Overview
The Linux kernel was designed by Linus Torvalds, following the lack of a working Kernel (operating system), kernel for GNU, a Unix-compatible operating system made entirely of free software that had been undergoing development since 1983 by Richard Stallman. A working Unix system called Minix was later released but its license was not entirely free at the time and it was made for an educative purpose. The first entirely free Unix for personal computers, 386BSD, did not appear until 1992, by which time Torvalds had already built and publicly released the first version of the Linux kernel on the Internet. Like GNU and 386BSD, Linux did not have any Unix code, being a fresh reimplementation, and therefore avoided the UNIX System Laboratories, Inc. v. Berkeley Software Design, Inc., then legal issues. Linux distributions became popular in the 1990s and effectively made Unix technologies accessible to home users on personal computers whereas previously it had been confined to sophisticated workstations. Desktop Linux distributions include a windowing system such as X Window System, X11 or Wayland (protocol), Wayland and a desktop environment such as GNOME, KDE Plasma or Xfce. Distributions intended for server (computing), servers may not have a graphical user interface at all or include a solution stack such as LAMP (software bundle), LAMP. The source code of Linux may be used, modified, and distributed commercially or non-commercially by anyone under the terms of its respective licenses, such as the GNU General Public License (GPL). The license means creating novel distributions is permitted by anyone and is easier than it would be for an operating system such as MacOS or Microsoft Windows. The Linux kernel, for example, is licensed under the GPLv2, with an exception for system calls that allows code that calls the kernel via system calls not to be licensed under the GPL. Because of the dominance of Linux-based Android (operating system), Android on smartphones, Linux, including Android, has the Usage share of operating systems, largest installed base of all general-purpose operating systems . Linux is, , used by around 4 percent of desktop computers. The Chromebook, which runs the Linux kernel-based ChromeOS, dominates the US K–12 education market and represents nearly 20 percent of sub-$300 Laptop, notebook sales in the US. Linux is the leading operating system on servers (over 96.4% of the top one million web servers' operating systems are Linux), leads other Big iron (computing), big iron systems such as mainframe computers, and is used on all of the TOP500, world's 500 fastest supercomputers (, having gradually displaced all competitors). Linux also runs on embedded systems, i.e., devices whose operating system is typically built into the firmware and is highly tailored to the system. This includes router (computing), routers, automation controls, smart home technology, smart home devices, video game consoles, televisions (Samsung and LG smart TVs), automobiles (Tesla, Audi, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai, and Toyota), and spacecraft (Falcon 9 rocket, SpaceX Dragon 2, Dragon crew capsule, and the Ingenuity (helicopter), Ingenuity Mars helicopter).History
Precursors
The Unix operating system was conceived of and implemented in 1969, at AT&T Corporation, AT&T's Bell Labs in the United States, by Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, Douglas McIlroy, and Joe Ossanna. First released in 1971, Unix was written entirely in assembly language, as was common practice at the time. In 1973, in a key pioneering approach, it was rewritten in the C (programming language), C programming language by Dennis Ritchie (except for some hardware and I/O routines). The availability of a high-level language implementation of Unix made its porting to different computer platforms easier. As a 1956 antitrust case forbade AT&T from entering the computer business, AT&T provided the operating system's source code to anyone who asked. As a result, Unix use grew quickly and it became widely adopted by academic institutions and businesses. In 1984, Breakup of the Bell System, AT&T divested itself of its Regional Bell Operating Company, regional operating companies, and was released from its obligation not to enter the computer business; freed of that obligation, Bell Labs began selling Unix as a Proprietary software, proprietary product, where users were not legally allowed to modify it. Onyx Systems began selling early microcomputer-based Unix workstations in 1980. Later, Sun Microsystems, founded as a spin-off of a student project at Stanford University, also began selling Unix-based desktop workstations in 1982. While Sun workstations did not use commodity PC hardware, for which Linux was later originally developed, it represented the first successful commercial attempt at distributing a primarily single-user microcomputer that ran a Unix operating system. With Unix increasingly "locked in" as a proprietary product, the GNU Project, started in 1983 by Richard Stallman, had the goal of creating a "complete Unix-compatible software system" composed entirely of free software. Work began in 1984. Later, in 1985, Stallman started the Free Software Foundation and wrote the GNU General Public License (GNU GPL) in 1989. By the early 1990s, many of the programs required in an operating system (such as libraries, compilers, text editors, a Shell (computing)#Command-line shells, command-line shell, and a windowing system) were completed, although low-level elements such as device drivers, daemon (computing), daemons, and the kernel (operating system), kernel, called GNU Hurd, were stalled and incomplete. Minix was created by Andrew S. Tanenbaum, a computer science professor, and released in 1987 as a minimal Unix-like operating system targeted at students and others who wanted to learn operating system principles. Although the Source-available software, complete source code of Minix was freely available, the licensing terms prevented it from being free software until the licensing changed in April 2000.Creation
