Tuesday, February 2, 2016

List of operating systems

List of operating systems
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This is a list of operating systems. Computer operating systems can be categorized by technology, ownership, licensing, working state, usage, and by many other characteristics. In practice, many of these groupings may overlap. Criteria for inclusion is notability, as shown either through an existing Wikipedia article or citation to a reliable source.

Contents

    1 Proprietary
        1.1 Acorn Computers
        1.2 Amiga Inc.
        1.3 Apple Inc.
        1.4 Apollo Computer
        1.5 Atari
        1.6 BAE Systems
        1.7 Be Inc.
        1.8 Bell Labs
        1.9 Bull SAS
        1.10 Burroughs Corporation
        1.11 Control Data Corporation
        1.12 Convergent Technologies
        1.13 Data General
        1.14 DataPoint
        1.15 DDC-I, Inc.
        1.16 Digital Research, Inc.
        1.17 Digital/Tandem Computers/Compaq/HP
        1.18 ENEA AB
        1.19 Fujitsu
        1.20 General Electric
        1.21 Google
        1.22 Green Hills Software
        1.23 Heathkit/Zenith Data Systems
        1.24 Hewlett-Packard
        1.25 Honeywell
        1.26 Intel Corporation
        1.27 IBM
            1.27.1 On early IBM mainframes (1400, 1800, 701, 704, 709, 7090, and 7094)
            1.27.2 On IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
            1.27.3 On IBM PC and Intel x86 based architectures
            1.27.4 On other IBM hardware platforms
        1.28 International Computers Limited
        1.29 LynuxWorks (originally Lynx Real-time Systems)
        1.30 Micrium Inc.
        1.31 Microsoft Corporation
        1.32 MontaVista Software
        1.33 NCR Corporation
        1.34 Nintendo
        1.35 Novell
        1.36 Quadros Systems
        1.37 RCA
        1.38 RoweBots
        1.39 Samsung Electronics
        1.40 SCO / The SCO Group[4]
        1.41 Scientific Data Systems (SDS)
        1.42 Sciopta Systems GmbH
        1.43 SYSGO
        1.44 Tandy Corporation
        1.45 TRON Project
        1.46 Unisys
        1.47 UNIVAC (later Unisys)
        1.48 Wang Laboratories
        1.49 Wind River Systems
        1.50 Other
            1.50.1 Lisp-based
            1.50.2 Non-standard language-based
            1.50.3 Other proprietary non-Unix-like
            1.50.4 Other proprietary Unix-like and POSIX-compliant
    2 Non-proprietary
        2.1 Unix-like
            2.1.1 Research Unix-like and other POSIX-compliant
            2.1.2 Free and open source Unix-like
            2.1.3 Other Unix-like
        2.2 Non-Unix-like
            2.2.1 Research non-Unix-like
            2.2.2 Free and open source non-Unix-like
    3 Disk operating systems
    4 Network operating systems
    5 Web operating systems
    6 Generic/commodity and other
    7 For Elektronika BK
    8 Hobby
    9 Embedded
        9.1 Personal digital assistants (PDAs)
        9.2 Digital media players
        9.3 Smartphones and Mobile phones
        9.4 Routers
        9.5 Other embedded
    10 Capability-based
        10.1 LEGO Mindstorms
        10.2 Other capability-based
    11 See also
        11.1 Category links
    12 References
    13 External links

Proprietary
Acorn Computers

    Arthur
    ARX
    MOS
    RISC iX
    RISC OS

Amiga Inc.

    AmigaOS
        AmigaOS 1.0-3.9 (Motorola 68000)
        AmigaOS 4 (PowerPC)
    Amiga Unix (aka Amix)

Apple Inc.

    Apple II family
        Apple DOS
        Apple Pascal
        ProDOS
        GS/OS
    Apple III
        Apple SOS
    Apple Lisa
        Lisa Workshop        Lisa Operating System    Apple Macintosh
        Mac OS
        A/UX (UNIX System V with BSD extensions)
        Rhapsody
        NeXTSTEP
        OS X (formerly Mac OS X)
        OS X Server (formerly Mac OS X Server)
    Apple Network Server
        IBM AIX (Apple-customized)
    Apple MessagePad
        Newton OS
    iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad
        iOS (a subset of OS X)
    Embedded operating systems
        A/ROSE
        iPod software (unnamed embedded OS for iPod)
        Unnamed NetBSD variant for Airport Extreme and Time Capsule

Apollo Computer

    Domain/OS : One of the first network-based systems. Run on Apollo/Domain hardware. Later bought by Hewlett-Packard.

Atari

    Atari DOS (for 8-bit computers)
    Atari TOS
    Atari MultiTOS

BAE Systems

    XTS-400

Be Inc.

    BeOS
        BeIA
        BeOS r5.1d0
            magnussoft ZETA (based on BeOS r5.1d0 source code, developed by yellowTAB)

Bell Labs

    Unix ("Ken's new system," for its creator (Ken Thompson), officially Unics and then Unix, the prototypic operating system created in Bell Labs in 1969 that formed the basis for the Unix family of operating systems)
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v1
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v2
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v3
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v4
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v5
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v6
            MINI-UNIX
            PWB/UNIX
                USG
                    CB Unix
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v7 (It is from Version 7 Unix (and, to an extent, its descendants listed below) that almost all Unix-based and Unix-like operating systems descend.)
            Unix System III
            Unix System IV
            Unix System V
                Unix System V Releases 2.0, 3.0, 3.2, 4.0, and 4.2
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v8
        UNIX TIme-Sharing System v9
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v10

Non-Unix Operating Systems:

    BESYS
    Plan 9 from Bell Labs

Bull SAS

    GCOS

Burroughs Corporation

    Burroughs MCP

Control Data Corporation

    Chippewa Operating System (COS)
        MACE (Mansfield and Cahlander Executive)
            Kronos (Kronographic OS)
                NOS (Network Operating System)
                    NOS/BE NOS Batch Environment
                    NOS/VE NOS Virtual Environment
        SCOPE (Supervisory Control Of Program Execution)
        SIPROS (for Simultaneous Processing Operating System)
    EP/IX (Enhanced Performance Unix)

Convergent Technologies

    Convergent Technologies Operating System (later acquired by Unisys)

Data General

    AOS for 16-bit Data General Eclipse computers and AOS/VS for 32-bit (MV series) Eclipses, MP/AOS for microNOVA-based computers
    DG/UX
    RDOS Real-time Disk Operating System, with variants: RTOS and DOS (not related to PC DOS, MS-DOS etc.)

DataPoint

    CTOS Z-80 based, Cassette Tape Operating System for early desktop systems. Capable of up to 8 simultaneous users. Replaced by DataPoint DOS.
    DOS Intel 808x/80x86-based, Disk Operating Systems for desktop systems. Capable of up to 32 users per node. Supported a sophisticated network of nodes that were often purpose-built. The name DOS was used in these products login screens before it was popularized by IBM, Microsoft and others.

DDC-I, Inc.

    Deos Time & Space Partitioned RTOS, Certified to DO-178B, Level A since 1998
    HeartOS Posix-based Hard Real-Time Operating System

Digital Research, Inc.

    CP/M
        CP/M CP/M for Intel 8080/8085 and Zilog Z80
            Personal CP/M, a refinement of CP/M 2.2 with BDOS 2.8
            CP/M Plus with BDOS 3.0
        CP/M-68K CP/M for Motorola 68000
        CP/M-8000 CP/M for Zilog Z8000
        CP/M-86 CP/M for Intel 8088/8086
            CP/M-86 Plus
            Personal CP/M-86
        MP/M Multi-user version of CP/M-80
            MP/M II
        MP/M-86 Multi-user version of CP/M-86
            MP/M 8-16, a dual-processor variant of MP/M for 8086 and 8080 CPUs.
        Concurrent CP/M, the successor of CP/M-80 and MP/M-80
        Concurrent CP/M-86, the successor of CP/M-86 and MP/M-86
            Concurrent CP/M 8-16, a dual-processor variant of Concurrent CP/M for 8086 and 8080 CPUs.
        Concurrent CP/M-68K, a variant for the 68000

    DOS
        Concurrent DOS, the successor of Concurrent CP/M-86 with PC-MODE
            Concurrent PC DOS, a Concurrent DOS variant for IBM compatible PCs
            Concurrent DOS 8-16, a dual-processor variant of Concurrent DOS for 8086 and 8080 CPUs.
            Concurrent DOS 286
            Concurrent DOS XM, a real-mode variant of Concurrent DOS with EEMS support
            Concurrent DOS 386
                Concurrent DOS 386/MGE, a Concurrent DOS 386 variant with advanced graphics terminal capabilities
        Concurrent DOS 68K, a port of Concurrent DOS to Motorola 68000 CPUs with DOS source code portability capabilities
        FlexOS 1.0 - 2.34, a derivative of Concurrent DOS 286
            FlexOS 186, a variant of FlexOS for terminals
            FlexOS 286, a variant of FlexOS for hosts
                Siemens S5-DOS/MT, an industrial control system based on FlexOS
                IBM 4680 OS, a POS operating system based on FlexOS
                IBM 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on FlexOS
                    Toshiba 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS
            FlexOS 386, a later variant of FlexOS for hosts
                IBM 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on FlexOS
                    Toshiba 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS
            FlexOS 68K, a derivative of Concurrent DOS 68K
        Multiuser DOS, the successor of Concurrent DOS 386
            CCI Multiuser DOS
            Datapac Multiuser DOS
                Datapac System Manager, a derivative of Datapac Multiuser DOS
            IMS Multiuser DOS
                IMS REAL/32, a derivative of Multiuser DOS
                    IMS REAL/NG, the successor of REAL/32
        DOS Plus 1.2 - 2.1, a single-user, multi-tasking system derived from Concurrent DOS 4.1 - 5.0
        DR DOS 3.31 - 6.0, a single-user, single-tasking native DOS derived from Concurrent DOS 6.0
            Novell PalmDOS 1.0
            Novell "Star Trek"
            Novell DOS 7, a single-user, multi-tasking system derived from DR DOS
            Caldera OpenDOS 7.01
            Caldera DR-DOS 7.02 and higher

Digital/Tandem Computers/Compaq/HP

    Domain/OS (originally Aegis, from Apollo Computer who were bought by HP)
    HP-UX
    Multi-Programming Executive (from HP)
    NonStop
    OS/8
    RSTS/E (multi-user time-sharing OS for PDP-11s)
    RSX-11 (multiuser, multitasking OS for PDP-11s)
    RT-11 (single user OS for PDP-11)
    TENEX (a variant of TOPS-20 from BBN, for the PDP-10)
    TOPS-10 (for the PDP-10)
    TOPS-20 (for the PDP-10)
    Digital UNIX (derived from OSF/1, became HP's Tru64 UNIX)
    Ultrix
    VMS (originally by DEC, now by HP) for the VAX mini-computer range, Alpha and Intel Itanium 2; later renamed OpenVMS)
    WAITS (for the PDP-6 and PDP-10)

ENEA AB

    OSE Flexible, small footprint, high-performance RTOS for control processors

Fujitsu

    Towns OS

General Electric

    Real-Time Multiprogramming Operating System

Google
Android 4.0.1 on the Galaxy Nexus

    Google Chrome OS is designed to work exclusively with web applications. Announced on July 7, 2009, Chrome OS is currently publicly available and was released summer 2011. The Chrome OS source code was released on November 19, 2009 under the BSD license as Chromium OS.
        Chromium OS is an open source operating system development version of Google Chrome OS. Both operating systems are based on the Linux kernel.
    Android is an operating system for mobile devices. It consists of Android Runtime (userland) with Linux (kernel), with its Linux kernel modified to add drivers for mobile device hardware and to remove unused Vanilla Linux drivers.

Green Hills Software

    INTEGRITY Reliable Operating system
    INTEGRITY-178B A DO-178B certified version of INTEGRITY.
    µ-velOSity A lightweight microkernel.

