Unix Windowing Systems
The phrase "windowing system for Unix" is nearly synonymous with X11 and, increasingly, Wayland. While X11 has dominated the Unix window system market for decades, it has coexisted with many others over the years. Some of them were early competitors that fell by the wayside, others filled niches that X was unable to, and still others are just fun little things someone made for fun or for a school project.
This project has three aims:
- Gather information about these alternative window systems
- Bring them up under emulation, where possible
- Preserve them by porting them to modern operating systems, where practical
Early Competitors and Predecessors
- ManaGeR (MGR)
- SunView
- NeWS / OpenWindows
- NeXT Display PostScript
- PERQ PNX / Sapphire
- HP Windows/9000
- CMU Andrew Window Manager
- W (the predecessor to X)
- prior versions of X (I'm aware X10R4 has been run in emulation)
- mpx and mux from Research Unix 8/9
- layers
- the UNIX PC window system
MGR
MGR ("ManaGeR") was a window system written for the Sun-3 (68k machines). It saw some use as a lightweight alternative to SunView and X. It's notable in that the terminal emulator is located in the display server, and that graphics are accessed with terminal escape sequences. This means that it's well-suited for running a bunch of terminal windows, but not for animations or video. [1]
It's also network transparent; clients can be run through any sort of terminal/telnet/modem line. This resembles the Blit, and apparently the Blit terminal from Bell Labs inspired MGR [2].
MGR apparently saw lots of ports[3]:
- Linux
- Sun-4 (SPARC) (both SunOS and, later, Solaris)
- Coherent
- Macintosh
- Atari ST (MiNT)
- Xenix
- Minix
- DECstation 3100 (Ultrix)
- AT&T UNIX PC
- OS-9
- Lynx
Ways to get this running:
- Emulating the original platform (Sun-3) is *possible* with TME, but that's a hassle.
- There's MC Widerkrantz's Solaris port[4], which QEMU might be able to run.
- andrew_w on the Discord has a disk image with a VSTa port of MGR, though it doesn't handle well in modern versions of QEMU.
- Someone ported MGR to run on top of X a decade ago[5]. Practical but boring.
It might also be feasible to forward-port this to the modern Linux framebuffer.
Niche Window Systems
- Xynth/XFast
- QNX Windows
- QNX Photon
- QNX screen
- RockLyte Athene
- Maryland Windows
- BSD window(1)
- the A/UX window system
BSD window
window(1) is a terminal multiplexer that offers overlapping windows on ordinary character cell terminals. It was introduced in 4.3BSD, and survived long enough to make it into the modern BSD systems for a bit. All of them have since jettisoned it in favor of tmux. Its last appearance was in NetBSD 6.1[6].
The NetBSD version of window was archived into pkgsrc [7]. The terminal emulation isn't ANSI-compliant, and there's no terminfo definition on non-NetBSD platforms (at least not on macOS). Compatibility with modern fancy shell prompts and TUI software is limited; Neofetch in particular emits sludge.
TODO: a good screenshot
TODO: build/install instructions for non-NetBSD (could probably make a fork/distribution with a terminfo definition)
Novelties
- Twin
- Y Window System
- Orbital
References
- ↑ https://hack.org/mc/mgr/
- ↑ https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/unix/MGRMemories
- ↑ https://web.mit.edu/linux/redhat/redhat-4.0.0/i386/doc/HTML/ldp/MGR-HOWTO-2.html
- ↑ https://hack.org/mc/mgr/
- ↑ https://github.com/hyc/mgr
- ↑ https://man.netbsd.org/NetBSD-6.1.5/window.1
- ↑ https://github.com/NetBSD/pkgsrc/tree/trunk/misc/window