While attending the University of Helsinki in the fall of 1990, Torvalds enrolled in a Unix course. The course used a MicroVAX minicomputer running Ultrix, and one of the required texts was ''Operating Systems: Design and Implementation'' by Andrew S. Tanenbaum. This textbook included a copy of Tanenbaum's Minix operating system. It was with this course that Torvalds first became exposed to Unix. In 1991, he became curious about operating systems. Frustrated by the licensing of Minix, which at the time limited it to educational use only, he began to work on his operating system kernel, which eventually became the Linux kernel. On July 3, 1991, to implement Unix system calls, Linus Torvalds attempted unsuccessfully to obtain a digital copy of the POSIX standards Software documentation, documentation with a request to the ''comp.os.minix'' Usenet newsgroup, newsgroup. After not finding the POSIX documentation, Torvalds initially resorted to determining system calls from SunOS documentation owned by the university for use in operating its Sun Microsystems server. He also learned some system calls from Tanenbaum's Minix text. Torvalds began the development of the Linux kernel on Minix and applications written for Minix were also used on Linux. Later, Linux matured and further Linux kernel development took place on Linux systems. GNU applications also replaced all Minix components, because it was advantageous to use the freely available code from the GNU Project with the fledgling operating system; code licensed under the GNU GPL can be reused in other computer programs as long as they also are released under the same or a compatible license. Torvalds initiated a switch from his original license, which prohibited commercial redistribution, to the GNU GPL. Developers worked to integrate GNU components with the Linux kernel, creating a fully functional and free operating system. Although not released until 1992, due to UNIX System Laboratories, Inc. v. Berkeley Software Design, Inc., legal complications, the development of 386BSD, from which NetBSD, OpenBSD and FreeBSD descended, predated that of Linux. Linus Torvalds has stated that if the GNU kernel or 386BSD had been available in 1991, he probably would not have created Linux.Naming
Commercial and popular uptake
The adoption of Linux in production environments, rather than being used only by hobbyists, started to take off first in the mid-1990s in the supercomputing community, where organizations such as NASA started to replace their increasingly expensive machines with computer cluster, clusters of inexpensive commodity computers running Linux. Commercial use began when Dell and IBM, followed by Hewlett-Packard, started offering Linux support to escape Microsoft's monopoly in the desktop operating system market. Today, Linux systems are used throughout computing, from embedded systems to virtually all supercomputers, and have secured a place in server installations such as the popular LAMP (software bundle), LAMP application stack. The use of Linux distributions in home and enterprise desktops has been growing. Linux distributions have also become popular in the netbook market, with many devices shipping with customized Linux distributions installed, and Google releasing their own ChromeOS designed for netbooks. Linux's greatest success in the consumer market is perhaps the mobile device market, with Android being the dominant operating system on smartphones and very popular on Tablet computer, tablets and, more recently, on wearable technology, wearables, and vehicles. Linux gaming is also on the rise with Valve Corporation, Valve showing its support for Linux and rolling out SteamOS, its own gaming-oriented Linux distribution, which was later implemented in their Steam Deck platform. Linux distributions have also gained popularity with various local and national governments, such as the federal government of Brazil.Development
Linus Torvalds is the lead maintainer for the Linux kernel and guides its development, while Greg Kroah-Hartman is the lead maintainer for the stable branch. Zoë Kooyman is the executive director of the Free Software Foundation, which in turn supports the GNU components. Finally, individuals and corporations develop third-party non-GNU components. These third-party components comprise a vast body of work and may include both kernel modules and user applications and libraries. Linux vendors and communities combine and distribute the kernel, GNU components, and non-GNU components, with additional package management software in the form of Linux distributions.Design
