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Full Discussion: Are the BSDs dying?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Are the BSDs dying? Post 303012282 by Corona688 on Thursday 1st of February 2018 05:02:07 PM
Old 02-01-2018
That other open UNIX and UNIX-like systems became numerous is hardly a "failure" on BSD's part. That you can use any OS you like, even ones not descended from BSD, and get the same features and calls, that source will work on wildly different processors, that it no longer matters where a feature was invented -- that was the whole point. That's their true and enduring success.

Also, you're thinking of this commercially, with emphasis on customers... You don't need to be popular to contribute useful ideas. Just look at "Plan Nine". Useful ideas are still being quietly taken from BSD here and there, now and again.

Last edited by Corona688; 02-01-2018 at 06:07 PM..
 

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EXIT(2) 							System Calls Manual							   EXIT(2)

NAME
exit, _exit - terminate a process SYNOPSIS
void _exit(int status) DESCRIPTION
_exit terminates a process with the following consequences: All of the descriptors open in the calling process are closed. This may entail delays, for example, waiting for output to drain; a process in this state may not be killed, as it is already dying. If the parent process of the calling process is executing a wait or is interested in the SIGCHLD signal (Minix-vmd), then it is notified of the calling process's termination and the low-order eight bits of status are made available to it; see wait(2). The parent process ID of all of the calling process's existing child processes are also set to 1. This means that the initializa- tion process (see intro(2)) inherits each of these processes as well. Most C programs call the library routine exit(3), which performs cleanup actions in the standard I/O library before calling _exit. RETURN VALUE
This call never returns. SEE ALSO
fork(2), sigaction(2), wait(2), exit(3). 4th Berkeley Distribution May 22, 1986 EXIT(2)
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