = Proprietary
website = [http://www.ibm.com/servers/aix/ IBM AIX]"AIX" (Advanced Interactive eXecutive) is the name given to a series of proprietary
operating system s sold byIBM for several of its computer system platforms, based onUNIX System V with4.3BSD -compatible command and programming interface extensions.AIX runs on up to 64
IBM POWER orPowerPC architecturecentral processing unit s and twoterabyte s (TB) ofrandom access memory . The JFS2file system —first introduced by IBM as part of AIX—allowscomputer file s and partitions over 16 TB in size.History
AIX Version 1, introduced in 1986 for the
IBM 6150 RT workstation, was based onUNIX System V Releases 1 and 2. In developing AIX, IBM andINTERACTIVE Systems Corporation (whom IBM contracted) also incorporated source code from 4.2 and 4.3BSD UNIX.Among other variants, IBM later produced AIX Version 3 (also known as AIX/6000), based on System V Release 3, for their
IBM POWER -basedRS/6000 platform. Since 1990, AIX has served as the primary operating system for the RS/6000 series (later renamed "IBM eServer pSeries", then "IBM System p ", and now "IBM Power Systems "). AIX Version 4, introduced in 1994, addedsymmetric multiprocessing with the introduction of the first RS/6000 SMP servers and continued to evolve though the 1990s, culminating with AIX 4.3.3 in 1999. Version 4.1, in a slightly modified form, was also the standard operating system for theApple Network Server systems sold byApple Computer to complement theMacintosh line.In the late 1990s, under
Project Monterey , IBM and theSanta Cruz Operation planned to integrate AIX andUnixWare into a single32-bit /64-bit multiplatform UNIX with particular emphasis on running onIntel IA-64 architecture CPUs. Abeta test version of AIX 5L for IA-64 systems was released, but according to documents released in "SCO vs. IBM", less than forty licenses for the finished Monterey Unix were ever sold before the project was terminated in 2002.AIX 6 was announced in May of 2007 and ran an open beta from June 2007 until the general availability (GA) of AIX 6.1 on November 9th, 2007. Major new features in AIX 6.1 included full
role-based access control ,workload partitions (which enable application mobility), andlive partition mobility on the POWER6 hardware.SCO lawsuit
In the SCO v. IBM lawsuit filed in 2003, the
SCO Group alleged that (among other infractions) IBM had misappropriated licensedsource code fromUNIX System V Release 4 for incorporation into AIX; SCO subsequently withdrew IBM's license to develop and distribute AIX. IBM maintains that their license was irrevocable, and continued to sell and support the product until the litigation was adjudicated.On
2007-08-10 the U.S. district court ruled that SCO does not own the copyrights to the Unix operating system. [cite web |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/11/technology/11novell.html |title=Judge Says Unix Copyrights Rightfully Belong to Novell |accessdate=2008-08-06 |publisher=NewYorkTimes |date=2007-08-10 ]upported hardware platforms
IBM 6150 RT
The original AIX (sometimes called AIX/RT) was developed for the IBM 6150 RT workstation by IBM in conjunction with
INTERACTIVE Systems Corporation , who had previously portedUNIX System III to theIBM PC for IBM as PC/IX. Installation media consisted of eight 1.2M floppy disks. The RT was based on theROMP chip, the first commercialRISC chip, based on a design, theIBM 801 , pioneered at IBM Research.One of the novel aspects of the RT design was the use of a
microkernel , called Virtual Resource Manager (VRM). The keyboard, mouse, display, disk drives and network were all controlled by a microkernel One could "hotkey" from one operating system to the next using the Alt-Tab key combination. Each OS in turn would get possession of the keyboard, mouse and display. Besides AIX v2, thePICK OS also utilized this microkernel.Much of the AIX v2 kernel was written in the
