MorphOS

Last updated
MorphOS
Spbu479.png
MorphOS 3.18 screenshot.jpg
MorphOS 3.18 showing the Ambient desktop
Developer The MorphOS Development Team
Written in C, C++, Objective-C++, Pascal, Python, Perl, Amiga E, Ruby, Lua
OS family AmigaOS-like
Working stateCurrent
Source model Closed source (with open source [1] components)
Initial release0.1 / August 1, 2000;24 years ago (2000-08-01)
Latest release 3.18 / May 13, 2023;19 months ago (2023-05-13)
Available in 19 languages
Platforms Pegasos, some models of Amiga, Efika, Mac Mini G4, eMac, Power Mac G4, PowerBook G4, iBook G4, Power Mac G5, SAM 460, AmigaOne X5000
Kernel type Micro/pico [2]
Default
user interface
Ambient
License Proprietary with GNU GPL Ambient user interface
Official website www.morphos-team.net

MorphOS is an AmigaOS-like operating system designed for Power and PowerPC based computers. The core, based on the Quark microkernel, is proprietary, although several libraries and other parts are open source, such as the Ambient desktop.

Contents

The project began in 1999 and it was produced for the Pegasos computer, as well as PowerUP accelerator equipped Amiga computers, and a series of Freescale development boards that use the Genesi firmware, including the Efika and mobileGT. Since then MorphOS has been ported to Apple's Mac mini, eMac, Power Mac G4 and limited support for Power Mac G5. It is binary compatible with software written for Motorola 68k-based Amiga computers. [3]

History

Amiga family development tree AmigaOS 3 and clones.svg
Amiga family development tree

The project began in 1999, based on the Quark microkernel. [4] The earliest versions of MorphOS ran only via PPC accelerator cards on the Amiga computers, and required portions of AmigaOS to fully function. [5] A collaborative effort between the companies bPlan (of which the lead MorphOS developer is a partner) and Thendic-France in 2002 resulted in the first regular, non-prototype production of bPlan-engineered Pegasos computers capable of running MorphOS or Linux. [6] [7] Thendic-France had financial problems and folded; however, the collaboration continued under the new banner of "Genesi". [8] [9] A busy promotional year followed in 2003, with appearances at conventions and exhibitions in several places around the world, including the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. [10]

After some bitter disagreements within the MorphOS development team in 2003 and 2004, culminating with accusations by a MorphOS developer that he and others had not been paid, [11] the Ambient desktop interface was released under GPL [12] [13] and is now actively developed by the Ambient development team. Subject to GPL rules, Ambient continues to be included in the commercial MorphOS product. An alternative MorphOS desktop system is Scalos. [14]

Characteristics and versions

Developed for PowerPC CPUs from Freescale and IBM, it also supports the original AmigaOS Motorola 68000 series (68k, MC680x0) applications via proprietary task-based emulation, and most AmigaOS PPC applications via API wrappers. It is API compatible with AmigaOS 3.1 and has a GUI based on the Magic User Interface (MUI).

Besides the Pegasos version of MorphOS, there is a version for Amiga computers equipped with PowerUP accelerator cards produced by Phase5. This version is free, as is registration. If unregistered, it slows down after each two-hour session. PowerUP MorphOS was most recently updated on 23 February 2006; however, it does not exceed the feature set or advancement of the Pegasos release. [15] [16]

A version of MorphOS for the Efika, a very small mainboard based on the ultra-low-power MPC5200B processor from Freescale, has been shown at exhibitions and user gatherings in Germany. [17] Current (since 2.0) release of MorphOS supports the Efika.

Software

MorphOS can run any system friendly Amiga software written for 68k processors. Also it is possible to use 68k libraries or datatypes on PPC applications and vice versa. It also provides compatibility layer for PowerUP and WarpUP software written for PowerUP accelerator cards. The largest repository is Aminet with over 75,000 packages online with packages from all Amiga flavors including music, sound, and artwork. MorphOS-only software repositories are hosted at MorphOS software, MorphOS files and MorphOS Storage. MorphOS is delivered with several desktop applications in the form of pre-installed software.