Many developers of open source, open-source software agree that the Linux kernel was not designed but rather evolution, evolved through natural selection. Torvalds considers that although the design of Unix served as a scaffolding, "Linux grew with a lot of mutations – and because the mutations were less than random, they were faster and more directed than Mutation#Induced mutation, alpha-particles in DNA." Eric S. Raymond considers Linux's revolutionary aspects to be social, not technical: before Linux, complex software was designed carefully by small groups, but "Linux evolved in a completely different way. From nearly the beginning, it was rather casually hacked on by huge numbers of volunteers coordinating only through the Internet. Quality was maintained not by rigid standards or autocracy but by the naively simple strategy of releasing every week and getting feedback from hundreds of users within days, creating a sort of rapid Darwinian selection on the mutations introduced by developers." Bryan Cantrill, an engineer of a competing OS, agrees that "Linux wasn't designed, it evolved", but considers this to be a limitation, proposing that some features, especially those related to security, cannot be evolved into, "this is not a biological system at the end of the day, it's a software system." A Linux-based system is a modular Unix-like operating system, deriving much of its basic design from principles established in Unix during the 1970s and 1980s. Such a system uses a monolithic kernel, the Linux kernel, which handles process control, networking, access to the peripherals, and file systems. Device drivers are either integrated directly with the kernel or added as modules that are loaded while the system is running. The GNU user space and kernel space, userland is a key part of most systems based on the Linux kernel, with Android being the notable exception. The glibc, GNU C library, an implementation of the C standard library, works as a wrapper for the system calls of the Linux kernel necessary to the kernel-userspace interface, the GNU toolchain, toolchain is a broad collection of programming tools vital to Linux development (including the GNU Compiler Collection, compilers used to build the Linux kernel itself), and the GNU Core Utilities, coreutils implement many basic List of Unix commands, Unix tools. The GNU Project also develops Bash (Unix shell), Bash, a popular Command-line interface, CLI shell. The graphical user interface (or GUI) used by most Linux systems is built on top of an implementation of the X Window System. More recently, some of the Linux community has sought to move to using Wayland (protocol), Wayland as the display server protocol, replacing X11. Many other open-source software projects contribute to Linux systems. Installed components of a Linux system include the following: * A bootloader, for example GNU GRUB, LILO (bootloader), LILO, SYSLINUX or systemd-boot. This is a program that loads the Linux kernel into the computer's main memory, by being executed by the computer when it is turned on and after the firmware initialization is performed. * An init program, such as the traditional sysvinit and the newer systemd, OpenRC and Upstart (software), Upstart. This is the first Process (computing), process launched by the Linux kernel, and is at the root of the process tree. It starts processes such as system services and login prompts (whether graphical or in terminal mode). * Library (computing), Software libraries, which contain code that can be used by running processes. On Linux systems using Executable and Linkable Format, ELF-format executable files, the dynamic linker that manages the use of dynamic libraries is known as ld-linux.so. If the system is set up for the user to compile software themselves, header files will also be included to describe the API, programming interface of installed libraries. Besides the most commonly used software library on Linux systems, the GNU C Library (glibc), there are numerous other libraries, such as Simple DirectMedia Layer, SDL and Mesa (computer graphics), Mesa. ** The C standard library is the library necessary to run programs written in C (programming language), C on a computer system, with the GNU C Library being the standard. It provides an implementation of the POSIX API, as well as extensions to that API. For embedded systems, alternatives such as musl, EGLIBC (a glibc fork once used by Debian) and uClibc (which was designed for uClinux) have been developed, although the last two are no longer maintained. Android uses its own C library, Bionic (software), Bionic. However, musl can additionally be used as a replacement for glibc on desktop and laptop systems, as seen on certain Linux distributions like Void Linux. * Basic Unix commands, with GNU coreutils being the standard implementation. Alternatives exist for embedded systems, such as the copyleft BusyBox, and the BSD-licensed Toybox. * Widget toolkits are the libraries used to build graphical user interfaces (GUIs) for software applications. Numerous widget toolkits are available, including GTK and Clutter developed by the GNOME Project, Qt (software), Qt developed by the Qt Project and led by The Qt Company, and Enlightenment Foundation Libraries (EFL) developed primarily by the Enlightenment (software), Enlightenment team. * A package manager, package management system, such as dpkg and RPM Package Manager, RPM. Alternatively packages can be compiled from binary or source Tar (computing), tarballs. * User interface programs such as command shells or windowing environments.User interface
