OpenWindows

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

OpenWindows on Solaris showing default DeskSet tools.
OpenWindows on Solaris showing default DeskSet tools.

OpenWindows was a graphical user interface environment for Sun Microsystems workstations which handled SunView, NeWS, and X Window System protocols. OpenWindows was included in later releases of the SunOS 4 operating system and the Solaris operating system until its removal in Solaris 9 in favor of CDE and GNOME 2.0.

Contents

[edit] Description

OpenWindows was a desktop environment that implemented the OPEN LOOK GUI specification. The name was actually an umbrella term used by Sun to describe several components: the underlying X11/NeWS window server, the OPEN LOOK Window Manager (olwm), the DeskSet productivity tools, and the XView and OLIT widget toolkits.

[edit] History

OpenWindows 1.0 was released in 1989 as a separately licensed addition to SunOS 4.0,[1] replacing the older SunView (originally "SunTools") windowing system. Its core was the "xnews server", a hybrid window server that as its name implies supported both X11 and NeWS-based applications. The server could also display legacy SunView applications, although this functionality was not well-supported. (A standalone NeWS windowing system was also available for a time, but was never the primary SunOS windowing environment.) Starting with SunOS 4.1.1, OpenWindows 2.0 was bundled with the operating system.

Solaris 2.0, the first release of the successor to SunOS 4, included OpenWindows 3.0.1. Starting with Solaris 2.3, Sun switched to a standard X11R5 release of X11. It was still called OpenWindows (now version 3.3), but the NeWS protocol was replaced by support for Adobe DPS. Support for SunView applications was removed. The graphical look and feel of the window manager and tools was still based on OPEN LOOK. Solaris 7 featured OpenWindows 3.6.1 with X11R6.4 server. [2]

In 1993, Sun and the other major Unix vendors of the time formed the COSE alliance, seeking further standardization among their Unix releases. The alliance chose the Motif look and feel as its standard, and Sun announced it would phase out OpenWindows in favor of the new COSE desktop environment, which came to be known as CDE.

The last release of OpenWindows was version 3.6.2, included in Solaris 8. With the release of Solaris 9 in 2002, the removal of OpenWindows support from Solaris finally began, as the OPEN LOOK DeskSet tools, OLIT and XView development tools, and olwm were removed. Support for running and displaying applications built with XView or OLIT remains in both Solaris 9 and Solaris 10.

[edit] Open source development

There is a project called "OWAcomp", the OpenWindows Augmented Compatibility Environment, hosted on Freshmeat, aimed at making it possible to use the OpenWindows Deskset environment on Solaris 9 and 10.

There is also a project hosted at SourceForge.net called "openlook" that is based on OpenWindows. As of July 2007, it is quite Linux-centric. Some OpenWindows applications were never released to open source by Sun, so some of these have been rewritten and some are still missing.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^  OpenWindows 1.0 announcement
  2. ^  Solaris FAQ


[edit] External links

This article was originally based on material from the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which is licensed under the GFDL.

Languages