AmigaOS 4


AmigaOS 4 is a line of Amiga operating systems which runs on PowerPC microprocessors. It is mainly based on AmigaOS 3.1 source code developed by Commodore, and partially on version 3.9 developed by Haage & Partner. "The Final Update" was released on 24 December 2006 after five years of development by the Belgian company Hyperion Entertainment under license from Amiga, Inc. for AmigaOne registered users.

History

During the five years of development, purchasers of AmigaOne machines could download pre-release versions of AmigaOS 4.0 from Hyperion's repository as long as these were made available.
On 20 December 2006, Amiga, Inc. terminated the contract with Hyperion Entertainment to produce or sell AmigaOS 4. Nevertheless, AmigaOS 4.0 was released commercially for Amigas with PowerUP accelerator cards in November 2007. The Italian computer company ACube Systems has announced Sam440ep and Sam440ep-flex motherboards, which are AmigaOS 4 compatible. Also, a third party bootloader, known as the "Moana", was released by Acube on torrent sites; it allows installation of the Sam440ep version of OS4 to Mac Mini G4's. However this is both unofficial and unsupported as of today, and very incomplete, especially regarding drivers. During the judicial procedure, OS4 was still being developed and distributed.
On 30 September 2009, Hyperion Entertainment and Amiga, Inc. reached a settlement agreement where Hyperion is granted an exclusive right to AmigaOS 3.1 and market AmigaOS 4 and subsequent versions of AmigaOS. Hyperion has assured the Amiga community that it will continue the development and the distribution of AmigaOS 4.x, as it has done since November 2001.

Description

AmigaOS 4 can be divided into two parts: the Workbench and the Kickstart.

Workbench

The Workbench is the GUI of OS4, a graphical interface file manager and application launcher for the Operating System. It also includes some general purpose tools and utility programs such as a Notepad for typing text, MultiView for viewing images and Amigaguide documents, Unarc for unpacking Archives, a PDF reader, a number of small preferences programs for changing settings of the GUI and OS, among other programs.

Kickstart

The Kickstart contains many of the core components of the OS. Prior to version 4 of AmigaOS the Kickstart had been released mostly on a ROM. In OS4 the Kickstart is instead stored on the hard disk. It consists mainly of:
There have been many different versions of the AmigaOS operating system during its three decades of history.

Versions 1.0 to 1.3

The first AmigaOS was introduced in 1985 and developed by Commodore International. It was nicknamed Workbench from the name of its Graphical user interface, due to an error of Commodore Marketing and Sales Department, which labeled the OS disk just with the name "Workbench Disk" and not with the correct name "AmigaOS Disk ". The first versions of AmigaOS are here indicated with the name of their original disks to preserve original custom.

Versions 2.0 to 3.1

Workbench 2.0 improvements introduced a lot of major advances to the GUI of Amiga operating system. The blue and orange colour scheme was replaced with a grey and light blue with 3D aspect in the border of the windows. The Workbench was no longer tied to the 640×256 or 640×200 display modes, and much of the system was improved with an eye to making future expansion easier. For the first time, a standardised "look and feel" was added. This was done by creating the Amiga Style Guide, and including libraries and software which assisted developers in making conformant software. Technologies included the GUI element creation library gadtools, the software installation scripting language Installer, and the AmigaGuide hypertext help system.

Versions 3.5 and 3.9

After the demise of Commodore, the later owners of the Amiga trademark granted a license to a German company called Haage & Partner to update the Amiga's operating system. Along with this update came a change in the way people referred to the Amiga's operating system. Rather than specifying "Kickstart" or "Workbench", the updates were most often referred to as simply "AmigaOS".
Whereas all previous OS releases ran on vanilla Amiga 500 with 68000 and 512 kB RAM, release 3.5 onwards required a 68020 or better and at least 4 MB fast ram.