PL/I programming language, which proved troublesome during the migration to AIX v3.Fact|date=June 2008 AIX v2 included fullTCP/IP networking, as well as SNA and two networking file systems: NFS, licensed fromSun Microsystems , andDistributed Services (DS). DS had the distinction of being built on top of SNA, and thereby being fully compatible with DS on the IBM midrange AS/400 and mainframe systems. For the graphical user interfaces, AIX v2 came with the X10R3 and later the X10R4 and X11 versions of theX Window System from MIT, together with the Athena widget set. Compilers forFortran and C were available. One of the more popular desktop applications was thePageMaker desktop publishing software.IBM PS/2 series
AIX PS/2 (also known as AIX/386) was developed by
Locus Computing Corporation under contract to IBM. AIX PS/2, first released in 1989, ran onIBM PS/2 personal computer s withIntel 386 and faster processors.IBM mainframes
In 1988, IBM announced AIX/370, also developed by Locus Computing. AIX/370 was IBM's first attempt to offer
Unix-like functionality for their mainframe line, specifically theSystem/370 . AIX/370 was released in 1990 with functional equivalence to System V Release 2 and 4.3BSD as well as IBM enhancements. With the introduction of theESA/390 architecture, AIX/370 was replaced by AIX/ESA in 1991, which was based onOSF/1 , and also ran on theSystem/390 platform. This development effort was made partly to allow IBM to compete withAmdahl UTS.Fact|date=June 2008 Unlike AIX/370, AIX/ESA ran both natively as the host operating system, and as a guest under VM. AIX/ESA, while technically advanced, had little commercial success, partially because UNIX functionality was added as an option to the existing mainframe operating system,MVS , which became MVS/ESA OpenEdition in 1999.Fact|date=June 2008POWER/PowerPC-based systems
The release of AIX version 3 (sometimes called AIX/6000) coincided with the announcement of the first IBM RS/6000 models. The RS/6000 was unique in that it not only outperformed all other machines in integer compute performance, but also beat the competition by a "factor of 10" in floating-point performance. Fact|date=February 2007
Releases of AIX version 3 also took advantage of the developments in the POWER architecture.
AIX v3 innovated in several ways on the software side. It was the first operating system to introduce the idea of a
journalling file system , JFS, which allowed for fast boot times by avoiding the need tofsck the disks on every reboot. Another innovation was the introduction of shared libraries, which avoided the need for an application to statically link to the libraries it used. The resulting smaller binaries used less of the hardware RAM, to run, and used less of the disk space to install. Besides improving performance, it was a boon to developers: executable binaries could be in the 10s ofkilobyte s instead of a megabyte for an executable statically linked to theC library . AIX v3 also ditched the microkernel of AIX v2, a contentious move that resulted in v3 being somewhat more "pure" (and containing no PL/1 code) than v2.Other notable subsytems included:
*IRIS GL , a 3D rendering library, the progenitor ofOpenGL . IrisGL was licensed by IBM from SGI, then a small company which had sold only one thousand machines to date. SGI also provided the low-end graphics card for the RS/6000, capable of drawing 20,000 Gouraud-shaded triangles per second. The high-end graphics card was designed by IBM, a follow-on to the mainframe-basedIBM 5080 , capable of rendering 990K vectors per second.
*PHIGS , another 3D rendering API, popular in automotive CAD/CAM circles, and at the core ofCATIA .
* Full implementation of version 11 of the X Window System, together with Motif as the recommended widget collection and window manager.
* Network file systems: NFS from Sun; AFS, theAndrew File System ; and DFS, theDistributed File System .