The user interface, also known as the shell (computing), shell, is either a command-line interface (CLI), a graphical user interface (GUI), or controls attached to the associated hardware, which is common for embedded systems. For desktop systems, the default user interface is usually graphical, although the CLI is commonly available through terminal emulator windows or on a separate virtual console. CLI shells are text-based user interfaces, which use text for both input and output. The dominant shell used in Linux is the bash (Unix shell), Bourne-Again Shell (bash), originally developed for the GNU Project; List of command-line interpreters, other shells such as Z shell, Zsh are also used. Most low-level Linux components, including various parts of the Userland (computing), userland, use the CLI exclusively. The CLI is particularly suited for automation of repetitive or delayed tasks and provides very simple inter-process communication.Video input infrastructure
Linux currently has two modern kernel-userspace APIs for handling video input devices: Video4Linux, V4L2 API for video streams and radio, and DVB API for digital TV reception. Due to the complexity and diversity of different devices, and due to the large number of formats and standards handled by those APIs, this infrastructure needs to evolve to better fit other devices. Also, a good userspace device library is the key to the success of having userspace applications to be able to work with all formats supported by those devices.Development
Community
A distribution is largely driven by its developer and user communities. Some vendors develop and fund their distributions on a volunteer basis, Debian being a well-known example. Others maintain a community version of their commercial distributions, as Red Hat does with Fedora Linux, Fedora, and SUSE S.A., SUSE does with openSUSE. In many cities and regions, local associations known as Linux User Groups (LUGs) seek to promote their preferred distribution and by extension free software. They hold meetings and provide free demonstrations, training, technical support, and operating system installation to new users. Many Internet communities also provide support to Linux users and developers. Most distributions and free software / open-source projects have Internet Relay Chat, IRC chatrooms or newsgroups. Internet forum, Online forums are another means of support, with notable examples being Stack Exchange, Unix & Linux Stack Exchange, LinuxQuestions.org and the various distribution-specific support and community forums, such as ones for Ubuntu, Fedora, Arch Linux, Gentoo Linux, Gentoo, etc. Linux distributions host mailing lists; commonly there will be a specific topic such as usage or development for a given list. There are several technology websites with a Linux focus. Print magazines on Linux often bundle cover disks that carry software or even complete Linux distributions. Although Linux distributions are generally available without charge, several large corporations sell, support, and contribute to the development of the components of the system and free software. An analysis of the Linux kernel in 2017 showed that well over 85% of the code was developed by programmers who are being paid for their work, leaving about 8.2% to unpaid developers and 4.1% unclassified. Some of the major corporations that provide contributions include Intel, Samsung, Google, AMD, Oracle Corporation, Oracle, and Facebook. Several corporations, notably Red Hat, Canonical (company), Canonical, and SUSE S.A., SUSE have built a significant business around Linux distributions. The free software licenses, on which the various software packages of a distribution built on the Linux kernel are based, explicitly accommodate and encourage commercialization; the relationship between a Linux distribution as a whole and individual vendors may be seen as symbiosis, symbiotic. One common business model of commercial suppliers is charging for support, especially for business users. A number of companies also offer a specialized business version of their distribution, which adds proprietary support packages and tools to administer higher numbers of installations or to simplify administrative tasks. Another business model is to give away the software to sell hardware. This used to be the norm in the computer industry, with operating systems such as CP/M, Apple DOS, and versions of the classic Mac OS before 7.6 freely copyable (but not modifiable). As computer hardware standardized throughout the 1980s, it became more difficult for hardware manufacturers to profit from this tactic, as the OS would run on any manufacturer's computer that shared the same architecture.Programming on Linux
