DEC's first release of OSF/1 (OSF/1 Release 1.0) in January 1992 was for its line of
MIPS-based
DECstation workstations, however this was never a fully supported product. DEC ported OSF/1 to their new
Alpha AXP platform as DEC OSF/1 AXP Release 1.2, released in March 1993. OSF/1 AXP is a full
64-bit operating system, preserving the kernel architecture based on Mach 2.5 and 4.3BSD components. From OSF/1 AXP 2.0 onwards,
UNIX System V compatibility was also integrated into the system, but the architecture remained centred on the Mach 2.5 modular kernel, unlike later OSF versions of the system. Although OSF/1 2.0 was also developed for DECStation MIPS systems, it was "never officially released or sold". Subsequent releases are named Digital UNIX, and later,
Tru64 UNIX. Upon its acquisition of
Apollo Computer in 1989,
HP announced plans to introduce OSF/1 on both companies' products by late 1990. HP released a port of OSF/1 to the early
HP 9000/700 workstations based on the
PA-RISC 1.1 architecture. This was withdrawn soon afterwards due to lack of software and hardware support compared to competing operating systems, specifically
HP-UX. As part of the
AIM alliance and the resulting
PowerOpen specification,
Apple Computer intended to base
A/UX 4.0 for its
PowerPC-based
Macintoshes upon OSF/1, but the project was cancelled and PowerOpen deprecated. IBM used OSF/1 as the basis of the
AIX/ESA operating system for
System/370 and
System/390 mainframes.
Intel Paragon supercomputers used a version of OSF/1 featuring the Mach 3.0 kernel. OSF/1 was also ported by
Kendall Square Research to its proprietary
microarchitecture used in the KSR1
supercomputer. == OSF MK ==