Heathkit/Zenith Data Systems

    HDOS; ran on the H8 and Heath/Zenith Z-89 series
    HT-11 (a modified version of RT-11) ran on the Heathkit H11

Hewlett-Packard

    HP Multi-Programming Executive; (MPE, MPE/XL, and MPE/iX) runs on HP 3000 and HP e3000 mini-computers.
    HP-UX; runs on HP9000 and Itanium servers - from small to mainframe-class computers.
    NonStop OS; runs on HP's NonStop line of Itanium servers.

Honeywell

    Multics
    GCOS
    CP-6

Intel Corporation

    iRMX; real-time operating system originally created to support the Intel 8080 and 8086 processor families in embedded applications.
    ISIS-II; "Intel Systems Implementation Supervisor" was THE environment for development of software within the Intel microprocessor family in the early 1980s on their Intellec Microcomputer Development System and clones. ISIS-II worked with 8 inch floppy disks and had an editor, cross-assemblers, a linker, an object locator, debugger, compilers for PLM (PL/I for microprocessors of the 8080/86 family), a BASIC interpreter, etc. and allowed file management through a console.

IBM
Further information: History of IBM mainframe operating systems
On early IBM mainframes (1400, 1800, 701, 704, 709, 7090, and 7094)

    BESYS (for the IBM 7090)
    CTSS (The Compatible Time-Sharing System, developed at MIT's Computation Center for use on a modified IBM 7094)
    GM OS & GM-NAA I/O (for the IBM 704)
    IBSYS (tape based operating system for IBM 7090 and IBM 7094)
    IJMON (A bootable serial I/O monitor for loading programs for IBM 1400 and IBM 1800)
    SOS (SHARE Operating System, for the IBM 704 and 709)
    UMES (University of Michigan Executive System, for the IBM 704, 709, and 7090)

On IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes

    OS/360 and successors on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        OS/360 (first official OS targeted for the System/360 architecture),
        Saw customer installations of the following variations:
            PCP (Primary Control Program, a kernel and a ground breaking automatic space allocating file system)
            MFT (original Multi-programming with a Fixed number of Tasks, replaced by MFT II)
            MFT II (Multi-Programming with a Fixed number of Tasks, had up to 15 fixed size application partitions, plus partitions for system tasks, initially defined at boot time but redefinable by operator command)
            MVT (Multi-Programming Variable Tasks, had up to 15 application regions defined dynamically, plus additional regions for system tasks)
        OS/VS (port of OS/360 targeted for the System/370 virtual memory architecture, "OS/370" is not correct name for OS/VS1 and OS/VS2, but rather refers to OS/VS2 MVS and MVS/SP Version 1),
        Customer installations in the following variations:
            SVS (Single Virtual Storage, both VS1 & VS2 began as SVS systems)
            OS/VS1 (Operating System/Virtual Storage 1, Virtual-memory version of MFT II)
            OS/VS2 (Operating System/Virtual Storage 2, Virtual-memory version of OS/MVT but without multiprocessing support)
                OS/VS2 R2 (called Multiple Virtual Storage, MVS, eliminated most need for VS1)
        MVS/SE (MVS System Extensions)
        MVS/SP (MVS System Product)
        MVS/XA (MVS/SP V2. MVS supported eXtended Architecture, 31-bit addressing)
        MVS/ESA (MVS supported Enterprise System Architecture, horizontal addressing extensions: data only address spaces called Dataspaces; a Unix environment was available starting with MVS/ESA V4R3)
        OS/390 (Upgrade from MVS, with an additional Unix environment)
        z/OS (OS/390 supported z/Architecture, 64-bit addressing)
    DOS/360 and successors on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        BOS/360 (early interim version of DOS/360, briefly available at a few Alpha & Beta System/360 sites)
        TOS/360 (similar to BOS above and more fleeting, able to boot and run from 2x00 series tape drives)
        DOS/360 (Disk Operating System (DOS), multi-programming system with up to 3 partitions, first commonly available OS for System/360)
            DOS/360/RJE (DOS/360 with a control program extension that provided for the monitoring of remote job entry hardware (card reader & printer) connected by dedicated phone lines)
        DOS/VS (First DOS offered on System/370 systems, provided virtual storage)
        DOS/VSE (also known as VSE, upgrade of DOS/VS, up to 14 fixed size processing partitions )
        VSE/SP (program product replacing DOS/VSE and VSE/AF)
        VSE/ESA (DOS/VSE extended virtual memory support to 32-bit addresses (Extended System Architecture)).
        z/VSE (latest version of the four decades old DOS lineage, supports 64-bit addresses, multiprocessing, multiprogramming, SNA, TCP/IP, and some virtual machine features in support of Linux workloads)
    CP/CMS (Control Program/Cambridge Monitor System) and successors on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        CP-40/CMS (for System/360 Model 40)
        CP-67/CMS (for System/360 Model 67)
        VM/370 (Virtual Machine / Conversational Monitor System, virtual memory operating system for System/370)
        VM/XA (VM/eXtended Architecture for System/370 with extended virtual memory)
        VM/ESA (Virtual Machine / Extended System Architecture, added 31-bit addressing to VM series)
        z/VM (z/Architecture version of the VM OS with 64-bit addressing)

Further information: History of CP/CMS

    TPF Line (Transaction Processing Facility) on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes (largely used by airlines)
        ACP (Airline Control Program)
        TPF (Transaction Processing Facility)
        z/TPF (z/Architecture extension)
    Unix-like on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        AIX/370 (IBM's Advanced Interactive eXecutive, a System V Unix version)
        AIX/ESA (IBM's Advanced Interactive eXecutive, a System V Unix version)
        OpenSolaris for IBM System z
        UTS (developed by Amdahl)
        z/Linux
    Others on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes:
        BOS/360 (Basic Operating System)
        MTS (Michigan Terminal System, developed by a group of universities in the US, Canada, and the UK for the IBM System/360 Model 67, System/370 series, and compatible mainframes)
        RTOS/360 (IBM's Real Time Operating System, ran on 5 NASA custom System/360-75s)[3]
        TOS/360 (Tape Operating System)
        TSS/360 (IBM's Time Sharing System)
        MUSIC/SP (developed by McGill University for IBM System/370)
        ORVYL and WYLBUR (developed by Stanford University for IBM System/360)

On IBM PC and Intel x86 based architectures

    PC DOS / IBM DOS
        PC DOS 1.x, 2.x, 3.x (developed jointly with Microsoft)
        IBM DOS 4.x, 5.0 (developed jointly with Microsoft)
        PC DOS 6.1, 6.3, 7, 2000, 7.10

See also: MS-DOS and Windows

    OS/2
        OS/2 1.x (developed jointly with Microsoft)
        OS/2 2.x
        OS/2 Warp 3
        OS/2 Warp 4
        eComStation (Warp 4.5/Workspace on Demand, rebundled by Serenity Systems International)
    IBM 4680 OS version 1 to 4, a POS operating system based on Digital Research's Concurrent DOS 286 and FlexOS 286 1.xx
        IBM 4690 OS version 1 to 6.3, a successor to 4680 OS based on Novell's FlexOS 286/FlexOS 386 2.3x
            Toshiba 4690 OS version 6.4, a successor to 4690 OS 6.3

On other IBM hardware platforms

    IBM Series/1
        EDX (Event Driven Executive)
        RPS (Realtime Programming System)
        CPS (Control Programming Support, subset of RPS)
        SerIX (Unix on Series/1)
    IBM 1130
        DMS (Disk Monitor System)
    IBM 1800
        TSX (Time Sharing eXecutive)
        MPX (Multi Programming eXecutive)
    IBM 8100
        DPCX (Distributed Processing Control eXecutive)
        DPPX (Distributed Processing Programming Executive)
    IBM System/3
        DMS (Disk Management System)
    IBM System/34, IBM System/36
        SSP (System Support Program)
    IBM System/38
        CPF (Control Program Facility)
    IBM System/88
        Stratus VOS (developed by Stratus, and used for IBM System/88, Original equipment manufacturer from Stratus)
    AS/400, iSeries, System i, Power Systems i Edition
        OS/400 (descendant of System/38 CPF, include System/36 SSP environment)
        i5/OS (extends OS/400 with significant interoperability features)
        IBM i (extends i5/OS)
    UNIX on IBM POWER
        AIX (Advanced Interactive eXecutive, a System V Unix version)
        AOS (a BSD Unix version, not related to Data General AOS)
    Others
        IBM Workplace OS (Microkernel based operating system, developed and canceled in 1990s)
        K42 (open-source research operating system on PowerPC or x86 based cache-coherent multiprocessor systems)
        Dynix (developed by Sequent, and used for IBM NUMA-Q too)

International Computers Limited

    J and MultiJob for the System 4 series mainframes
    GEORGE 2/3/4 GEneral ORGanisational Environment, used by ICL 1900 series mainframes
    Executive, used on the 290x range of minicomputers
    TME, used on the ME29 minicomputer
    ICL VME, including early variants VME/B and VME/2900, appearing on the ICL 2900 Series and Series 39 mainframes, implemented in S3
    VME/K on early smaller 2900s

LynuxWorks (originally Lynx Real-time Systems)

    LynxOS

Micrium Inc.

    MicroC/OS-II (Small pre-emptive priority based multi-tasking kernel)
    MicroC/OS-III (Small pre-emptive priority based multi-tasking kernel, with unlimited number of tasks and priorities, and round robin scheduling)

Microsoft Corporation

    Xenix (licensed version of Unix; licensed to SCO in 1987)
    MSX-DOS (developed by MS Japan for the MSX 8-bit computer)
    MS-DOS (developed jointly with IBM, versions 1.0–6.22)
    Windows (16-bit and 32-bit preemptive and cooperative multitasking, running on top of MS-DOS)
        Windows 1.0 (Windows 1)
        Windows 2.0 (Windows 2 - separate version for i386 processor)
        Windows 3.0 (Windows 3)
        Windows 3.1.x (Windows 3.1)
        Windows for Workgroups 3.1 (Codename Snowball)
        Windows 3.2 (Chinese-only release)
        Windows for Workgroups 3.1.1
        Windows 95 (Codename Chicago - Windows 4.0)
        Windows 98 (Codename Memphis - Windows 4.1)
        Windows Millennium Edition (Windows ME - Windows 4.9)
    Windows NT (Full 32-bit or 64-bit kernel, not dependent on MS-DOS)
        Windows NT 3.1
        Windows NT 3.5
        Windows NT 3.51
        Windows NT 4.0
        Windows 2000 (Windows NT 5.0)
        Windows XP (Windows NT 5.1)
        Windows Server 2003 (Windows NT 5.2)
        Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs (based on Windows XP)
        Windows Vista (Windows NT 6.0)
        Windows Azure (Cloud OS Platform) 2009
        Windows Home Server (based on Windows Server 2003)
        Windows Server 2008 (based on Windows Vista)
        Windows 7 (Windows NT 6.1)
        Windows Server 2008 R2 (based on Windows 7)
        Windows Home Server 2011 (based on Windows Server 2008 R2)
        Windows Server 2012 (based on Windows 8)
        Windows 8 (Windows NT 6.2)
        Windows Phone 8
        Windows 8.1 (Windows NT 6.3)
        Windows Server 2012 R2 (based on Windows 8.1)
        Xbox One system software
        Windows Phone 8.1
        Windows 10 (Windows NT 10.0)
        Windows 10 Mobile
    Windows CE (OS for handhelds, embedded devices, and real-time applications that is similar to other versions of Windows)
        Windows CE 3.0
        Windows CE 5.0
        Windows CE 6.0
        Windows Mobile (based on Windows CE, but for a smaller form factor)
        Windows Phone 7
    Singularity - A research operating system written mostly in managed code (C#)
    Midori - A managed code operating system
    Xbox 360 system software

MontaVista Software

    MontaVista Mobilinux

NCR Corporation

    TMX - Transaction Management eXecutive

Nintendo

    es is a computer operating system developed originally by Nintendo and since 2008 by Esrille. It is open source and runs natively on x86 platforms.