Most programming languages support Linux either directly or through third-party community based Porting, ports. The original development tools used for building both Linux applications and operating system programs are found within the GNU toolchain, which includes the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) and the GNU Build System. Amongst others, GCC provides compilers for Ada (programming language), Ada, C (programming language), C, C++, Go (programming language), Go and Fortran. Many programming languages have a cross-platform reference implementation that supports Linux, for example PHP, Perl, Ruby (programming language), Ruby, Python (programming language), Python, Java (programming language), Java, Go (programming language), Go, Rust (programming language), Rust and Haskell. First released in 2003, the LLVM project provides an alternative cross-platform open-source compiler for many languages. Proprietary software, Proprietary compilers for Linux include the Intel C++ Compiler, Sun Studio (software), Sun Studio, and IBM XL C/C++ Compilers, IBM XL C/C++ Compiler. BASIC is available in procedural programming, procedural form from QB64, PureBasic, Yabasic, GLBasic, Basic4GL, XBasic, wxBasic, SdlBasic, and Basic-256, as well as object oriented programming, object oriented through Gambas, FreeBASIC, B4X, Basic for Qt, Phoenix Object Basic, NS Basic, ProvideX, Chipmunk Basic, RapidQ and Xojo. Pascal (programming language), Pascal is implemented through GNU Pascal, Free Pascal, and Virtual Pascal, as well as graphically via Lazarus (software), Lazarus, PascalABC.NET, or Delphi (software), Delphi using FireMonkey (previously through Borland Kylix). A common feature of Unix-like systems, Linux includes traditional specific-purpose programming languages targeted at scripting language, scripting, text processing and system configuration and management in general. Linux distributions support shell scripts, AWK, awk, sed and make (software), make. Many programs also have an embedded programming language to support configuring or programming themselves. For example, regular expressions are supported in programs like grep and locate (Unix), locate, the traditional Unix message transfer agent Sendmail contains its own Turing completeness, Turing complete scripting system, and the advanced text editor GNU Emacs is built around a general purpose Emacs Lisp, Lisp interpreter. Most distributions also include support for PHP, Perl, Ruby (programming language), Ruby, Python (programming language), Python and other dynamic programming language, dynamic languages. While not as common, Linux also supports C Sharp (programming language), C# and other Common Language Infrastructure, CLI List of CLI languages, languages (via Mono (software), Mono), Vala (programming language), Vala, and Scheme (programming language), Scheme. Guile (programming language), Guile Scheme acts as an scripting language, extension language targeting the GNU system utilities, seeking to make the conventionally small, static typing, static, compiled C programs of Unix philosophy, Unix design rapidly and dynamically extensible via an elegant, functional programming, functional high-level scripting system; many GNU programs can be compiled with optional Guile language binding, bindings to this end. A number of Java virtual machines and development kits run on Linux, including the original Sun Microsystems JVM (HotSpot (virtual machine), HotSpot), and IBM's J2SE RE, as well as many open-source projects like Kaffe and Jikes RVM; Kotlin (programming language), Kotlin, Scala (programming language), Scala, Apache Groovy, Groovy and other List of JVM languages, JVM languages are also available. GNOME and KDE are popular desktop environments and provide a framework for developing applications. These projects are based on the GTK and Qt (toolkit), Qt widget toolkits, respectively, which can also be used independently of the larger framework. Both support a wide variety of languages. There are :Linux integrated development environments, a number of Integrated development environments available including Anjuta, Code::Blocks, CodeLite, Eclipse (software), Eclipse, Geany, ActiveState Komodo, KDevelop, Lazarus (software), Lazarus, MonoDevelop, NetBeans, and Qt Creator, while the long-established editors Vim (text editor), Vim, GNU nano, nano and Emacs remain popular.Hardware support
Uses
Market share and uptake
Many quantitative studies of free/open-source software focus on topics including market share and reliability, with numerous studies specifically examining Linux. The Linux market is growing, and the Linux operating system market size is expected to see a growth of 19.2% by 2027, reaching $15.64 billion, compared to $3.89 billion in 2019. Analysts project a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 13.7% between 2024 and 2032, culminating in a market size of US$34.90 billion by the latter year. Analysts and proponents attribute the relative success of Linux to its security, reliability, low cost, and freedom from vendor lock-in. ; Desktops and laptops : According to web analytics, web server statistics (that is, based on the numbers recorded from visits to websites by client devices), in October 2024, the estimated market share of Linux on desktop computers was around 4.3%. In comparison, Microsoft Windows had a market share of around 73.4%, while macOS covered around 15.5%. ; Web servers : W3Cook publishes stats that use the top 1,000,000 Alexa domains, which estimate that 96.55% of web servers run Linux, 1.73% run Windows, and 1.72% run FreeBSD. :W3Techs publishes stats that use the top 10,000,000 Alexa domains and the top 1,000,000 Tranco domains, updated monthly and estimate that Linux is used by 39% of the web servers, versus 21.9% being used by Microsoft Windows. 