Versions 4.0 and 4.1

In 2001 Amiga Inc. signed a contract with Hyperion Entertainment to develop the PowerPC native AmigaOS 4 from their previous AmigaOS 3.1 release. Unlike the previous versions which were based on the Motorola 68k central processor, OS4 runs only on PowerPC computer systems. Amiga, Inc.'s distribution policies for AmigaOS 4.0 and any later versions required that OS4 must be bundled with all new third-party hardware "Amigas", with the sole exception of Amigas with Phase5 PowerPC accelerator boards, for which OS4 is sold separately. This requirement was overturned in the agreement reached between Amiga, Inc. and Hyperion in the settlement of a lawsuit over the ownership of AmigaOS 4.
In 2014 Hyperion introduced AmigaOS 4.1 Final Edition incorporating all previous downloadable updates and some new features like unified graphics library with RTG support and support for more than 2 GB RAM.

Versions 4.2

In May 2012 Hyperion announced that they were working on AmigaOS 4.2. It would introduce hardware accelerated 3D support, multi-core support, a vastly improved file system API and many other features.

AmigaOS 4 prominent features

Prominent features compared to other operating systems or previous versions of AmigaOS:

Appearance

Amiga

Released for Amigas equipped with third party PPC add-on boards:
Released for AmigaOne motherboards:
Released for Pegasos systems:
Released for Sam440 systems:
VersionRelease DateIntroduced Features
4.0Developer Pre-releaseApril 2004First public release
4.0Developer Pre-release Update10 October 2004AltiVec support, PowerPC-native Picasso96 and MUI, USB support for input devices
4.0Developer Pre-release Update 227 December 2004Mass Storage Support for USB
4.0Developer Pre-release Update 314 June 2005PowerPC native Warp3D drivers for Voodoo 3, Voodoo 4/5 and the Radeon 7x00 series of graphics cards; WarpOS support
4.0Developer Pre-release Update 48 February 2006Petunia just-in-time 68k emulator; Warp3D with support for Voodoo 3/4/5 and ATI Radeon models 7000, 7200, 7500, 9000, 9200 and 9250; Intuition supports screen dragging
4.0The Final Update24 December 2006Virtualized memory and faster memory allocation system ; new icon theme
4.0July 2007 Update18 July 2007Support for Shared objects; Python 2.5.1; merge of Tools and Utilities drawers
4.0for Classic AmigaNovember 2007July 2007 Update baseline
4.0February 2008 update for CyberStormPPC and BlizzardPPC23 February 2008Addressed some issues and compatibility problems
4.1AmigaOS 4.117 September 2008Memory paging; JXFS filesystem; Hardware compositing engine; Cairo device-independent 2D rendering library
4.1Quick Fix21 June 2009Addressed some issues
4.1Update 114 January 2010Improved compositing effects ; New notification system Ringhio; DDC support; AppDir: handler and URLopen; new Startup preferences; new icon set; MiniGL V2.2
4.1Update 230 April 2010Updated Python; Cairo 1.8.10 ; AmiDock supports icon scaling
4.1Update 329 August 2011USB 2.0 support; Updated MUI
4.1Update 422 December 2011Emulation drawer with AmigaOS 3.x ROMs and Workbench files; RunInUAE contribution
4.1Update 528 January 2012, 16 August 2012First public release for AmigaOne X1000, later for other platforms. Improved Warp3D and IDE drivers; optimized DMA copy support for Sam440ep and Sam460ex systems; improved Classic compatibility
4.1Update 630 November 2012Auto-update of system components through AmiUpdate
4.1Update 7Internal update, not released for end users, features unknown
4.1Final Edition 18 December 2014Support for more than 2 GB RAM; new unified graphics library with RTG support; improved console; new Intuition and Workbench features; updated Python port; improved DOS; updated context menus; new menus system with unlimited menus and sub menus; thumbnail previews of photos, images in menus; stand alone product, does not require previous releases and does not work as an upgrade over 4.1 Update 6
4.1Final Edition Update 131 December 2016Support for Z3 RAM as regular Fast RAM; support for disks larger than 2 TB; numerous bug fixes

Future

For the AmigaOS 4.2, Hyperion Entertainment planned the following updates: