showing the proportion of users of each BSD variant from a BSD usage survey in 2005. Each participant was permitted to indicate multiple BSD variants. BSD has been the base of a large number of operating systems. Most notable among these today are perhaps the major
open source BSDs: FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD, which are all derived from
386BSD and
4.4BSD-Lite by various routes. Both NetBSD and FreeBSD started life in 1993, initially derived from 386BSD, but in 1994 migrating to a 4.4BSD-Lite code base. OpenBSD was
forked in 1995 from NetBSD. A number of commercial operating systems are also partly or wholly based on BSD or its descendants, including
Sun's SunOS and
Apple Inc.'s
macOS. Most of the current BSD operating systems are
open source and available for download, free of charge, under the
BSD License, the most notable exception being
macOS. They also generally use a
monolithic kernel architecture, apart from macOS and DragonFly BSD which feature
hybrid kernels. The various open source BSD projects generally develop the kernel and
userland programs and libraries together, the source code being managed using a single central source repository. In the past, BSD was also used as a basis for several proprietary versions of Unix, such as
Sun's
SunOS,
Sequent's
Dynix,
NeXT's
NeXTSTEP,
DEC's
Ultrix and OSF/1 AXP (now
Tru64 UNIX). Parts of NeXT's software became the foundation for
macOS, among the most commercially successful BSD variants in the general market. A selection of significant Unix versions and
Unix-like operating systems that descend from BSD includes: •
FreeBSD, an open source general purpose operating system. •
Orbis OS, Sony's fork of FreeBSD 9 is the operating system for the PS4.
CellOS for the PS3 system is believed to also be a FreeBSD fork, and is known to contain FreeBSD and NetBSD code •
TrueOS,
GhostBSD and
DesktopBSD, distributions of FreeBSD with emphasis on ease of use and user friendly interfaces for the desktop/laptop PC user. •
MidnightBSD, another fork of FreeBSD •
DragonFly BSD, a fork of FreeBSD to follow an alternative design, particularly related to
SMP. •
NextBSD, new BSD distribution derived from FreeBSD 10.1 and various macOS components. •
FreeNAS a free network-attached storage server based on a minimal version of FreeBSD. •
NAS4Free fork of 0.7
FreeNAS version, Network attached storage server. •
Nokia IPSO (IPSO SB variant), the FreeBSD-based OS used in
Nokia Firewall Appliances. • The OS for the
Netflix Open Connect Appliance. •
Junos, the operating system for
Juniper routers, a customized version of FreeBSD, and a variety of other embedded operating systems •
Isilon Systems'
OneFS, the operating system used on Isilon IQ-series clustered storage systems, is a heavily customized version of FreeBSD. •
NetApp's Data ONTAP, the operating system for NetApp filers, is a customized version of FreeBSD with the ONTAP architecture built on top. •
m0n0wall, a FreeBSD distribution tweaked for usage as a firewall. •
pfSense free open source FreeBSD based firewall/router. •
OPNsense, firewall, a fork of pfSense •
Coyote Point Systems EQ/OS, a hardened high-performance runtime for server
load balancing. •
NetBSD, an open source BSD focused on clean design and portability. •
OpenBSD, a 1995
fork of NetBSD, focused on security. •
Force10 FTOS, the operating system for Force 10 and
Dell datacenter network switches. •
Dell DNOS version 9 and above, the successor to
FTOS. •
NeXT NEXTSTEP and
OPENSTEP, based on the
Mach kernel and
4BSD; the ancestor of
macOS •
Apple Inc.'s
Darwin, the core of
macOS and
iOS; built on the
XNU kernel (part
Mach, part FreeBSD, part Apple-derived code) and a
userland much of which comes from FreeBSD •
TrustedBSD •
F5 Networks, F5 BIGIP Appliances used a BSD OS as the management OS until version 9.0 was released, which is built on top of Linux. • DEC's
Ultrix, the official version of Unix for its
PDP-11, VAX, and
DECstation systems •
Sony NEWS-OS, a BSD-based operating system for their network engineering workstations •
OSF/1, a hybrid kernel based Unix developed by the
Open Software Foundation, incorporating a modified
Mach kernel and parts of 4BSD •
Tru64 UNIX (formerly DEC OSF/1 AXP or Digital UNIX), the port of
OSF/1 for
DEC Alpha-based systems from
DEC,
Compaq and
HP. • Pre-5.0 versions of
Sun Microsystems SunOS, an enhanced version of 4BSD for the Sun
Motorola 68k-based
Sun-2 and
Sun-3 systems,
SPARC-based systems, and
x86-based
Sun386i systems (SunOS 5.0 and later versions are
System V Release 4-based) •
386BSD, the first open source BSD-based operating system and the ancestor of most current BSD systems •
DEMOS, a Soviet BSD clone •
BSD/OS, a (now defunct) proprietary BSD for PCs ==See also==