* NCS, theNetwork Computing System , licensed fromApollo Computer (later acquired by HP)
* TheNeXT windowing system (NeXT DPS). This was notable as a "plan B", in case the X11/Motif/IrisGL combination failed in the marketplace. However, it was highly proprietary: it hadn't been licensed to any other Unix vendor. This, in the face of the open systems challenge of X11/Motif and its lack of 3D capability, cemented its failure in the marketplace.As of 2007, the current release of AIX runs on the RS/6000 and System p,
BladeCenter JS-series,IntelliStation POWER, andSystem i5 platforms.Apple Network Servers
The
Apple Network Server systems were PowerPC-based systems designed byApple Computer to have numerous high-end features that standard Apple hardware did not have, including swappable hard drives, redundant power supplies, and external monitoring capability. These systems were more or less based on thePower Macintosh hardware available at the time but were designed to use AIX (versions 4.1.4 or 4.1.5) as their native operating system in a specialized version specific to the ANS.AIX was only compatible with the Network Servers and was not ported to standard Power Macintosh hardware. Not to be confused is
A/UX , Apple's earlier version of Unix for68k -basedMacintosh es.IA-64 systems
As part of
Project Monterey , abeta test version of AIX 5L was released for the IA-64 (Itanium ) architecture in 2001, but this was abandoned before it became an official product due to the lack of interest in the finished Project Monterey system, as well as the overall lack of uptake of the IA-64 architecture by a skeptical marketplace, which largely gravitated towards theProject Trillian port ofLinux as the primary platform OS.Fact|date=July 2008Versions
POWER/PowerPC releases
* AIX 6.1, [http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/p/os/aix/v61/index.html November 9, 2007]
**Workload Partitions (WPARs)operating system-level virtualization
**Live Application Mobility
** Role Based Access ControlRBAC
** [http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/systems/scope/aix/topic/com.ibm.aix.security/doc/security/aix_sec_expert.htm AIX Security Expert] - A system and network security hardening tool
**Trusted AIX
** Integrated Electronic Service Agent(tm) for auto error reporting
** EncryptingJFS2 filesystem
** Trusted Execution
** Concurrent Kernel Maintenance
** Kernel exploitation ofPOWER6 storage keys
**ProbeVue dynamic tracing
** Systems Director Console for AIX
** Integrated filesystem snapshot
* AIX 5L 5.3, [http://www-306.ibm.com/software/support/systemsp/lifecycle/ August 13, 2004]
** NFS Version 4
** Advanced Accounting
** VirtualSCSI
** Virtual Ethernet
** Exploitation ofSimultaneous multithreading (SMT)
**Micro-Partitioning enablement
** POWER5 exploitation
** JFS2 quotas
** Ability to shrink aJFS2 filesystem
**kernel scheduler has been enhanced to dynamically increase and decrease the use of virtual processors. AIX 5L Version 5.3 ML3
* AIX 5L 5.2, [http://www-306.ibm.com/software/support/systemsp/lifecycle/ October 18, 2002]
** Ability to run on the IBMBladeCenter JS20 with thePowerPC 970 .
** Minimum level required for POWER5 hardware
** MPIO forFibre Channel disks
**iSCSI Initiator software
** Participation in Dynamic LPAR
**Concurrrent I/O (CIO) feature introduced forJFS2 released in Maintenance Level 01 in May 2003 [ [http://www.ibm.com/servers/aix/whitepapers/db_perf_aix.pdf Improving Database Performance With AIX Concurrent I/O - White Paper ] ]
* AIX 5L 5.1, May 4, 2001
** Ability to run on anIA-64 architecture processor, although this never went beyond beta, [ [http://www.unigroup.org/unigroup-0404.html Unigroup Next Meeting Announcement ] ]