Novell

    NetWare network operating system providing high-performance network services. Has been superseded by Open Enterprise Server line, which can be based on NetWare or Linux to provide the same set of services.
    UnixWare
        Novell "SuperNOS", a never released merge of NetWare and UnixWare
    Novell "Corsair"
        Novell "Exposé"
    Open Enterprise Server, the successor to NetWare.

Quadros Systems

    RTXC Quadros RTOS proprietary C-based RTOS used in embedded systems ows

RCA

    TSOS, first OS supporting virtual addressing of the main storage and support for both timeshare and batch interface

RoweBots

    DSPnano RTOS 8/16 Bit Ultra Tiny Embedded Linux Compatible RTOS
    Unison RTOS 32 Bit Open Standards, Linux Compatible, Ultra Tiny Size, Modularity, POSIX-compliant RTOS which supports a variety of wireless modules and provides a complete set of security protocols

Samsung Electronics

    Bada
    Tizen

SCO / The SCO Group

    Xenix, Unix System III based distribution for the Intel 8086/8088 architecture
        Xenix 286, Unix System V Release 2 based distribution for the Intel 80286 architecture
        Xenix 386, Unix System V Release 2 based distribution for the Intel 80386 architecture
    SCO Unix, SCO UNIX System V/386 was the first volume commercial product licensed by AT&T to use the UNIX System trademark (1989). Derived from AT&T System V Release 3.2 with an infusion of Xenix device drivers and utilities plus most of the SVR4 features
        SCO Open Desktop, the first 32-bit graphical user interface for UNIX Systems running on Intel processor-based computers. Based on SCO Unix
    SCO OpenServer 5, AT&T UNIX System V Release 3 based
    SCO OpenServer 6, SVR5 (UnixWare 7) based kernel with SCO OpenServer 5 application and binary compatibility, system administration, and user environments
    UnixWare
        UnixWare 2.x, based on AT&T System V Release 4.2MP
        UnixWare 7, UnixWare 2 kernel plus parts of 3.2v5 (UnixWare 2 + OpenServer 5 = UnixWare 7). Referred to by SCO as SVR5

Scientific Data Systems (SDS)

    Berkeley Timesharing System for the SDS 940

Sciopta Systems GmbH

    SCIOPTA Pre-emptive, priority-based real-time kernel (IEC61508 certified)

SYSGO

    PikeOS is a certified real time operating system for safety and security critical embedded systems

Tandy Corporation

    TRS-DOS; A floppy-disk-oriented OS supplied by Tandy/Radio Shack for their Z80-based line of personal computers. Eventually renamed as LS-DOS or LDOS.
    NewDos/80; A third-party OS for Tandy's TRS-80 personal computers.
    DeskMate; Operating system

TRON Project

    TRON (open real-time operating system kernel)
    T-Kernel

Unisys

    Unisys OS 2200 operating system

UNIVAC (later Unisys)

    EXEC I
    EXEC II
    EXEC 8 Ran on 1100 series.
    VS/9, successor to RCA TSOS

Wang Laboratories

    WPS Wang Word Processing System. Micro-code based system.
    OIS Wang Office Information System. Successor to the WPS. Combined the WPS and VP/MVP systems.
    Wang VS Operating System (VSOS) - used on the VS line of minicomputer systems.

Wind River Systems

    VxWorks Small footprint, scalable, high-performance RTOS

Other
Lisp-based

    Lisp Machines, Inc. (also known as LMI) used an operating system written in MIT's Lisp Machine Lisp.
    Symbolics Genera written in a systems dialect of the Lisp programming language called ZetaLisp and Symbolics Common Lisp. Genera was ported to a virtual machine for the DEC Alpha line of computers.
    Texas Instruments' Explorer Lisp machine workstations also had systems code written in Lisp Machine Lisp.
    Xerox 1100 series of Lisp machines used an operating system also written in Interlisp, and was also ported to a virtual machine called "Medley."

Non-standard language-based

    Pilot operating system (used in Xerox Star workstations) was written in the Mesa programming language.
    PERQ Operating System (POS) was written in PERQ Pascal.

Other proprietary non-Unix-like

    ???????-1 (Elbrus-1) and ???????-2 used for application, job control, system programming,[5] implemented in u???-76 (AL-76).
    EOS; developed by ETA Systems for use in their ETA-10 line of supercomputers
    EMBOS; developed by Elxsi for use on their mini-supercomputers
    GCOS is a proprietary Operating System originally developed by General Electric
    MAI Basic Four; An OS implementing Business Basic from MAI Systems.
    Michigan Terminal System; Developed by a group of universities in the US, Canada, and the UK for use on the IBM System/360 Model 67, the System/370 series, and compatible mainframes
    MUSIC/SP; an operating system developed for the S/370, running normally under VM
    OS ES; an operating system for ES EVM
    PC-MOS/386; DOS-like, but multiuser/multitasking
    Prolog-Dispatcher; used to control Soviet Buran space ship.
    SINTRAN III; an operating system used with Norsk Data computers.
    SkyOS; commercial desktop OS for PCs
    THEOS
    TSX-32; a 32-bit operating system for x86 platform.
    TX990/TXDS, DX10 and DNOS; proprietary operating systems for TI-990 minicomputers

Other proprietary Unix-like and POSIX-compliant

    Aegis (Apollo Computer)
    Amiga Unix (Amiga ports of Unix System V release 3.2 with Amiga A2500UX and SVR4 with Amiga A3000UX. Started in 1990, last version was in 1992)
    Coherent (Unix-like OS from Mark Williams Co. for PC class computers)
    DC/OSx (DataCenter/OSx was an operating system for MIPS based systems developed by Pyramid Technology)
    DG/UX (Data General Corp)
    DNIX from DIAB
    DSPnano RTOS (POSIX nanokernel, DSP Optimized, Open Source)
    HeliOS developed and sold by Perihelion Software mainly for transputer based systems
    Interactive Unix (a port of the UNIX System V operating system for Intel x86 by Interactive Systems Corporation)
    IRIX from SGI
    MeikOS
    NeXTSTEP (developed by NeXT; a Unix-based OS based on the Mach microkernel)
    OS-9 Unix-like RTOS. (OS from Microware for Motorola 6809 based microcomputers)
    OS9/68K Unix-like RTOS. (OS from Microware for Motorola 680x0 based microcomputers; based on OS-9)
    OS-9000 Unix-like RTOS. (OS from Microware for Intel x86 based microcomputers; based on OS-9, written in C)
    OSF/1 (developed into a commercial offering by Digital Equipment Corporation)
    OpenStep
    QNX (POSIX, microkernel OS; usually a real time embedded OS)
    Rhapsody (an early form of OS X)
    RISC iX - Derived from BSD 4.3, by Acorn computers, for their ARM family of machines.
    RISC/os (a port by MIPS of 4.3BSD to the RISC MIPS architecture)
    RMX
    SCO UNIX (from SCO, bought by Caldera who renamed themselves SCO Group)
    SINIX (a port by SNI of Unix to the RISC MIPS architecture)
    Solaris (Sun's System V-based replacement for SunOS)
    SunOS (BSD-based Unix system used on early Sun hardware)
    SUPER-UX (a port of System V Release 4.2MP with features adopted from BSD and Linux for NEC SX architecture supercomputers)
    System V (a release of AT&T Unix, 'SVR4' was the 4th minor release)
    System V/AT, 386 (The first version of AT&T System V UNIX on the IBM 286 and 386 PCs, ported and sold by Microport)
    Trusted Solaris (Solaris with kernel and other enhancements to support multilevel security)
    UniFLEX (Unix-like OS from TSC for DMA-capable, extended addresses, Motorola 6809 based computers; e.g. SWTPC, GIMIX, …)
    Unicos (the version of Unix designed for Cray Supercomputers, mainly geared to vector calculations)
    UTX-32 (Developed by Gould CSD (Computer System Division), a Unix-based OS that included both BSD and System V characteristics. It was one of the first Unix based systems to receive NSA's C2 security level certification.)

Non-proprietary
Unix-like
Research Unix-like and other POSIX-compliant

    Minix (study OS developed by Andrew S. Tanenbaum in the Netherlands)
    Plan 9 (distributed OS developed at Bell Labs, based on original Unix design principles yet functionally different and going much further)
        Inferno (distributed OS derived from Plan 9, originally from Bell Labs)
        Plan B (distributed OS derived from Plan 9 and Off++ microkernel)
    Unix (OS developed at Bell Labs ca 1970 initially by Ken Thompson)
    Xinu (Study OS developed by Douglas E. Comer in the USA)

Free and open source Unix-like
Ubuntu, an example of a Linux-like system

    BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution, a variant of Unix for DEC VAX hardware)
        FreeBSD (one of the outgrowths of UC Regents' abandonment of CSRG's 'BSD Unix')
            DragonFlyBSD, forked from FreeBSD 4.8
            Darwin, created by Apple using FreeBSD and NeXTSTEP
            GhostBSD
            PC-BSD
        NetBSD (an embeded device BSD variant)
            OpenBSD forked from NetBSD
    GNU
    Linux

See also: List of Linux distributions

        Cray Linux Environment
    OpenSolaris, contains original Unix (SVR4) code. Now discontinued by Oracle in favor of Solaris 11 Express
        OpenIndiana, aims to continue development and distribution of OpenSolaris operating system. Operates under the Illumos Foundation. Uses the Illumos kernel, which is a derivative of OS/Net, which is basically a Solaris/OpenSolaris kernel with the bulk of the drivers, core libraries, and basic utilities.
        Nexenta OS, based on the OpenSolaris kernel with Ubuntu packages
        Jaris OS, based on OpenSolaris with support for Japanese
    RTEMS (Real-Time Executive for Multiprocessor Systems)
    Syllable Desktop
    Univention Corporate Server
    VSTa
        FMI/OS, successor of VSTa

Other Unix-like

    Plurix
    TUNIS (University of Toronto)

Non-Unix-like
Research non-Unix-like

    Amoeba (research OS by Andrew S. Tanenbaum)
    Croquet
    EROS microkernel, capability-based
    HelenOS research and experimental operating system
    House Haskell User's Operating System and Environment, research OS written in Haskell and C.
    ILIOS Research OS designed for routing
        CapROS microkernel EROS successor.
        Coyotos microkernel EROS successor, goal: be first formally verified OS.
    L4 Second generation microkernel
    Mach (from OS kernel research at Carnegie Mellon University; see NeXTSTEP)
    Nemesis Cambridge University research OS - detailed quality of service abilities.
    Spring (research OS from Sun Microsystems)
    THE multiprogramming system by Dijkstra in 1968 at the University of Technology in the Netherlands, introduced the first form of software-based memory segmentation, freeing programmers from being forced to use actual physical locations.
    V from Stanford, early 1980s[6]

Free and open source non-Unix-like

    Cosmos (written in C#)
    FreeDOS (open source DOS variant)
    Haiku (open source inspired by BeOS, under development)
    ITS written by MIT students (for the PDP-6 and PDP-10)
    MonaOS (written in C++)
    osFree OS/2 Warp open source clone.
    OSv (written in C++)
    Phantom OS (persistent object oriented)
    ReactOS, open source OS designed to be binary compatible with Windows NT and its variants (Windows XP, Windows 2000, etc.); currently in development phase
    SharpOS (written in .NET C#)

