Hi Bruce, >Actually, until recently you could only be POSIX compliant by paying >a lot of money. You paid for copies of the standard, you paid for >validation software, and you paid for a POSIX compliance lab to certify >you. So it was a way for the well-funded commercial Linux projects to >differentiate themselves from high-quality but underfunded efforts like >Debian. Now, they will have to use the still-costly X/Open standards >to differentiate themselves.
Just my CHF 0.02: I suppose that the POSIX-compliance test is relatively cheap[1] in comparison to the XPG4 branding (afterward the branding are allowed to call your ``Un*x''-clone a ``Unix'' [note the capitalization]). I don't know how much the POSIX compliance testing actually costs, but buying the standards is affordable[2] (quoting IEEE 1996 catalog): member list 1003.1b-1993 (POSIX.1, C-API, Realtime extension) $68.40 $114.00 1003.2d-1994 (POSIX.2, Shell&Utilities, Amendment 1) $40.08 $68.00 1003.3-1991 (Test methods for measuring conformance to POSIX) $22.20 $37.00 [skipping FORTRAN] 9945-1:1990(E) (POSIX.1, C-API f. Sys. Application C) $54.00 $90.00 9945-2:1993(E) (POSIX.2 Shell and utilities) $111.00 $185.00 2003.1:1992 (Test methods for measuring system conformance to POSIX part 1: System Integration) $57.60 $96.60 >NIST developed a compliance test suite for the U.S. Federal Information >Processing Standard. This is a superset of POSIX. They recently decided >to make it free, so that more people would implement POSIX. We think >that's a great idea, and we got right to work. Yes, I wholeheartily agree. [1] extrapolating from the standard prices [2] at least if you are a member, they are still cheap compared to the ISO/ITU-T prices... Thanks, David -- David Frey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> |Microsoft isn't the answer...it's the QUESTION. Schlieren, Switzerland |``No'' is the answer. 51F35923114FC8647D05FF173C61EFDE|Use Debian GNU/Linux! -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]