Components

System architecture Mos.svg
System architecture

ABox

ABox is an emulation sandbox featuring a PPC native AmigaOS API clone that is binary compatible with both 68k Amiga applications and both PowerUP and WarpOS formats of Amiga PPC executables. ABox is based in part on AROS Research Operating System. ABox includes Trance JIT code translator for 68k native Amiga applications.

Other

Amiga3dapi.svg

Ambient

Ambient
Original author(s) David Gerber
Developer(s) Ambient Open Source Team
Initial release2005;19 years ago (2005) [18]
Stable release
1.1599 / June 8, 2008;16 years ago (2008-06-08) [19]
Written in C
Operating system MorphOS
Type Desktop environment
License GNU General Public License
Website morphosambient.sf.net

Ambient is the built-in MUI-based desktop environment for MorphOS, [20] the development was started in 2001 by David Gerber. Its main goals were that it should be fully asynchronous, simple and fast. [21] Ambient remotely resembles Workbench and Directory Opus Magellan trying to mix the best of both worlds.

Features

Ambient does not strictly follow the Amiga Workbench interface paradigm but there are still many similarities: while programs are called tools, program attributes are called tooltypes, data files are projects and directories are drawers.

  • support for ARexx scripting language
  • default icon library for hundreds of fileformats
  • fully asynchronous, multi-threaded design
  • fast asynchronous file I/O functions and file notifications
  • support for PNG and other Amiga icon formats
  • built-in icon, workbench and wbstart libraries
  • built-in applications like disk formatting and commodities manager
  • panels which are used as program launchers

Ambient is localised for various languages and while it is an intrinsic part of MorphOS, it is also available separately. There are various visual effects in Ambient that take advantage of hardware accelerated visual effects within MorphOS. [22]

Desktop icons

The native icon format in Ambient is PNG, but there is built-in support for other Amiga icon formats. Ambient introduced a special icon format called DataType Icons where the icon is simply any image file renamed to include the .info extension. Those icons are read using the Amiga DataType system.

Original Amiga iconsMagicWBNewIconsGlowIconsGlowIcons32DT IconsPNGDualPNGSVG
Colours4825625616M16M16M16M16M
Alpha blendingNoNoNoNoYesYesYesYesNot sure
Icon size36×4046×4646×46128×128128×128128×128128×128
Second state imageYesYesYesYesYesNoNoYesNo
Embedded metadataYesYesYesYesYesNoYesYesNot sure

Development status

In 2005, David Gerber released Ambient source code under GPL [18] and it is now developed by the Ambient development team.

See also

Supported hardware

Amiga

Apple

Genesi/bPlan GmbH

ACube

A-Eon Technology

Version history

Release history of 0.x/1.x series

VersionRelease dateNotes
0.1August 1, 2000Amiga
0.2October 17, 2000Amiga
0.4February 14, 20013rd Release [24]
0.5May 1, 2001Amiga
0.8August 2001Amiga, Pegasos I
0.92002beta [25]
1.014 October 2002Pegasos I
1.1December 13, 2002Pegasos I
1.2February 9, 2003Pegasos I
1.3March 27, 2003Pegasos I
1.4August 7, 2003Pegasos I
1.4.4March 28, 2005Pegasos I/II
1.4.5April 30, 2005Pegasos I/II
1.4.5August 25, 2005Amiga [26]