Disk operating systems
Main article: DOS

    86-DOS (developed at Seattle Computer Products by Tim Paterson for the new Intel 808x CPUs; licensed to Microsoft, became PC DOS/MS-DOS. Also known by its working title QDOS.)
        PC DOS (IBM's DOS variant, developed jointly with Microsoft, versions 1.0–7.0, 2000, 7.10)
        MS-DOS (Microsoft's DOS variant for OEM, developed jointly with IBM, versions 1.x–6.22 Microsoft's now abandoned DOS variant)
    Concurrent CP/M-86 3.1 (BDOS 3.1) with PC-MODE (Digital Research's successor of CP/M-86 and MP/M-86)
        Concurrent DOS 3.1-4.1 (BDOS 3.1-4.1)
            Concurrent PC DOS 3.2 (BDOS 3.2) (Concurrent DOS variant for IBM compatible PCs)
                DOS Plus 1.2 (BDOS 4.1), 2.1 (BDOS 5.0) (single-user, multi-tasking system derived from Concurrent DOS 4.1-5.0)
            Concurrent DOS 8-16 (dual-processor variant of Concurrent DOS for 8086 and 8080 CPUs)
            Concurrent DOS 286 1.x
                FlexOS 1.00-2.34 (derivative of Concurrent DOS 286)
                    FlexOS 186 (variant of FlexOS for terminals)
                    FlexOS 286 (variant of FlexOS for hosts)
                        Siemens S5-DOS/MT (industrial control system based on FlexOS)
                        IBM 4680 OS (POS operating system based on FlexOS)
                        IBM 4690 OS (POS operating system based on FlexOS)
                            Toshiba 4690 OS (POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS)
                    FlexOS 386 (later variant of FlexOS for hosts)
                        IBM 4690 OS (POS operating system based on FlexOS)
                            Toshiba 4690 OS (POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS)
            Concurrent DOS 386 1.0, 1.1, 2.0, 3.0 (BDOS 5.0-6.2)
                Concurrent DOS 386/MGE (Concurrent DOS 386 variant with advanced graphics terminal capabilities)
                Multiuser DOS 5.0, 5.01, 5.1 (BDOS 6.3-6.6) (successor of Concurrent DOS 386)
                    CCI Multiuser DOS 5.0-7.22 (up to BDOS 6.6)
                    Datapac Multiuser DOS
                        Datapac System Manager 7 (derivative of Datapac Multiuser DOS)
                    IMS Multiuser DOS 5.1, 7.0, 7.1 (BDOS 6.6-6.7)
                        IMS REAL/32 7.50, 7.51, 7.52, 7.53, 7.54, 7.6, 7.7, 7.8, 7.90, 7.91, 7.92, 7.93, 7.94, 7.95 (BDOS 6.8 and higher) (derivative of Multiuser DOS)
                            IMS REAL/NG (successor of REAL/32)
            Concurrent DOS XM 5.0, 5.2, 6.0, 6.2 (BDOS 5.0-6.2) (real-mode variant of Concurrent DOS with EEMS support)
                DR DOS 3.31, 3.32, 3.33, 3.34, 3.35, 5.0, 6.0 (BDOS 6.0-7.1) single-user, single-tasking native DOS derived from Concurrent DOS 6.0)
                    Novell PalmDOS 1.0 (BDOS 7.0)
                    Novell DR DOS "StarTrek"
                    Novell DOS 7 (single-user, multi-tasking system derived from DR DOS, BDOS 7.2)
                        Novell DOS 7 updates 1-10 (BDOS 7.2)
                            Caldera OpenDOS 7.01 (BDOS 7.2)
                                Enhanced DR-DOS 7.01.0x (BDOS 7.2)
                                    Dell Real Mode Kernel (DRMK)
                        Novell DOS 7 updates 11-15.2 (BDOS 7.2)
                            Caldera DR-DOS 7.02-7.03 (BDOS 7.3)
                                DR-DOS "WinBolt"
                                OEM DR-DOS 7.04-7.05 (BDOS 7.3)
                                OEM DR-DOS 7.06 (PQDOS)
                                OEM DR-DOS 7.07 (BDOS 7.4/7.7)
    FreeDOS (open source DOS variant)
    ProDOS (operating system for the Apple II series computers)
    PTS-DOS (DOS variant by Russian company Phystechsoft)
    TurboDOS (Software 2000, Inc.) for Z80 and Intel 8086 processor-based systems
    Multi-tasking user interfaces and environments for DOS
        DESQview+ QEMM 386 multi-tasking user interface for DOS
        DESQView/X (X-windowing GUI for DOS)

Network operating systems
Main article: Network operating system

    Cambridge Ring
    Cisco IOS by Cisco Systems
    CSIRONET by (CSIRO)
    CTOS (Convergent Technologies, later acquired by Unisys)
    Data ONTAP by NetApp
    Enterprise OS by McDATA
    ExtremeWare by Extreme Networks
    ExtremeXOS by Extreme Networks
    Fabric OS by Brocade
    JunOS by Juniper
    NetWare (networking OS by Novell)
    NOS (developed by CDC for use in their Cyber line of supercomputers)
    Novell Open Enterprise Server (Open Source networking OS by Novell. Can incorporate either SUSE Linux or Novell NetWare as its kernel).
    Plan 9 (distributed OS developed at Bell Labs, based on Unix design principles but not functionally identical)
        Inferno (distributed OS derived from Plan 9, originally from Bell Labs)
        Plan B (distributed OS derived from Plan 9 and Off++ microkernel)
    SAN-OS by Cisco (now NX-OS)
    TurboDOS (Software 2000, Inc.)

Web operating systems
Main article: Web operating system

    Browser OS
    Chrome OS
    DesktopTwo
    eyeOS
    FullyOS
    G.ho.st
    Glide OS
    Joli OS
    YouOS

Generic/commodity and other

    BLIS/COBOL
    Bluebottle also known as AOS (a concurrent and active object update to the Oberon operating system)
    BS1000 by Siemens AG
    BS2000 by Siemens AG, now BS2000/OSD from Fujitsu-Siemens Computers (formerly Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme)
    BS3000 by Siemens AG (functionally similar to OS-IV and MSP from Fujitsu)
    FLEX9 (by TSC for Motorola 6809 based machines; successor to FLEX, which was for Motorola 6800 CPUs)
    GEM (windowing GUI for CP/M, DOS, and Atari TOS)
    GEOS (popular windowing GUI for PC, Commodore, Apple computers)
    JavaOS
    JNode (Java New Operating System Design Effort), written 99% in Java (native compiled), provides own JVM and JIT compiler. Based on GNU Classpath.
    JX Java operating system that focuses on a flexible and robust operating system architecture developed as an open source system by the University of Erlangen.
    KERNAL (default OS on Commodore 64)
    MERLIN for the Corvus Concept
    MorphOS (Amiga compatible)
    MSP by Fujitsu (successor to OS-IV), now MSP/EX,  also known as Extended System Architecture (EXA), for 31-bit mode
    NetWare (networking OS by Novell)
    Oberon (operating system) (developed at ETH-Zürich by Niklaus Wirth et al.) for the Ceres and Chameleon workstation projects.
    OSD/XC by Fujitsu-Siemens (BS2000 ported to an emulation on a Sun SPARC platform)
    OS-IV by Fujitsu (based on early versions of IBM's MVS)
    Pick (often licensed and renamed)
    PRIMOS by Prime Computer (sometimes spelled PR1MOS and PR1ME)
    Sinclair QDOS (multitasking for the Sinclair QL computer)
    SSB-DOS (by TSC for Smoke Signal Broadcasting; a variant of FLEX in most respects)
    SymbOS (GUI based multitasking operating system for Z80 computers)
    Symobi (GUI based modern micro-kernel OS for x86, ARM and PowerPC processors, developed by Miray Software; used and developed further at Technical University of Munich)
    TripOS, 1978
    TurboDOS (Software 2000, Inc.)
    UCSD p-System (portable complete programming environment/operating system/virtual machine developed by a long running student project at UCSD; directed by Prof Kenneth Bowles; written in Pascal)
    VOS by Stratus Technologies with strong influence from Multics
    VOS by Hitachi for its IBM-compatible mainframes, based on IBM's MVS
    VM2000 by Siemens AG
    Visi On (first GUI for early PC machines; not commercially successful)
    VPS/VM (IBM based, main operating system at Boston University for over 10 years.)

For Elektronika BK

    ANDOS
    CSI-DOS
    KMON
    MK-DOS

Hobby

    AROS (AROS Research Operating System, formerly known as Amiga Research Operating System)
    AtheOS (branched to become Syllable Desktop)
        Syllable Desktop (a modern, independently originated OS; see AtheOS)
    BareMetal
    DexOS - 32-bit operating system written in x86 assembly.
    DSPnano RTOS
    EmuTOS
    EROS (Extremely Reliable Operating System)
    HelenOS, based on a preemptible microkernel design
    LSE/OS
    MenuetOS (extremely compact OS with GUI, written entirely in FASM assembly language)
        KolibriOS (a fork of MenuetOS)
    S-OS (a minimal DOS for Z80 machines)
    MikeOS (written in x86 assembly language)
    PonyOS (A Unix-Like system made as an April Fools Day joke, based on the show My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic. It purposefully does not support USB or networking, in an attempt to make it look as cheap as possible)

Embedded
Personal digital assistants (PDAs)

    DIP DOS on Atari Portfolio
    Embedded Linux
        Android
        Ångström distribution
        Familiar Linux
        Maemo based on Debian deployed on Nokia's Nokia 770, N800 and N810 Internet Tablets.
        MeeGo merger of Moblin and Maemo
        OpenZaurus
        webOS from Palm, Inc., later Hewlett-Packard via acquisition, and most recently at LG Electronics through acquisition from Hewlett-Packard
    Inferno (distributed OS originally from Bell Labs)
    iOS (a subset of OS X)
    Magic Cap
    MS-DOS on Poqet PC, HP 95LX, HP 100LX, HP 200LX, HP 1000CX, HP OmniGo 700LX
    NetBSD
    Newton OS on Apple MessagePad
    Palm OS from Palm, Inc; now spun off as PalmSource
    PEN/GEOS on HP OmniGo 100 and 120
    PenPoint OS
    Plan 9 from Bell Labs
    PVOS
    Symbian OS
    Windows CE, from Microsoft
        Pocket PC from Microsoft, a variant of Windows CE.
        Windows Mobile from Microsoft, a variant of Windows CE.
        Windows Phone from Microsoft,

Digital media players

    DSPnano RTOS
    iOS (a subset of OS X)
    iPod software
    ipodlinux
    iriver clix OS
    RockBox

Smartphones and Mobile phones
Main article: Mobile operating system

    BlackBerry OS
    Embedded Linux
        Access Linux Platform
        Android
        bada
        Firefox OS (project name: Boot to Gecko)
        Openmoko Linux
        OPhone
        MeeGo (from merger of Maemo & Moblin)
        Mobilinux
        MotoMagx
        Qt Extended
        Sailfish OS
        Tizen (earlier called LiMo Platform)
        webOS
    PEN/GEOS, GEOS-SC, GEOS-SE
    iOS (a subset of OS X)
    Palm OS
    Symbian platform (successor to Symbian OS)
    Windows Mobile (superseded by Windows Phone)

BlackBerry 10
Routers

    AlliedWare by Allied Telesis (aka Allied Telesyn)
    AirOS by Ubiquiti Networks
    CatOS by Cisco Systems
    Cisco IOS (originally Internetwork Operating System) by Cisco Systems
    DD-WRT by NewMedia-NET
    Inferno (distributed OS originally from Bell Labs)
    IOS-XR by Cisco Systems
    IronWare by Foundry Networks
    JunOS by Juniper Networks
    LibreWRT[12] GNU/Linux-libre
    OpenWrt
    RouterOS by Mikrotik
    ScreenOS by Juniper Networks, originally from Netscreen
    Timos by Alcatel-Lucent
    FTOS by Force10 Networks
    RTOS by Force10 Networks
    List of wireless router firmware projects

Other embedded

    Contiki
    ERIKA Enterprise
    eCos
    NetBSD
    uClinux
    MINIX
    NCOS
    freeRTOS, openRTOS and safeRTOS
    OpenEmbedded (or Yocto_Project)
    QNX [13]
    REX OS (microkernel OS; usually an embedded cell phone OS)
    ROM-DOS
    TinyOS
    ThreadX
    UbiquiOS by Virscient
    DSPnano RTOS
    Windows Embedded
        Windows CE
        Windows Embedded Standard
        Windows Embedded Enterprise
        Windows Embedded POSReady
    Wombat OS (microkernel OS; usually a real time embedded OS)

