BSDi was formed in 1991 by members of the
Computer Systems Research Group (CSRG) at
UC Berkeley to develop and sell a proprietary version of BSD Unix for
PC compatible systems with
Intel 386 (or later) processors. This made use of work previously done by
Bill Jolitz to port BSD to the PC platform. BSDi had distributed over 300 copies of the beta version of BSD/386 by August 1992. BSD/386 1.0 was released in March 1993. The company sold licenses and support for it, taking advantage of terms in the
BSD License which permit use of the BSD software in proprietary systems, as long the author is credited. The company in turn contributed code and resources to the development of non-proprietary BSD operating systems. In the meantime, Jolitz had left BSDi and independently released a
free software BSD for PCs, called
386BSD. The BSDi system features complete and thorough
manpage documentation for the entire system, including complete syntax and argument explanations, examples, file usage, authors, and cross-references to other commands. BSD/386 licenses (including
source code) were priced at $995, lower than
AT&T UNIX System V source licenses, a fact highlighted in their advertisements. As part of the settlement of
USL v. BSDi, BSDI substituted code that had been written for the university's 4.4 BSD-Lite release for disputed code in their OS, effective with release 2.0. By the time of this release, the "386" designation had become dated, and BSD/386 was renamed "BSD/OS". Later releases of BSD/OS also support
Sun SPARC-based systems. BSD/OS 5.x versions are available for PowerPC too. The marketing of BSD/OS became increasingly focused on
Internet server applications. However, the increasingly tight market for
Unix-compatible software in the late 1990s and early 2000s hurt sales of BSD/OS. On one end of the market, it lacked the certification of
the Open Group to bear the UNIX trademark, and the sales force and hardware support of the larger Unix vendors. Simultaneously, it lacked the negligible acquisition cost of the open source BSDs and
Linux. BSD/OS was acquired by
Wind River Systems in April 2001. Wind River discontinued sales of BSD/OS at the end of 2003, with support terminated at the end of 2004. ==Releases==