Release history of 2.x/3.x series

VersionRelease dateNotes
2.0June 30, 2008Added support for Efika 5200B platform; native TCP/IP stack, an updated Sputnik release, AltiVec support, alpha compositing 3D layers for the graphical user interface, new USB components (including USB 2.0 support), new screenblankers, and Reggae, a new, modular, streaming multimedia framework [27]
2.1September 6, 2008Support for the Efika's audio [28]
2.2December 20, 2008 TrueCrypt-compatible disk encryption suite [29]
2.3August 6, 2009Origyn Web Browser as the default browser, read only HFS+ file system support [30]
2.4October 12, 2009Added support for Mac mini G4; write support for Mac HFS disks, new charsets.library to provide better multilingual application support [31]
2.5June 4, 2010Added support for eMac G4; drivers for SiI3x1x based 2-port Serial ATA PCI cards [32]
2.6October 10, 2010Added support for Power Mac G4; 2D drivers for Rage 128 Pro graphics cards; Released at precisely 10.10.10 10:10 [33]
2.7December 2, 2010Improving support for Power Mac G4 platforms [34]
3.0June 8, 2012Added support for PowerBook G4; performance improvements [35]
3.1July 8, 2012Bug-fix release [36]
3.2May 27, 2013Added support for further PowerBook G4 models, iBook G4 and Power Mac G5 model A1047; 3D drivers for Radeon R300 based cards, wireless networking via Atheros chipset, major overhaul of TCP/IP stack ("NetStack") – improving networking performance [37]
3.3September 18, 2013Fixes support for some iBook G4 models [38]
3.4December 14, 2013Improved R300 3D and G5 video playback performance, support for non-native display resolutions on various PowerBook models [39]
3.5February 15, 2014Support for PowerMac7,2 Power Mac G5 models [40]
3.6June 27, 2014Broadcom Wi-Fi support, AMD R400 support, SMBFS file system, VNC server and a Synergy client [41]
3.7August 3, 2014Bug-fix release [42]
3.8May 15, 2015Support for Sam 460 series of mainboards; basic drivers for Radeon HD series graphics cards, 4K displays in native resolution [43]
3.9June 19, 2015Bug-fix release [44]
3.10March 25, 2018Extended hardware support (AmigaOne X5000 mainboard; new SATA controllers, network controllers, scanners and graphics cards), Flow Studio IDE with built-in debugger, support for time zones, new fonts, new themes, vector graphics, including SVG icons, overall bug fixes and performance improvements [45]
3.11July 6, 2018Bug-fix release [46]
3.12October 2, 2019Dual monitor support for select hardware, improved thermal management for select hardware, new FireWire stack, support for more printers and scanners, upgraded Odyssey browser with HTTP/2 and TLS 1.3 and spell checking support, substantial upgrades and new features to Flow Studio IDE, UTF-8 support in MUI, ObjFW runtime with Automatic Reference Counting [47]
3.13February 7, 2020Bug-fix release [48]
3.14October 4, 2020Kernel improvements for threading, improved TCP/IP network stack threading support, improved unix emulation layer, Magic User Interface improvements, improved ObjectiveC framework, improved translations for various languages, updated open source components for various libraries and classes, numerous bug fixes. Introduces ScoutNG system monitoring application [49]
3.15December 31, 2020Bug-fix release [50]
3.16March 9, 2022Added notification system and email client Iris, [51] replaced Odyssey web browser with Wayfarer web browser, added new application switcher. Improvements for Synergy client, added shared openSSL 3 library. Includes hundreds of bug fixes [52]
3.17May 1, 2022Bug-fix release [53]
3.18May 13, 2023New features: Scriptable Hex/RAM/Disk editor, ArchiveIt archiver/unarchiver application, better cooling information display via Thermals application, Samba2/3 support, including integration with Ambient desktop. Extensive improvements to Radeon drivers and improvements to Realtek 8168 driver support. Issues in USB support for CyrusPlus 5040 systems has been corrected. Many system components and libraries have been bugfixed and improved, including MUI, Netstack and Filesysbox. [54]

MorphOS 2 includes a native TCP/IP stack ("Netstack") and a Web browser, Sputnik or Origyn Web Browser. [55] Sputnik was begun under a user community bounty system [56] that also resulted in MOSNet, a free, separate TCP/IP stack for MorphOS 1 users. Sputnik is a port of the KHTML rendering engine, on which WebKit is also based. Sputnik is no longer being developed and was removed from later MorphOS 2 releases.