40.1% used other types of Unix. :International Data Corporation, IDC's Q1 2007 report indicated that Linux held 12.7% of the overall server market at that time; this estimate was based on the number of Linux servers sold by various companies, and did not include server hardware purchased separately that had Linux installed on it later. As of 2024, estimates suggest Linux accounts for at least 80% of the public cloud workload, partly thanks to its widespread use in platforms like Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud Platform.ZDNet report that 96.3% of the top one million web servers are running Linux. W3Techs state that Linux powers at least 39.2% of websites whose operating system is known, with other estimates saying 55%.; Mobile devices : Android, which is based on the Linux kernel, has become the dominant operating system for smartphones. In April 2023, 68.61% of mobile devices accessing websites using StatCounter were from Android. Android is also a popular operating system for tablets, being responsible for more than 60% of tablet sales . According to web server statistics, Android has a market share of about 71%, with iOS holding 28%, and the remaining 1% attributed to various niche platforms. ; Film production : For years, Linux has been the platform of choice in the film industry. The first major film produced on Linux servers was 1997's ''Titanic (1997 film), Titanic''. Since then major studios including DreamWorks Animation, Pixar, Weta Digital, and Industrial Light & Magic have migrated to Linux. According to the Linux Movies Group, more than 95% of the servers and desktops at large animation and visual effects companies use Linux. ; Use in government : Linux distributions have also gained popularity with various local and national governments. News of the Russian military creating its own Linux distribution has also surfaced, and has come to fruition as the G.H.ost Project. The Indian state of Kerala has gone to the extent of mandating that all state high schools run Linux on their computers. People's Republic of China, China uses Linux exclusively as the operating system for its Loongson processor family to achieve technology independence. In Spain, some regions have developed their own Linux distributions, which are widely used in education and official institutions, like gnuLinEx in Extremadura and Guadalinex in Andalusia. France and Germany have also taken steps toward the adoption of Linux. North Korea's Red Star OS, developed , is based on a version of Fedora Linux.
Copyright, trademark, and naming
The Linux kernel is software license, licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL), version 2. The GPL requires that anyone who distributes software based on source code under this license must make the originating source code (and any modifications) available to the recipient under the same terms. Other key components of a typical Linux distribution are also mainly licensed under the GPL, but they may use other licenses; many libraries use the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL), a more permissive variant of the GPL, and the X.Org Server, X.Org implementation of the X Window System uses the MIT License. Torvalds states that the Linux kernel will not move from version 2 of the GPL to version 3. He specifically dislikes some provisions in the new license which prohibit the use of the software in digital rights management. It would also be impractical to obtain permission from all the copyright holders, who number in the thousands. A 2001 study of Red Hat Linux 7.1 found that this distribution contained 30 million source lines of code. Using the COCOMO, Constructive Cost Model, the study estimated that this distribution required about eight thousand person-years of development time. According to the study, if all this software had been developed by conventional proprietary means, it would have cost about to develop in in the United States. Most of the source code (71%) was written in the C programming language, but many other languages were used, including C++, Lisp (programming language), Lisp, assembly language, Perl, Python, Fortran, and various shell scripting languages. Slightly over half of all lines of code were licensed under the GPL. The Linux kernel itself was 2.4 million lines of code, or 8% of the total. In a later study, the same analysis was performed for Debian version 4.0 (etch, which was released in 2007). This distribution contained close to 283 million source lines of code, and the study estimated that it would have required about seventy three thousand man-years and cost (in dollars) to develop by conventional means.See also
* Comparison of Linux distributions * Comparison of open-source and closed-source software * Comparison of operating systems * Comparison of X Window System desktop environments * Criticism of desktop Linux * Criticism of Linux * Linux kernel version history * Linux Documentation Project * Linux From Scratch * Linux Software Map * List of Linux distributions * List of Linux games, List of games released on Linux * List of operating systems * Loadable kernel module * Usage share of operating systems * Timeline of operating systemsNotes
References
External links
* (archived)