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COMMAND.COM, the original Microsoft command line processor introduced on MS-DOS as well as Windows 9x, in 32-bit versions of NT-based Windows via NTVDM; cmd.exe, successor of COMMAND.COM introduced on OS/2 and Windows NT systems, although COMMAND.COM is still available in virtual DOS machines on IA-32 versions of those operating systems also.
This shell can be found installed and is the default interactive shell for users on most Linux systems. KornShell (ksh): written by David Korn based on the Bourne shell sources [8] while working at Bell Labs; Public domain Korn shell (pdksh) MirBSD Korn shell (mksh): a descendant of the OpenBSD /bin/ksh and pdksh, developed as part of MirOS BSD
MKS Toolkit is a software package produced and maintained by PTC that provides a Unix-like environment for scripting, connectivity and porting Unix and Linux software to Microsoft Windows. It was originally created for MS-DOS , and OS/2 versions were released up to version 4.4. [ 1 ]
Hamilton C shell also includes true su and sudo for Windows that can pass all of that state information and start the child either elevated or as another user (or both). [31] [32] Graphical user interfaces exist for sudo – notably gksudo – but are deprecated in Debian and no longer included in Ubuntu.
Z shell's configuration utility for new users Zsh with Agnoster theme running on Konsole terminal emulator. Features include: [14] Programmable command-line completion that can help the user type both options and arguments for most used commands, with out-of-the-box support for several hundred commands
Korn Shell running on Windows Services for UNIX. KornShell was originally proprietary software.In 2000 the source code was released under a license particular to AT&T, but since the ksh93q release in early 2005 it has been licensed under the Eclipse Public License. [4]
Partial (not distributed as a standalone executable, but it can be built as one) Shell Usual environment Usually invoked Introduced Platform-independent Default login shell in Default script shell in License Source code availability User interface Mouse support Unicode support ISO 8601 support Console redirection Stream redirection Configurability
References, correct or not, to the software as U/Win and AT&T Unix for Windows can be found in some cases, especially from the early days of its existence. UWIN source is available under the open source Eclipse Public License 1.0 at AT&T's AST / UWIN repositories on GitHub.