All TCP/IP stacks Tcps.svg
All TCP/IP stacks

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amiga</span> Family of personal computers sold by Commodore

Amiga is a family of personal computers produced by Commodore from 1985 until the company's bankruptcy in 1994, with production by others afterward. The original model is one of a number of mid-1980s computers with 16-bit or 16/32-bit processors, 256 KB or more of RAM, mouse-based GUIs, and significantly improved graphics and audio compared to previous 8-bit systems. These include the Atari ST—released earlier the same year—as well as the Macintosh and Acorn Archimedes. The Amiga differs from its contemporaries through custom hardware to accelerate graphics and sound, including sprites, a blitter, and four channels of sample-based audio. It runs a pre-emptive multitasking operating system called AmigaOS.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of the graphical user interface</span>

The history of the graphical user interface, understood as the use of graphic icons and a pointing device to control a computer, covers a five-decade span of incremental refinements, built on some constant core principles. Several vendors have created their own windowing systems based on independent code, but with basic elements in common that define the WIMP "window, icon, menu and pointing device" paradigm.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AmigaOne</span> A series of computers intended to run AmigaOS 4

AmigaOne is a series of computers intended to run AmigaOS 4 developed by Hyperion Entertainment, as a successor to the Amiga series by Commodore International. Unlike the original Amiga computers which used Motorola 68k processors, the AmigaOne line uses PowerPC processors. Earlier models were produced by Eyetech; in September 2009, Hyperion secured an exclusive licence for the AmigaOne name and subsequently new AmigaOne computers were released by A-Eon Technology and Acube Systems.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pegasos</span>

Pegasos was sold by Genesi USA, Inc., and designed by their research and design partner bplan GmbH based in Frankfurt, Germany. It is a MicroATX motherboard powered by a PowerPC 750CXe or PowerPC 7447 microprocessor, featuring three PCI slots, one AGP slot, two Ethernet ports, USB, DDR, AC'97 sound, and FireWire. Like the PowerPC Macintosh counterparts, it boots via Open Firmware.

In computing, Quark is an operating system kernel used in MorphOS. It is a microkernel designed to run fully virtualized computers, called boxes. As of 2020, only one box is available, the ABox, that lets users run extant AmigaOS software compiled for Motorola 68000 series and PowerPC central processing units (CPUs).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Magic User Interface</span> Widget toolkit for AmigaOS

The Magic User Interface is an object-oriented system by Stefan Stuntz to generate and maintain graphical user interfaces. With the aid of a preferences program, the user of an application has the ability to customize the system according to personal taste.

The Amiga is a family of home computers that were designed and sold by the Amiga Corporation from 1985 to 1994.

The Amiga computer can be used to emulate several other computer platforms, including legacy platforms such as the Commodore 64, and its contemporary rivals such as the IBM PC and the Macintosh.

AmigaOS is the proprietary native operating system of the Amiga personal computer. Since its introduction with the launch of the Amiga 1000 in 1985, there have been four major versions and several minor revisions of the operating system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Workbench (AmigaOS)</span> Graphical user interface for the Amiga computer

Workbench is the desktop environment and graphical file manager of AmigaOS developed by Commodore International for their Amiga line of computers. Workbench provides the user with a graphical interface to work with file systems and launch applications. It uses a workbench metaphor for representing file system organisation.