        1.4 Apollo Computer
        1.5 Atari
        1.6 BAE Systems
        1.7 Be Inc.
        1.8 Bell Labs
        1.9 Bull SAS
        1.10 Burroughs Corporation
        1.11 Control Data Corporation
        1.12 Convergent Technologies
        1.13 Data General
        1.14 DataPoint
        1.15 DDC-I, Inc.
        1.16 Digital Research, Inc.
        1.17 Digital/Tandem Computers/Compaq/HP
        1.18 ENEA AB
        1.19 Fujitsu
        1.20 General Electric
        1.21 Google
        1.22 Green Hills Software
        1.23 Heathkit/Zenith Data Systems
        1.24 Hewlett-Packard
        1.25 Honeywell
        1.26 Intel Corporation
        1.27 IBM
            1.27.1 On early IBM mainframes (1400, 1800, 701, 704, 709, 7090, and 7094)
            1.27.2 On IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
            1.27.3 On IBM PC and Intel x86 based architectures
            1.27.4 On other IBM hardware platforms
        1.28 International Computers Limited
        1.29 LynuxWorks (originally Lynx Real-time Systems)
        1.30 Micrium Inc.
        1.31 Microsoft Corporation
        1.32 MontaVista Software
        1.33 NCR Corporation
        1.34 Nintendo
        1.35 Novell
        1.36 Quadros Systems
        1.37 RCA
        1.38 RoweBots
        1.39 Samsung Electronics
        1.40 SCO / The SCO Group[4]
        1.41 Scientific Data Systems (SDS)
        1.42 Sciopta Systems GmbH
        1.43 SYSGO
        1.44 Tandy Corporation
        1.45 TRON Project
        1.46 Unisys
        1.47 UNIVAC (later Unisys)
        1.48 Wang Laboratories
        1.49 Wind River Systems
        1.50 Other
            1.50.1 Lisp-based
            1.50.2 Non-standard language-based
            1.50.3 Other proprietary non-Unix-like
            1.50.4 Other proprietary Unix-like and POSIX-compliant
    2 Non-proprietary
        2.1 Unix-like
            2.1.1 Research Unix-like and other POSIX-compliant
            2.1.2 Free and open source Unix-like
            2.1.3 Other Unix-like
        2.2 Non-Unix-like
            2.2.1 Research non-Unix-like
            2.2.2 Free and open source non-Unix-like
    3 Disk operating systems
    4 Network operating systems
    5 Web operating systems
    6 Generic/commodity and other
    7 For Elektronika BK
    8 Hobby
    9 Embedded
        9.1 Personal digital assistants (PDAs)
        9.2 Digital media players
        9.3 Smartphones and Mobile phones
        9.4 Routers
        9.5 Other embedded
    10 Capability-based
        10.1 LEGO Mindstorms
        10.2 Other capability-based
    11 See also
        11.1 Category links
    12 References
    13 External links

Proprietary
Acorn Computers

    Arthur
    ARX
    MOS
    RISC iX
    RISC OS

Amiga Inc.

    AmigaOS
        AmigaOS 1.0-3.9 (Motorola 68000)
        AmigaOS 4 (PowerPC)
    Amiga Unix (aka Amix)

Apple Inc.

    Apple II family
        Apple DOS
        Apple Pascal
        ProDOS
        GS/OS
    Apple III
        Apple SOS
    Apple Lisa
        Lisa Workshop[1]
        Lisa Operating System[2]
    Apple Macintosh
        Mac OS
        A/UX (UNIX System V with BSD extensions)
        Rhapsody
        NeXTSTEP
        OS X (formerly Mac OS X)
        OS X Server (formerly Mac OS X Server)
    Apple Network Server
        IBM AIX (Apple-customized)
    Apple MessagePad
        Newton OS
    iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad
        iOS (a subset of OS X)
    Embedded operating systems
        A/ROSE
        iPod software (unnamed embedded OS for iPod)
        Unnamed NetBSD variant for Airport Extreme and Time Capsule

Apollo Computer

    Domain/OS : One of the first network-based systems. Run on Apollo/Domain hardware. Later bought by Hewlett-Packard.

Atari

    Atari DOS (for 8-bit computers)
    Atari TOS
    Atari MultiTOS

BAE Systems

    XTS-400

Be Inc.

    BeOS
        BeIA
        BeOS r5.1d0
            magnussoft ZETA (based on BeOS r5.1d0 source code, developed by yellowTAB)

Bell Labs

    Unix ("Ken's new system," for its creator (Ken Thompson), officially Unics and then Unix, the prototypic operating system created in Bell Labs in 1969 that formed the basis for the Unix family of operating systems)
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v1
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v2
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v3
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v4
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v5
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v6
            MINI-UNIX
            PWB/UNIX
                USG
                    CB Unix
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v7 (It is from Version 7 Unix (and, to an extent, its descendants listed below) that almost all Unix-based and Unix-like operating systems descend.)
            Unix System III
            Unix System IV
            Unix System V
                Unix System V Releases 2.0, 3.0, 3.2, 4.0, and 4.2
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v8
        UNIX TIme-Sharing System v9
        UNIX Time-Sharing System v10

Non-Unix Operating Systems:

    BESYS
    Plan 9 from Bell Labs

Bull SAS

    GCOS

Burroughs Corporation

    Burroughs MCP

Control Data Corporation

    Chippewa Operating System (COS)
        MACE (Mansfield and Cahlander Executive)
            Kronos (Kronographic OS)
                NOS (Network Operating System)
                    NOS/BE NOS Batch Environment
                    NOS/VE NOS Virtual Environment
        SCOPE (Supervisory Control Of Program Execution)
        SIPROS (for Simultaneous Processing Operating System)
    EP/IX (Enhanced Performance Unix)

Convergent Technologies

    Convergent Technologies Operating System (later acquired by Unisys)

Data General

    AOS for 16-bit Data General Eclipse computers and AOS/VS for 32-bit (MV series) Eclipses, MP/AOS for microNOVA-based computers
    DG/UX
    RDOS Real-time Disk Operating System, with variants: RTOS and DOS (not related to PC DOS, MS-DOS etc.)

DataPoint

    CTOS Z-80 based, Cassette Tape Operating System for early desktop systems. Capable of up to 8 simultaneous users. Replaced by DataPoint DOS.
    DOS Intel 808x/80x86-based, Disk Operating Systems for desktop systems. Capable of up to 32 users per node. Supported a sophisticated network of nodes that were often purpose-built. The name DOS was used in these products login screens before it was popularized by IBM, Microsoft and others.

DDC-I, Inc.

    Deos Time & Space Partitioned RTOS, Certified to DO-178B, Level A since 1998
    HeartOS Posix-based Hard Real-Time Operating System

Digital Research, Inc.

    CP/M
        CP/M CP/M for Intel 8080/8085 and Zilog Z80
            Personal CP/M, a refinement of CP/M 2.2 with BDOS 2.8
            CP/M Plus with BDOS 3.0
        CP/M-68K CP/M for Motorola 68000
        CP/M-8000 CP/M for Zilog Z8000
        CP/M-86 CP/M for Intel 8088/8086
            CP/M-86 Plus
            Personal CP/M-86
        MP/M Multi-user version of CP/M-80
            MP/M II
        MP/M-86 Multi-user version of CP/M-86
            MP/M 8-16, a dual-processor variant of MP/M for 8086 and 8080 CPUs.
        Concurrent CP/M, the successor of CP/M-80 and MP/M-80
        Concurrent CP/M-86, the successor of CP/M-86 and MP/M-86
            Concurrent CP/M 8-16, a dual-processor variant of Concurrent CP/M for 8086 and 8080 CPUs.
        Concurrent CP/M-68K, a variant for the 68000

    DOS
        Concurrent DOS, the successor of Concurrent CP/M-86 with PC-MODE
            Concurrent PC DOS, a Concurrent DOS variant for IBM compatible PCs
            Concurrent DOS 8-16, a dual-processor variant of Concurrent DOS for 8086 and 8080 CPUs.
            Concurrent DOS 286
            Concurrent DOS XM, a real-mode variant of Concurrent DOS with EEMS support
            Concurrent DOS 386
                Concurrent DOS 386/MGE, a Concurrent DOS 386 variant with advanced graphics terminal capabilities
        Concurrent DOS 68K, a port of Concurrent DOS to Motorola 68000 CPUs with DOS source code portability capabilities
        FlexOS 1.0 - 2.34, a derivative of Concurrent DOS 286
            FlexOS 186, a variant of FlexOS for terminals
            FlexOS 286, a variant of FlexOS for hosts
                Siemens S5-DOS/MT, an industrial control system based on FlexOS
                IBM 4680 OS, a POS operating system based on FlexOS
                IBM 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on FlexOS
                    Toshiba 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS
            FlexOS 386, a later variant of FlexOS for hosts
                IBM 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on FlexOS
                    Toshiba 4690 OS, a POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS
            FlexOS 68K, a derivative of Concurrent DOS 68K
        Multiuser DOS, the successor of Concurrent DOS 386
            CCI Multiuser DOS
            Datapac Multiuser DOS
                Datapac System Manager, a derivative of Datapac Multiuser DOS
            IMS Multiuser DOS
                IMS REAL/32, a derivative of Multiuser DOS
                    IMS REAL/NG, the successor of REAL/32
        DOS Plus 1.2 - 2.1, a single-user, multi-tasking system derived from Concurrent DOS 4.1 - 5.0
        DR DOS 3.31 - 6.0, a single-user, single-tasking native DOS derived from Concurrent DOS 6.0
            Novell PalmDOS 1.0
            Novell "Star Trek"
            Novell DOS 7, a single-user, multi-tasking system derived from DR DOS
            Caldera OpenDOS 7.01
            Caldera DR-DOS 7.02 and higher

Digital/Tandem Computers/Compaq/HP

    Domain/OS (originally Aegis, from Apollo Computer who were bought by HP)
    HP-UX
    Multi-Programming Executive (from HP)
    NonStop
    OS/8
    RSTS/E (multi-user time-sharing OS for PDP-11s)
    RSX-11 (multiuser, multitasking OS for PDP-11s)
    RT-11 (single user OS for PDP-11)
    TENEX (a variant of TOPS-20 from BBN, for the PDP-10)
    TOPS-10 (for the PDP-10)
    TOPS-20 (for the PDP-10)
    Digital UNIX (derived from OSF/1, became HP's Tru64 UNIX)
    Ultrix
    VMS (originally by DEC, now by HP) for the VAX mini-computer range, Alpha and Intel Itanium 2; later renamed OpenVMS)
    WAITS (for the PDP-6 and PDP-10)

ENEA AB

    OSE Flexible, small footprint, high-performance RTOS for control processors

Fujitsu

    Towns OS

General Electric

    Real-Time Multiprogramming Operating System

Google
Android 4.0.1 on the Galaxy Nexus

    Google Chrome OS is designed to work exclusively with web applications. Announced on July 7, 2009, Chrome OS is currently publicly available and was released summer 2011. The Chrome OS source code was released on November 19, 2009 under the BSD license as Chromium OS.
        Chromium OS is an open source operating system development version of Google Chrome OS. Both operating systems are based on the Linux kernel.
    Android is an operating system for mobile devices. It consists of Android Runtime (userland) with Linux (kernel), with its Linux kernel modified to add drivers for mobile device hardware and to remove unused Vanilla Linux drivers.

Green Hills Software

    INTEGRITY Reliable Operating system
    INTEGRITY-178B A DO-178B certified version of INTEGRITY.
    µ-velOSity A lightweight microkernel.

Heathkit/Zenith Data Systems

    HDOS; ran on the H8 and Heath/Zenith Z-89 series
    HT-11 (a modified version of RT-11) ran on the Heathkit H11

Hewlett-Packard

    HP Multi-Programming Executive; (MPE, MPE/XL, and MPE/iX) runs on HP 3000 and HP e3000 mini-computers.
    HP-UX; runs on HP9000 and Itanium servers - from small to mainframe-class computers.
    NonStop OS; runs on HP's NonStop line of Itanium servers.

