- Source: Hydra (operating system)
Hydra (stylized as HYDRA) is an early, discontinued, capability-based, object-oriented microkernel designed to support a wide range of possible operating systems to run on it. Hydra was created as part of the C.mmp project at Carnegie Mellon University in 1971.
The name is based on the ancient Greek mythological creature the hydra.
Hydra was designed to be modular and secure, and intended to be flexible enough for easy experimentation.
The system was implemented in the programming language BLISS.
References
Levin, R.; Cohen, E.; Corwin, W.; Pollack, F.; Wulf, William (November 1, 1975). "Policy/mechanism separation in Hydra". Proceedings of the fifth ACM symposium on operating systems principles. pp. 132–140. doi:10.1145/800213.806531. S2CID 10524544.
Wulf, William; Cohen, E.; Corwin, W.; Jones, A.; Levin, R.; Pierson, C.; Pollack, F. (June 1974). "Hydra: The Kernel of a Multiprocessor Operating System". Commun. ACM. 17 (6): 337–345. doi:10.1145/355616.364017. S2CID 8011765. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 1, 2007.
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- Hydra (operating system)
- Hydra
- Hydra (software)
- List of operating systems
- Timeline of operating systems
- Kernel (operating system)
- Capability-based operating system
- List of programmers
- Capability-based security
- William Wulf