Intuition is the native windowing system and user interface (UI) engine of AmigaOS. It was developed almost entirely by RJ Mical. Intuition should not be confused with Workbench, the AmigaOS desktop environment and spatial file manager, which relies on Intuition for handling windows and input events. Workbench uses Intuition to produce displays and AmigaDOS to interact with filing system: AmigaDOS is built on Exec.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AmigaOS 4</span> Line of Amiga operating systems

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Genesi</span>

Genesi is an international group of technology and consulting companies in the United States, Mexico and Germany. It is most widely known for designing and manufacturing ARM architecture and Power ISA-based computing devices. The Genesi Group consists of Genesi USA Inc., Genesi Americas LLC, Genesi Europe UG, Red Efika, bPlan GmbH and the affiliated non-profit organization Power2People.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AROS Research Operating System</span> Operating system

AROS Research Operating System is a free and open-source multi media centric implementation of the AmigaOS 3.1 application programming interface (API) which is designed to be portable and flexible. As of 2021, ports are available for personal computers (PCs) based on x86 and PowerPC, in native and hosted flavors, with other architectures in development. In a show of full circle development, AROS has been ported to the Motorola 68000 series (m68k) based Amiga 1200, and there is also an ARM port for the Raspberry Pi series.

Hunk is the executable file format of tools and programs of the Amiga Operating System based on Motorola 68000 CPU and other processors of the same family. The file format was originally defined by MetaComCo. as part of TRIPOS, which formed the basis for AmigaDOS. This kind of executable got its name from the fact that the software programmed on Amiga is divided in its internal structure into many pieces called hunks, in which every portion could contain either code or data.

WarpOS is a multitasking kernel for the PowerPC (PPC) architecture central processing unit (CPU) developed by Haage & Partner for the Amiga computer platform in the late 1990s and early 2000s. It runs on PowerUP accelerator boards developed by phase5 which contains both a Motorola 68000 series CPU and a PowerPC CPU with shared address space. WarpOS runs alongside the 68k-based AmigaOS, which can use the PowerPC as a coprocessor. Despite its name, it is not an operating system (OS), but a kernel; it supplies a limited set of functions similar to those in AmigaOS for using the PowerPC. When released, its original name was WarpUP, but was changed to reflect its greater feature set, and possibly to avoid comparison with its competitor, PowerUP.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AmigaOS</span> Operating system for Amiga computers

AmigaOS is a family of proprietary native operating systems of the Amiga and AmigaOne personal computers. It was developed first by Commodore International and introduced with the launch of the first Amiga, the Amiga 1000, in 1985. Early versions of AmigaOS required the Motorola 68000 series of 16-bit and 32-bit microprocessors. Later versions, after Commodore's demise, were developed by Haage & Partner and then Hyperion Entertainment. A PowerPC microprocessor is required for the most recent release, AmigaOS 4.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scalos</span> Widget toolkit and window manager for AmigaOS

Scalos is a desktop replacement for the original Amiga Workbench GUI, based on a subset of APIs and its own front-end window manager of the same name. Scalos is NOT an AmigaOS replacement, although its name suggests otherwise. Its goal is to emulate the real Workbench behaviour, plus integrating additional functionality and an enhanced look. As stated on its website, the name "Scalos" was inspired by the fictional time-accelerated planet Scalos in the Star Trek episode "Wink of an Eye".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">PowerUP (accelerator)</span>

PowerUP boards were dual-processor accelerator boards designed by Phase5 Digital Products for Amiga computers. They had two different processors, a Motorola 68000 series (68k) and a PowerPC, working in parallel, sharing the complete address space of the Amiga computer system.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AmigaOS 4 version history</span>

A new version of AmigaOS was released on December 24, 2006 after five years of development by Hyperion Entertainment (Belgium) under license from Amiga, Inc. for AmigaOne registered users.

References

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  34. MorphOS 2.7 release notes
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  43. MorphOS 3.8 release notes
  44. MorphOS 3.9 release notes
  45. MorphOS 3.10 release notes
  46. MorphOS 3.11 release notes
  47. MorphOS 3.12 release notes
  48. MorphOS 3.13 release notes
  49. MorphOS 3.14 release notes
  50. MorphOS 3.15 release notes
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