Honeywell

    Multics
    GCOS
    CP-6

Intel Corporation

    iRMX; real-time operating system originally created to support the Intel 8080 and 8086 processor families in embedded applications.
    ISIS-II; "Intel Systems Implementation Supervisor" was THE environment for development of software within the Intel microprocessor family in the early 1980s on their Intellec Microcomputer Development System and clones. ISIS-II worked with 8 inch floppy disks and had an editor, cross-assemblers, a linker, an object locator, debugger, compilers for PLM (PL/I for microprocessors of the 8080/86 family), a BASIC interpreter, etc. and allowed file management through a console.

IBM
Further information: History of IBM mainframe operating systems
On early IBM mainframes (1400, 1800, 701, 704, 709, 7090, and 7094)

    BESYS (for the IBM 7090)
    CTSS (The Compatible Time-Sharing System, developed at MIT's Computation Center for use on a modified IBM 7094)
    GM OS & GM-NAA I/O (for the IBM 704)
    IBSYS (tape based operating system for IBM 7090 and IBM 7094)
    IJMON (A bootable serial I/O monitor for loading programs for IBM 1400 and IBM 1800)
    SOS (SHARE Operating System, for the IBM 704 and 709)
    UMES (University of Michigan Executive System, for the IBM 704, 709, and 7090)

On IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes

    OS/360 and successors on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        OS/360 (first official OS targeted for the System/360 architecture),
        Saw customer installations of the following variations:
            PCP (Primary Control Program, a kernel and a ground breaking automatic space allocating file system)
            MFT (original Multi-programming with a Fixed number of Tasks, replaced by MFT II)
            MFT II (Multi-Programming with a Fixed number of Tasks, had up to 15 fixed size application partitions, plus partitions for system tasks, initially defined at boot time but redefinable by operator command)
            MVT (Multi-Programming Variable Tasks, had up to 15 application regions defined dynamically, plus additional regions for system tasks)
        OS/VS (port of OS/360 targeted for the System/370 virtual memory architecture, "OS/370" is not correct name for OS/VS1 and OS/VS2, but rather refers to OS/VS2 MVS and MVS/SP Version 1),
        Customer installations in the following variations:
            SVS (Single Virtual Storage, both VS1 & VS2 began as SVS systems)
            OS/VS1 (Operating System/Virtual Storage 1, Virtual-memory version of MFT II)
            OS/VS2 (Operating System/Virtual Storage 2, Virtual-memory version of OS/MVT but without multiprocessing support)
                OS/VS2 R2 (called Multiple Virtual Storage, MVS, eliminated most need for VS1)
        MVS/SE (MVS System Extensions)
        MVS/SP (MVS System Product)
        MVS/XA (MVS/SP V2. MVS supported eXtended Architecture, 31-bit addressing)
        MVS/ESA (MVS supported Enterprise System Architecture, horizontal addressing extensions: data only address spaces called Dataspaces; a Unix environment was available starting with MVS/ESA V4R3)
        OS/390 (Upgrade from MVS, with an additional Unix environment)
        z/OS (OS/390 supported z/Architecture, 64-bit addressing)
    DOS/360 and successors on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        BOS/360 (early interim version of DOS/360, briefly available at a few Alpha & Beta System/360 sites)
        TOS/360 (similar to BOS above and more fleeting, able to boot and run from 2x00 series tape drives)
        DOS/360 (Disk Operating System (DOS), multi-programming system with up to 3 partitions, first commonly available OS for System/360)
            DOS/360/RJE (DOS/360 with a control program extension that provided for the monitoring of remote job entry hardware (card reader & printer) connected by dedicated phone lines)
        DOS/VS (First DOS offered on System/370 systems, provided virtual storage)
        DOS/VSE (also known as VSE, upgrade of DOS/VS, up to 14 fixed size processing partitions )
        VSE/SP (program product replacing DOS/VSE and VSE/AF)
        VSE/ESA (DOS/VSE extended virtual memory support to 32-bit addresses (Extended System Architecture)).
        z/VSE (latest version of the four decades old DOS lineage, supports 64-bit addresses, multiprocessing, multiprogramming, SNA, TCP/IP, and some virtual machine features in support of Linux workloads)
    CP/CMS (Control Program/Cambridge Monitor System) and successors on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        CP-40/CMS (for System/360 Model 40)
        CP-67/CMS (for System/360 Model 67)
        VM/370 (Virtual Machine / Conversational Monitor System, virtual memory operating system for System/370)
        VM/XA (VM/eXtended Architecture for System/370 with extended virtual memory)
        VM/ESA (Virtual Machine / Extended System Architecture, added 31-bit addressing to VM series)
        z/VM (z/Architecture version of the VM OS with 64-bit addressing)

Further information: History of CP/CMS

    TPF Line (Transaction Processing Facility) on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes (largely used by airlines)
        ACP (Airline Control Program)
        TPF (Transaction Processing Facility)
        z/TPF (z/Architecture extension)
    Unix-like on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes
        AIX/370 (IBM's Advanced Interactive eXecutive, a System V Unix version)
        AIX/ESA (IBM's Advanced Interactive eXecutive, a System V Unix version)
        OpenSolaris for IBM System z
        UTS (developed by Amdahl)
        z/Linux
    Others on IBM S/360, S/370, and successor mainframes:
        BOS/360 (Basic Operating System)
        MTS (Michigan Terminal System, developed by a group of universities in the US, Canada, and the UK for the IBM System/360 Model 67, System/370 series, and compatible mainframes)
        RTOS/360 (IBM's Real Time Operating System, ran on 5 NASA custom System/360-75s)[3]
        TOS/360 (Tape Operating System)
        TSS/360 (IBM's Time Sharing System)
        MUSIC/SP (developed by McGill University for IBM System/370)
        ORVYL and WYLBUR (developed by Stanford University for IBM System/360)

On IBM PC and Intel x86 based architectures

    PC DOS / IBM DOS
        PC DOS 1.x, 2.x, 3.x (developed jointly with Microsoft)
        IBM DOS 4.x, 5.0 (developed jointly with Microsoft)
        PC DOS 6.1, 6.3, 7, 2000, 7.10

See also: MS-DOS and Windows

    OS/2
        OS/2 1.x (developed jointly with Microsoft)
        OS/2 2.x
        OS/2 Warp 3
        OS/2 Warp 4
        eComStation (Warp 4.5/Workspace on Demand, rebundled by Serenity Systems International)
    IBM 4680 OS version 1 to 4, a POS operating system based on Digital Research's Concurrent DOS 286 and FlexOS 286 1.xx
        IBM 4690 OS version 1 to 6.3, a successor to 4680 OS based on Novell's FlexOS 286/FlexOS 386 2.3x
            Toshiba 4690 OS version 6.4, a successor to 4690 OS 6.3

On other IBM hardware platforms

    IBM Series/1
        EDX (Event Driven Executive)
        RPS (Realtime Programming System)
        CPS (Control Programming Support, subset of RPS)
        SerIX (Unix on Series/1)
    IBM 1130
        DMS (Disk Monitor System)
    IBM 1800
        TSX (Time Sharing eXecutive)
        MPX (Multi Programming eXecutive)
    IBM 8100
        DPCX (Distributed Processing Control eXecutive)
        DPPX (Distributed Processing Programming Executive)
    IBM System/3
        DMS (Disk Management System)
    IBM System/34, IBM System/36
        SSP (System Support Program)
    IBM System/38
        CPF (Control Program Facility)
    IBM System/88
        Stratus VOS (developed by Stratus, and used for IBM System/88, Original equipment manufacturer from Stratus)
    AS/400, iSeries, System i, Power Systems i Edition
        OS/400 (descendant of System/38 CPF, include System/36 SSP environment)
        i5/OS (extends OS/400 with significant interoperability features)
        IBM i (extends i5/OS)
    UNIX on IBM POWER
        AIX (Advanced Interactive eXecutive, a System V Unix version)
        AOS (a BSD Unix version, not related to Data General AOS)
    Others
        IBM Workplace OS (Microkernel based operating system, developed and canceled in 1990s)
        K42 (open-source research operating system on PowerPC or x86 based cache-coherent multiprocessor systems)
        Dynix (developed by Sequent, and used for IBM NUMA-Q too)

International Computers Limited

    J and MultiJob for the System 4 series mainframes
    GEORGE 2/3/4 GEneral ORGanisational Environment, used by ICL 1900 series mainframes
    Executive, used on the 290x range of minicomputers
    TME, used on the ME29 minicomputer
    ICL VME, including early variants VME/B and VME/2900, appearing on the ICL 2900 Series and Series 39 mainframes, implemented in S3
    VME/K on early smaller 2900s

LynuxWorks (originally Lynx Real-time Systems)

    LynxOS

Micrium Inc.

    MicroC/OS-II (Small pre-emptive priority based multi-tasking kernel)
    MicroC/OS-III (Small pre-emptive priority based multi-tasking kernel, with unlimited number of tasks and priorities, and round robin scheduling)

Microsoft Corporation

    Xenix (licensed version of Unix; licensed to SCO in 1987)
    MSX-DOS (developed by MS Japan for the MSX 8-bit computer)
    MS-DOS (developed jointly with IBM, versions 1.0–6.22)
    Windows (16-bit and 32-bit preemptive and cooperative multitasking, running on top of MS-DOS)
        Windows 1.0 (Windows 1)
        Windows 2.0 (Windows 2 - separate version for i386 processor)
        Windows 3.0 (Windows 3)
        Windows 3.1.x (Windows 3.1)
        Windows for Workgroups 3.1 (Codename Snowball)
        Windows 3.2 (Chinese-only release)
        Windows for Workgroups 3.1.1
        Windows 95 (Codename Chicago - Windows 4.0)
        Windows 98 (Codename Memphis - Windows 4.1)
        Windows Millennium Edition (Windows ME - Windows 4.9)
    Windows NT (Full 32-bit or 64-bit kernel, not dependent on MS-DOS)
        Windows NT 3.1
        Windows NT 3.5
        Windows NT 3.51
        Windows NT 4.0
        Windows 2000 (Windows NT 5.0)
        Windows XP (Windows NT 5.1)
        Windows Server 2003 (Windows NT 5.2)
        Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs (based on Windows XP)
        Windows Vista (Windows NT 6.0)
        Windows Azure (Cloud OS Platform) 2009
        Windows Home Server (based on Windows Server 2003)
        Windows Server 2008 (based on Windows Vista)
        Windows 7 (Windows NT 6.1)
        Windows Server 2008 R2 (based on Windows 7)
        Windows Home Server 2011 (based on Windows Server 2008 R2)
        Windows Server 2012 (based on Windows 8)
        Windows 8 (Windows NT 6.2)
        Windows Phone 8
        Windows 8.1 (Windows NT 6.3)
        Windows Server 2012 R2 (based on Windows 8.1)
        Xbox One system software
        Windows Phone 8.1
        Windows 10 (Windows NT 10.0)
        Windows 10 Mobile
    Windows CE (OS for handhelds, embedded devices, and real-time applications that is similar to other versions of Windows)
        Windows CE 3.0
        Windows CE 5.0
        Windows CE 6.0
        Windows Mobile (based on Windows CE, but for a smaller form factor)
        Windows Phone 7
    Singularity - A research operating system written mostly in managed code (C#)
    Midori - A managed code operating system
    Xbox 360 system software

MontaVista Software

    MontaVista Mobilinux

NCR Corporation

    TMX - Transaction Management eXecutive

Nintendo

    es is a computer operating system developed originally by Nintendo and since 2008 by Esrille. It is open source and runs natively on x86 platforms.

