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Full Discussion: Are the BSDs dying?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Are the BSDs dying? Post 303012227 by Neo on Wednesday 31st of January 2018 11:15:49 PM
Old 02-01-2018
There is nothing "dead" about BSD. BSD lives in the heart and soul of MacOS, and MacOS is a very popular computer operating system. All software changes over time, and BSD is no exception and BSD changed the heart of the MacOS forever:

Reference:

BSD Overview

Quote:
BSD Overview

The BSD portion of the OS X kernel is derived primarily from FreeBSD, a version of 4.4BSD that offers advanced networking, performance, security, and compatibility features. BSD variants in general are derived (sometimes indirectly) from 4.4BSD-Lite Release 2 from the Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) at the University of California at Berkeley. BSD provides many advanced features, including the following:

Preemptive multitasking with dynamic priority adjustment. Smooth and fair sharing of the computer between applications and users is ensured, even under the heaviest of loads.

Multiuser access. Many people can use an OS X system simultaneously for a variety of things. This means, for example, that system peripherals such as printers and disk drives are properly shared between all users on the system or the network and that individual resource limits can be placed on users or groups of users, protecting critical system resources from overuse.

Strong TCP/IP networking with support for industry standards such as SLIP, PPP, and NFS. OS X can interoperate easily with other systems as well as act as an enterprise server, providing vital functions such as NFS (remote file access) and email services, or Internet services such as HTTP, FTP, routing, and firewall (security) services.
Memory protection. Applications cannot interfere with each other. One application crashing does not affect others in any way.

Virtual memory and dynamic memory allocation. Applications with large appetites for memory are satisfied while still maintaining interactive response to users. With the virtual memory system in OS X, each application has access to its own 4 GB memory address space; this should satisfy even the most memory-hungry applications.
Support for kernel threads based on Mach threads. User-level threading packages are implemented on top of kernel threads. Each kernel thread is an independently scheduled entity. When a thread from a user process blocks in a system call, other threads from the same process can continue to execute on that or other processors. By default, a process in the conventional sense has one thread, the main thread. A user process can use the POSIX thread API to create other user threads.

SMP support. Support is included for computers with multiple CPUs.

Source code. Developers gain the greatest degree of control over the BSD programming environment because source is included.

Many of the POSIX APIs.
 

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PTHREAD_KEY_CREATE(3)					   BSD Library Functions Manual 				     PTHREAD_KEY_CREATE(3)

NAME
pthread_key_create -- thread-specific data key creation LIBRARY
POSIX Threads Library (libpthread, -lpthread) SYNOPSIS
#include <pthread.h> int pthread_key_create(pthread_key_t *key, void (*destructor)(void *)); DESCRIPTION
The pthread_key_create() function creates a thread-specific data key visible to all threads in the process. Key values provided by pthread_key_create() are opaque objects used to locate thread-specific data. Although the same key value may be used by different threads, the values bound to the key by pthread_setspecific() are maintained on a per-thread basis and persist for the life of the calling thread. Upon key creation, the value NULL is associated with the new key in all active threads. Upon thread creation, the value NULL is associated with all defined keys in the new thread. An optional destructor function may be associated with each key value. At thread exit, if a key value has a non-NULL destructor pointer, and the thread has a non-NULL value associated with the key, the function pointed to is called with the current associated value as its sole argument. The order of destructor calls is unspecified if more than one destructor exists for a thread when it exits. If, after all the destructors have been called for all non-NULL values with associated destructors, there are still some non-NULL values with associated destructors, then the process is repeated. If, after at least [PTHREAD_DESTRUCTOR_ITERATIONS] iterations of destructor calls for outstanding non-NULL values, there are still some non-NULL values with associated destructors, the implementation stops calling destructors. RETURN VALUES
If successful, the pthread_key_create() function will store the newly created key value at the location specified by key and returns zero. Otherwise an error number will be returned to indicate the error. ERRORS
The pthread_key_create() function will fail if: [EAGAIN] The system lacked the necessary resources to create another thread-specific data key, or the system-imposed limit on the total number of keys per process [PTHREAD_KEYS_MAX] would be exceeded. [ENOMEM] Insufficient memory exists to create the key. SEE ALSO
pthread_getspecific(3), pthread_key_delete(3), pthread_setspecific(3) STANDARDS
The pthread_key_create() function conforms to ISO/IEC 9945-1:1996 (``POSIX.1''). BSD
April 4, 1996 BSD
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