TRIPOS

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This article is about TRIPOS, the operating system. For the name given to undergraduate degree subjects by Cambridge University, see Tripos.

TRIPOS (TRIvial Portable Operating System) is a computer operating system. It was developed in 1978 at the Computer Laboratory of Cambridge University by Martin Richards. It formed the basis of early versions of AmigaDOS (the DOS component of AmigaOS).

TRIPOS provided features such as pre-emptive multi-tasking (using a simple highest priority free-to-run scheduler), a hierarchical file system and multiple command line interpreters.

Most of TRIPOS was implemented in BCPL. The kernel and device drivers were implemented in assembly language.

TRIPOS was ported to a number of machines, including the Data General Nova 2, the Computer Automation LSI4, plus Motorola 68000 and Intel 8086- based hardware. It included support for the Cambridge Ring local area network. More recently, Martin Richards produced a port of TRIPOS to run under Linux, using BCPL Cintcode.

TRIPOS is still actively maintained by Misys Financial Systems in Worcestershire, UK. Many British insurance brokers have a Motorola 68000 based TRIPOS system serving either Qume terminals or Qume terminal emulators over a Telnet style TCP/IP connection. Misys have added a number of features to support the modern office such as the ability to print to Windows/SAMBA or HP JetDirect printers.

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