** Minimum level required for POWER4 hardware and the last release that worked on theMicro Channel architecture
**64-bit kernel, installed but not activated by default
** JFS2
** Ability to run in a Logical Partition onPOWER4
** The L stands forLinux affinity
**Trusted Computing Base (TCB)
** Support for mirroring with striping* AIX 4.3.3, September 17,1999
** Onlinebackup function
**Workload Manager (WLM)
** Introduction oftopas utility
* AIX 4.3.2, October 23,1998
* AIX 4.3.1, April 24,1998
* AIX 4.3, October 31,1997
** Ability to run on 64-bit architecture CPUs
**IPv6
**Web-based System Manager
* AIX 4.2.1, April 25,1997
** NFS Version 3
* AIX 4.2, May 17,1996
* AIX 4.1.5, November 8,1996
* AIX 4.1.4, October 20,1995
* AIX 4.1.3, July 7,1995
** CDE 1.0 became the default GUI environment, replacing Motif X Window Manager.
* AIX 4.1.1, October 28,1994
* AIX 4.1, August 12,1994
* AIX 4.0, 1994
** Run on RS/6000 systems withPowerPC processors and PCI busses.
* AIX 3.2 1992
* AIX 3.1, February 1990
** Journaled File System (JFS) filesystem type
* AIX 3.0 1989
** LVM (Logical Volume Manager ) was incorporated into OSF/1, and in [http://www.byte.com/art/9504/sec14/art2.htm 1995 for HP-UX] , and [http://www.usenix.org/events/usenix01/freenix01/full_papers/teigland/teigland_html/index.html the Linux LVM implementation is similar to the HP-UX LVM implementation] .
** SMIT was introduced.IBM PS/2 releases
* AIX PS/2 v1.1, 1989
** last version was 1.3, 1992.IBM 6150 RT releases
* AIX v1.0, 1986
* AIX v2.0
** last version was 2.2.1.User interfaces
Graphical
The
Common Desktop Environment (CDE) is AIX's defaultgraphical user interface . As part of Linux Affinity and the free AIX Toolbox for Linux Applications (ATLA), open-sourceKDE andGNOME desktop are also available.ystem Management Console
SMIT is the System Management Interface Tool for AIX. It allows a user to navigate a menu hierarchy of commands, rather than using the command line. Invocation is typically achieved with the command
smit
. Experienced system administrators make use of theF6
function key which generates the command line that SMIT will invoke to complete the proposed task.SMIT also generates a log of commands that are performed in the
smit.script
file. Thesmit.script
file automatically records the commands with the command flags and parameters used. Thesmit.script
file can be used as an executable shell script to rerun system configuration tasks. SMIT also creates thesmit.log
file, which contains additional detailed information that can be used by programmers in extending the SMIT system.smit
andsmitty
refer to the same program, thoughsmitty
invokes the text-based version, whilesmit
will invoke an X Window System based interface if possible; however, ifsmit
determines that X Window System capabilities are not present, it will present the text-based version instead of failing. Determination of X Window System capabilities is typically performed by checking for the existence of theDISPLAY
variable.References
ee also
* AOS, IBM's educational-market port of 4.3BSD
*List of Unix systems
*Operating systems timeline External links
* [http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/p/os/aix/v61/index.html AIX Version 6.1 overview]
* [http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/systems/scope/aix/index.jsp AIX version 6.1 information center]
* [http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/p/os/aix/ IBM AIX page]
* [http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/wikis/display/WikiPtype/Home AIX Wiki]
* [http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/forums/dw_forum.jsp?forum=747&cat=56 AIX Forum]
* [http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/aix/ AIX & UNIX dW Zone]
* [http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/pseries/v5r3/index.jsp AIX 5.3 Documentation]
* [http://www.ibm.com/servers/aix/products/aixos/linux/ AIX Toolbox for Linux Applications]
* [http://www.ibm.com/servers/eserver/support/unixservers/aixfixes.html AIX fixes]
* [http://rootvg.net/index.php RootVG.net Independent portal for AIX & System p infomation]
* [http://www.pseriestech.org/forum/aix-for-power-systems/ pSeriesTech.Org AIX Support Forum]
* [http://www.elink.ibmlink.ibm.com/public/applications/publications/cgibin/pbi.cgi?CTY=US&FNC=SRX&PBL=GC23-3059-01 AIX/ESA V2R2 General Information]
* [http://www.unet.univie.ac.at/aix/aixprggd/genprogc/toc.htm AIX Version 4.3 General Programming Concepts: Writing and Debugging Programs]
* [http://www.ibm.com/support/electronic IBM Electronic Service Agent]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.