RIO (PROGRAM)


'rio' is Plan 9 from Bell Labs's windowing system.

Contents
Overview
History
See also
External links

Overview


rio windows during a Plan 9 installation

Many of its features embody key Plan 9 design concepts:

★ Each window runs in its own private namespace.

★ It exports a file system interface to running applications. This interface is the same rio receives from the operating system, allowing rio to run inside a rio window without any special arrangements. Because the interface uses 9P, rio is network transparent even if it doesn't include any network-aware code.

★ Windows are treated as completely editable text.
It is most notably known for making its window management transparent to the application. This allows running rio inside rio or another window manager.

History


rio is the latest in a long series of graphical user interfaces developed at Bell Labs, most developed by Rob Pike, including the first graphical window system for UNIX (which predated X), the concurrent window system, and the Blit.
rio in the early 1990s

rio was a complete rewrite of in Alef. Its main change was that it stopped parsing and rewriting graphical commands and let the client write pixels directly. This was done mainly for efficiency. As Alef disappeared due to being too difficult to maintain given the number of people working on Plan 9 at the time, rio was rewritten in C. This was done using the Plan 9 thread library which was insipired by Alef and had most of its features, like blocking channels for interthread and interprocess communication. Another important change, due more to the environment than to rio per se, was that rio supported full colour, using a Porter-Duff algebra, whereas 8½ used bitblt operations.

See also



Plan 9 from Bell Labs - rio's native environment

Plan 9 from User Space - Includes a window manager that emulates the rio user interface

Rob Pike - The author of rio and 8½

Blit - A terminal developed at Bell Labs that pioneered some of the UI concepts used in Rio.

External links



rio man page(4)

The 8½ paper - Describes rio's predecessor which had a very similar design

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