Novell

    NetWare network operating system providing high-performance network services. Has been superseded by Open Enterprise Server line, which can be based on NetWare or Linux to provide the same set of services.
    UnixWare
        Novell "SuperNOS", a never released merge of NetWare and UnixWare
    Novell "Corsair"
        Novell "Exposé"
    Open Enterprise Server, the successor to NetWare.

Quadros Systems

    RTXC Quadros RTOS proprietary C-based RTOS used in embedded systems ows

RCA

    TSOS, first OS supporting virtual addressing of the main storage and support for both timeshare and batch interface

RoweBots

    DSPnano RTOS 8/16 Bit Ultra Tiny Embedded Linux Compatible RTOS
    Unison RTOS 32 Bit Open Standards, Linux Compatible, Ultra Tiny Size, Modularity, POSIX-compliant RTOS which supports a variety of wireless modules and provides a complete set of security protocols

Samsung Electronics

    Bada
    Tizen

SCO / The SCO Group

    Xenix, Unix System III based distribution for the Intel 8086/8088 architecture
        Xenix 286, Unix System V Release 2 based distribution for the Intel 80286 architecture
        Xenix 386, Unix System V Release 2 based distribution for the Intel 80386 architecture
    SCO Unix, SCO UNIX System V/386 was the first volume commercial product licensed by AT&T to use the UNIX System trademark (1989). Derived from AT&T System V Release 3.2 with an infusion of Xenix device drivers and utilities plus most of the SVR4 features
        SCO Open Desktop, the first 32-bit graphical user interface for UNIX Systems running on Intel processor-based computers. Based on SCO Unix
    SCO OpenServer 5, AT&T UNIX System V Release 3 based
    SCO OpenServer 6, SVR5 (UnixWare 7) based kernel with SCO OpenServer 5 application and binary compatibility, system administration, and user environments
    UnixWare
        UnixWare 2.x, based on AT&T System V Release 4.2MP
        UnixWare 7, UnixWare 2 kernel plus parts of 3.2v5 (UnixWare 2 + OpenServer 5 = UnixWare 7). Referred to by SCO as SVR5

Scientific Data Systems (SDS)

    Berkeley Timesharing System for the SDS 940

Sciopta Systems GmbH

    SCIOPTA Pre-emptive, priority-based real-time kernel (IEC61508 certified)

SYSGO

    PikeOS is a certified real time operating system for safety and security critical embedded systems

Tandy Corporation

    TRS-DOS; A floppy-disk-oriented OS supplied by Tandy/Radio Shack for their Z80-based line of personal computers. Eventually renamed as LS-DOS or LDOS.
    NewDos/80; A third-party OS for Tandy's TRS-80 personal computers.
    DeskMate; Operating system

TRON Project

    TRON (open real-time operating system kernel)
    T-Kernel

Unisys

    Unisys OS 2200 operating system

UNIVAC (later Unisys)

    EXEC I
    EXEC II
    EXEC 8 Ran on 1100 series.
    VS/9, successor to RCA TSOS

Wang Laboratories

    WPS Wang Word Processing System. Micro-code based system.
    OIS Wang Office Information System. Successor to the WPS. Combined the WPS and VP/MVP systems.
    Wang VS Operating System (VSOS) - used on the VS line of minicomputer systems.

Wind River Systems

    VxWorks Small footprint, scalable, high-performance RTOS

Other
Lisp-based

    Lisp Machines, Inc. (also known as LMI) used an operating system written in MIT's Lisp Machine Lisp.
    Symbolics Genera written in a systems dialect of the Lisp programming language called ZetaLisp and Symbolics Common Lisp. Genera was ported to a virtual machine for the DEC Alpha line of computers.
    Texas Instruments' Explorer Lisp machine workstations also had systems code written in Lisp Machine Lisp.
    Xerox 1100 series of Lisp machines used an operating system also written in Interlisp, and was also ported to a virtual machine called "Medley."

Non-standard language-based

    Pilot operating system (used in Xerox Star workstations) was written in the Mesa programming language.
    PERQ Operating System (POS) was written in PERQ Pascal.

Other proprietary non-Unix-like

    ???????-1 (Elbrus-1) and ???????-2 used for application, job control, system programming,[5] implemented in u???-76 (AL-76).
    EOS; developed by ETA Systems for use in their ETA-10 line of supercomputers
    EMBOS; developed by Elxsi for use on their mini-supercomputers
    GCOS is a proprietary Operating System originally developed by General Electric
    MAI Basic Four; An OS implementing Business Basic from MAI Systems.
    Michigan Terminal System; Developed by a group of universities in the US, Canada, and the UK for use on the IBM System/360 Model 67, the System/370 series, and compatible mainframes
    MUSIC/SP; an operating system developed for the S/370, running normally under VM
    OS ES; an operating system for ES EVM
    PC-MOS/386; DOS-like, but multiuser/multitasking
    Prolog-Dispatcher; used to control Soviet Buran space ship.
    SINTRAN III; an operating system used with Norsk Data computers.
    SkyOS; commercial desktop OS for PCs
    THEOS
    TSX-32; a 32-bit operating system for x86 platform.
    TX990/TXDS, DX10 and DNOS; proprietary operating systems for TI-990 minicomputers

Other proprietary Unix-like and POSIX-compliant

    Aegis (Apollo Computer)
    Amiga Unix (Amiga ports of Unix System V release 3.2 with Amiga A2500UX and SVR4 with Amiga A3000UX. Started in 1990, last version was in 1992)
    Coherent (Unix-like OS from Mark Williams Co. for PC class computers)
    DC/OSx (DataCenter/OSx was an operating system for MIPS based systems developed by Pyramid Technology)
    DG/UX (Data General Corp)
    DNIX from DIAB
    DSPnano RTOS (POSIX nanokernel, DSP Optimized, Open Source)
    HeliOS developed and sold by Perihelion Software mainly for transputer based systems
    Interactive Unix (a port of the UNIX System V operating system for Intel x86 by Interactive Systems Corporation)
    IRIX from SGI
    MeikOS
    NeXTSTEP (developed by NeXT; a Unix-based OS based on the Mach microkernel)
    OS-9 Unix-like RTOS. (OS from Microware for Motorola 6809 based microcomputers)
    OS9/68K Unix-like RTOS. (OS from Microware for Motorola 680x0 based microcomputers; based on OS-9)
    OS-9000 Unix-like RTOS. (OS from Microware for Intel x86 based microcomputers; based on OS-9, written in C)
    OSF/1 (developed into a commercial offering by Digital Equipment Corporation)
    OpenStep
    QNX (POSIX, microkernel OS; usually a real time embedded OS)
    Rhapsody (an early form of OS X)
    RISC iX - Derived from BSD 4.3, by Acorn computers, for their ARM family of machines.
    RISC/os (a port by MIPS of 4.3BSD to the RISC MIPS architecture)
    RMX
    SCO UNIX (from SCO, bought by Caldera who renamed themselves SCO Group)
    SINIX (a port by SNI of Unix to the RISC MIPS architecture)
    Solaris (Sun's System V-based replacement for SunOS)
    SunOS (BSD-based Unix system used on early Sun hardware)
    SUPER-UX (a port of System V Release 4.2MP with features adopted from BSD and Linux for NEC SX architecture supercomputers)
    System V (a release of AT&T Unix, 'SVR4' was the 4th minor release)
    System V/AT, 386 (The first version of AT&T System V UNIX on the IBM 286 and 386 PCs, ported and sold by Microport)
    Trusted Solaris (Solaris with kernel and other enhancements to support multilevel security)
    UniFLEX (Unix-like OS from TSC for DMA-capable, extended addresses, Motorola 6809 based computers; e.g. SWTPC, GIMIX, …)
    Unicos (the version of Unix designed for Cray Supercomputers, mainly geared to vector calculations)
    UTX-32 (Developed by Gould CSD (Computer System Division), a Unix-based OS that included both BSD and System V characteristics. It was one of the first Unix based systems to receive NSA's C2 security level certification.)

Non-proprietary
Unix-like
Research Unix-like and other POSIX-compliant

    Minix (study OS developed by Andrew S. Tanenbaum in the Netherlands)
    Plan 9 (distributed OS developed at Bell Labs, based on original Unix design principles yet functionally different and going much further)
        Inferno (distributed OS derived from Plan 9, originally from Bell Labs)
        Plan B (distributed OS derived from Plan 9 and Off++ microkernel)
    Unix (OS developed at Bell Labs ca 1970 initially by Ken Thompson)
    Xinu (Study OS developed by Douglas E. Comer in the USA)

Free and open source Unix-like
Ubuntu, an example of a Linux-like system

    BSD (Berkeley Software Distribution, a variant of Unix for DEC VAX hardware)
        FreeBSD (one of the outgrowths of UC Regents' abandonment of CSRG's 'BSD Unix')
            DragonFlyBSD, forked from FreeBSD 4.8
            Darwin, created by Apple using FreeBSD and NeXTSTEP
            GhostBSD
            PC-BSD
        NetBSD (an embeded device BSD variant)
            OpenBSD forked from NetBSD
    GNU
    Linux

See also: List of Linux distributions

        Cray Linux Environment
    OpenSolaris, contains original Unix (SVR4) code. Now discontinued by Oracle in favor of Solaris 11 Express
        OpenIndiana, aims to continue development and distribution of OpenSolaris operating system. Operates under the Illumos Foundation. Uses the Illumos kernel, which is a derivative of OS/Net, which is basically a Solaris/OpenSolaris kernel with the bulk of the drivers, core libraries, and basic utilities.
        Nexenta OS, based on the OpenSolaris kernel with Ubuntu packages
        Jaris OS, based on OpenSolaris with support for Japanese
    RTEMS (Real-Time Executive for Multiprocessor Systems)
    Syllable Desktop
    Univention Corporate Server
    VSTa
        FMI/OS, successor of VSTa

Other Unix-like

    Plurix
    TUNIS (University of Toronto)

Non-Unix-like
Research non-Unix-like

    Amoeba (research OS by Andrew S. Tanenbaum)
    Croquet
    EROS microkernel, capability-based
    HelenOS research and experimental operating system
    House Haskell User's Operating System and Environment, research OS written in Haskell and C.
    ILIOS Research OS designed for routing
        CapROS microkernel EROS successor.
        Coyotos microkernel EROS successor, goal: be first formally verified OS.
    L4 Second generation microkernel
    Mach (from OS kernel research at Carnegie Mellon University; see NeXTSTEP)
    Nemesis Cambridge University research OS - detailed quality of service abilities.
    Spring (research OS from Sun Microsystems)
    THE multiprogramming system by Dijkstra in 1968 at the University of Technology in the Netherlands, introduced the first form of software-based memory segmentation, freeing programmers from being forced to use actual physical locations.
    V from Stanford, early 1980s

Free and open source non-Unix-like

    Cosmos (written in C#)
    FreeDOS (open source DOS variant)
    Haiku (open source inspired by BeOS, under development)
    ITS written by MIT students (for the PDP-6 and PDP-10)
    MonaOS (written in C++)
    osFree OS/2 Warp open source clone.
    OSv (written in C++)
    Phantom OS (persistent object oriented)
    ReactOS, open source OS designed to be binary compatible with Windows NT and its variants (Windows XP, Windows 2000, etc.); currently in development phase
    SharpOS (written in .NET C#)

Disk operating systems
Main article: DOS

    86-DOS (developed at Seattle Computer Products by Tim Paterson for the new Intel 808x CPUs; licensed to Microsoft, became PC DOS/MS-DOS. Also known by its working title QDOS.)
        PC DOS (IBM's DOS variant, developed jointly with Microsoft, versions 1.0–7.0, 2000, 7.10)
        MS-DOS (Microsoft's DOS variant for OEM, developed jointly with IBM, versions 1.x–6.22 Microsoft's now abandoned DOS variant)
    Concurrent CP/M-86 3.1 (BDOS 3.1) with PC-MODE (Digital Research's successor of CP/M-86 and MP/M-86)
        Concurrent DOS 3.1-4.1 (BDOS 3.1-4.1)
            Concurrent PC DOS 3.2 (BDOS 3.2) (Concurrent DOS variant for IBM compatible PCs)
                DOS Plus 1.2 (BDOS 4.1), 2.1 (BDOS 5.0) (single-user, multi-tasking system derived from Concurrent DOS 4.1-5.0)
            Concurrent DOS 8-16 (dual-processor variant of Concurrent DOS for 8086 and 8080 CPUs)
            Concurrent DOS 286 1.x
                FlexOS 1.00-2.34 (derivative of Concurrent DOS 286)
                    FlexOS 186 (variant of FlexOS for terminals)
                    FlexOS 286 (variant of FlexOS for hosts)
                        Siemens S5-DOS/MT (industrial control system based on FlexOS)
                        IBM 4680 OS (POS operating system based on FlexOS)
                        IBM 4690 OS (POS operating system based on FlexOS)
                            Toshiba 4690 OS (POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS)
                    FlexOS 386 (later variant of FlexOS for hosts)
                        IBM 4690 OS (POS operating system based on FlexOS)
                            Toshiba 4690 OS (POS operating system based on IBM 4690 OS and FlexOS)
            Concurrent DOS 386 1.0, 1.1, 2.0, 3.0 (BDOS 5.0-6.2)
                Concurrent DOS 386/MGE (Concurrent DOS 386 variant with advanced graphics terminal capabilities)
                Multiuser DOS 5.0, 5.01, 5.1 (BDOS 6.3-6.6) (successor of Concurrent DOS 386)
                    CCI Multiuser DOS 5.0-7.22 (up to BDOS 6.6)
                    Datapac Multiuser DOS
                        Datapac System Manager 7 (derivative of Datapac Multiuser DOS)
                    IMS Multiuser DOS 5.1, 7.0, 7.1 (BDOS 6.6-6.7)
                        IMS REAL/32 7.50, 7.51, 7.52, 7.53, 7.54, 7.6, 7.7, 7.8, 7.90, 7.91, 7.92, 7.93, 7.94, 7.95 (BDOS 6.8 and higher) (derivative of Multiuser DOS)
                            IMS REAL/NG (successor of REAL/32)
            Concurrent DOS XM 5.0, 5.2, 6.0, 6.2 (BDOS 5.0-6.2) (real-mode variant of Concurrent DOS with EEMS support)
                DR DOS 3.31, 3.32, 3.33, 3.34, 3.35, 5.0, 6.0 (BDOS 6.0-7.1) single-user, single-tasking native DOS derived from Concurrent DOS 6.0)
                    Novell PalmDOS 1.0 (BDOS 7.0)
                    Novell DR DOS "StarTrek"
                    Novell DOS 7 (single-user, multi-tasking system derived from DR DOS, BDOS 7.2)
                        Novell DOS 7 updates 1-10 (BDOS 7.2)
                            Caldera OpenDOS 7.01 (BDOS 7.2)
                                Enhanced DR-DOS 7.01.0x (BDOS 7.2)
                                    Dell Real Mode Kernel (DRMK)
                        Novell DOS 7 updates 11-15.2 (BDOS 7.2)
                            Caldera DR-DOS 7.02-7.03 (BDOS 7.3)
                                DR-DOS "WinBolt"
                                OEM DR-DOS 7.04-7.05 (BDOS 7.3)
                                OEM DR-DOS 7.06 (PQDOS)
                                OEM DR-DOS 7.07 (BDOS 7.4/7.7)
    FreeDOS (open source DOS variant)
    ProDOS (operating system for the Apple II series computers)
    PTS-DOS (DOS variant by Russian company Phystechsoft)
    TurboDOS (Software 2000, Inc.) for Z80 and Intel 8086 processor-based systems
    Multi-tasking user interfaces and environments for DOS
        DESQview+ QEMM 386 multi-tasking user interface for DOS
        DESQView/X (X-windowing GUI for DOS)

Network operating systems
Main article: Network operating system

    Cambridge Ring
    Cisco IOS by Cisco Systems
    CSIRONET by (CSIRO)
    CTOS (Convergent Technologies, later acquired by Unisys)
    Data ONTAP by NetApp
    Enterprise OS by McDATA
    ExtremeWare by Extreme Networks
    ExtremeXOS by Extreme Networks
    Fabric OS by Brocade
    JunOS by Juniper
    NetWare (networking OS by Novell)
    NOS (developed by CDC for use in their Cyber line of supercomputers)
    Novell Open Enterprise Server (Open Source networking OS by Novell. Can incorporate either SUSE Linux or Novell NetWare as its kernel).
    Plan 9 (distributed OS developed at Bell Labs, based on Unix design principles but not functionally identical)
        Inferno (distributed OS derived from Plan 9, originally from Bell Labs)
        Plan B (distributed OS derived from Plan 9 and Off++ microkernel)
    SAN-OS by Cisco (now NX-OS)
    TurboDOS (Software 2000, Inc.)

Web operating systems
Main article: Web operating system

    Browser OS
    Chrome OS
    DesktopTwo
    eyeOS
    FullyOS
    G.ho.st
    Glide OS
    Joli OS
    YouOS

Generic/commodity and other

    BLIS/COBOL
    Bluebottle also known as AOS (a concurrent and active object update to the Oberon operating system)
    BS1000 by Siemens AG
    BS2000 by Siemens AG, now BS2000/OSD from Fujitsu-Siemens Computers (formerly Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme)
    BS3000 by Siemens AG (functionally similar to OS-IV and MSP from Fujitsu)
    FLEX9 (by TSC for Motorola 6809 based machines; successor to FLEX, which was for Motorola 6800 CPUs)
    GEM (windowing GUI for CP/M, DOS, and Atari TOS)
    GEOS (popular windowing GUI for PC, Commodore, Apple computers)
    JavaOS
    JNode (Java New Operating System Design Effort), written 99% in Java (native compiled), provides own JVM and JIT compiler. Based on GNU Classpath.
    JX Java operating system that focuses on a flexible and robust operating system architecture developed as an open source system by the University of Erlangen.
    KERNAL (default OS on Commodore 64)
    MERLIN for the Corvus Concept
    MorphOS (Amiga compatible)
    MSP by Fujitsu (successor to OS-IV), now MSP/EX,  also known as Extended System Architecture (EXA), for 31-bit mode
    NetWare (networking OS by Novell)
    Oberon (operating system) (developed at ETH-Zürich by Niklaus Wirth et al.) for the Ceres and Chameleon workstation projects.
    OSD/XC by Fujitsu-Siemens (BS2000 ported to an emulation on a Sun SPARC platform)
    OS-IV by Fujitsu (based on early versions of IBM's MVS)
    Pick (often licensed and renamed)
    PRIMOS by Prime Computer (sometimes spelled PR1MOS and PR1ME)
    Sinclair QDOS (multitasking for the Sinclair QL computer)
    SSB-DOS (by TSC for Smoke Signal Broadcasting; a variant of FLEX in most respects)
    SymbOS (GUI based multitasking operating system for Z80 computers)
    Symobi (GUI based modern micro-kernel OS for x86, ARM and PowerPC processors, developed by Miray Software; used and developed further at Technical University of Munich)
    TripOS, 1978
    TurboDOS (Software 2000, Inc.)
    UCSD p-System (portable complete programming environment/operating system/virtual machine developed by a long running student project at UCSD; directed by Prof Kenneth Bowles; written in Pascal)
    VOS by Stratus Technologies with strong influence from Multics
    VOS by Hitachi for its IBM-compatible mainframes, based on IBM's MVS
    VM2000 by Siemens AG
    Visi On (first GUI for early PC machines; not commercially successful)
    VPS/VM (IBM based, main operating system at Boston University for over 10 years.)

For Elektronika BK

    ANDOS
    CSI-DOS
    KMON
    MK-DOS

Hobby

    AROS (AROS Research Operating System, formerly known as Amiga Research Operating System)
    AtheOS (branched to become Syllable Desktop)
        Syllable Desktop (a modern, independently originated OS; see AtheOS)
    BareMetal
    DexOS - 32-bit operating system written in x86 assembly.
    DSPnano RTOS
    EmuTOS
    EROS (Extremely Reliable Operating System)
    HelenOS, based on a preemptible microkernel design
    LSE/OS
    MenuetOS (extremely compact OS with GUI, written entirely in FASM assembly language)
        KolibriOS (a fork of MenuetOS)
    S-OS (a minimal DOS for Z80 machines)
    MikeOS (written in x86 assembly language)
    PonyOS (A Unix-Like system made as an April Fools Day joke, based on the show My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic. It purposefully does not support USB or networking, in an attempt to make it look as cheap as possible)

Embedded
Personal digital assistants (PDAs)

    DIP DOS on Atari Portfolio
    Embedded Linux
        Android
        Ångström distribution
        Familiar Linux
        Maemo based on Debian deployed on Nokia's Nokia 770, N800 and N810 Internet Tablets.
        MeeGo merger of Moblin and Maemo
        OpenZaurus
        webOS from Palm, Inc., later Hewlett-Packard via acquisition, and most recently at LG Electronics through acquisition from Hewlett-Packard
    Inferno (distributed OS originally from Bell Labs)
    iOS (a subset of OS X)
    Magic Cap
    MS-DOS on Poqet PC, HP 95LX, HP 100LX, HP 200LX, HP 1000CX, HP OmniGo 700LX
    NetBSD
    Newton OS on Apple MessagePad
    Palm OS from Palm, Inc; now spun off as PalmSource
    PEN/GEOS on HP OmniGo 100 and 120
    PenPoint OS
    Plan 9 from Bell Labs
    PVOS
    Symbian OS
    Windows CE, from Microsoft
        Pocket PC from Microsoft, a variant of Windows CE.
        Windows Mobile from Microsoft, a variant of Windows CE.
        Windows Phone from Microsoft,

Digital media players

    DSPnano RTOS
    iOS (a subset of OS X)
    iPod software
    ipodlinux
    iriver clix OS
    RockBox

Smartphones and Mobile phones
Main article: Mobile operating system

    BlackBerry OS
    Embedded Linux
        Access Linux Platform
        Android
        bada
        Firefox OS (project name: Boot to Gecko)
        Openmoko Linux
        OPhone
        MeeGo (from merger of Maemo & Moblin)
        Mobilinux
        MotoMagx
        Qt Extended
        Sailfish OS
        Tizen (earlier called LiMo Platform)
        webOS
    PEN/GEOS, GEOS-SC, GEOS-SE
    iOS (a subset of OS X)
    Palm OS
    Symbian platform (successor to Symbian OS)
    Windows Mobile (superseded by Windows Phone)

BlackBerry 10
Routers

    AlliedWare by Allied Telesis (aka Allied Telesyn)
    AirOS by Ubiquiti Networks
    CatOS by Cisco Systems
    Cisco IOS (originally Internetwork Operating System) by Cisco Systems
    DD-WRT by NewMedia-NET
    Inferno (distributed OS originally from Bell Labs)
    IOS-XR by Cisco Systems
    IronWare by Foundry Networks
    JunOS by Juniper Networks
    LibreWRT[12] GNU/Linux-libre
    OpenWrt
    RouterOS by Mikrotik
    ScreenOS by Juniper Networks, originally from Netscreen
    Timos by Alcatel-Lucent
    FTOS by Force10 Networks
    RTOS by Force10 Networks
    List of wireless router firmware projects

Other embedded

    Contiki
    ERIKA Enterprise
    eCos
    NetBSD
    uClinux
    MINIX
    NCOS
    freeRTOS, openRTOS and safeRTOS
    OpenEmbedded (or Yocto_Project)
    QNX     REX OS (microkernel OS; usually an embedded cell phone OS)
    ROM-DOS
    TinyOS
    ThreadX
    UbiquiOS by Virscient
    DSPnano RTOS
    Windows Embedded
        Windows CE
        Windows Embedded Standard
        Windows Embedded Enterprise
        Windows Embedded POSReady
    Wombat OS (microkernel OS; usually a real time embedded OS)

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