Limitations of POSIX Applications on Windows NT
ID: Q149902
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The information in this article applies to:
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Microsoft Win32 Application Programming Interface (API), included with:
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Microsoft Windows NT, versions 3.51, 4.00
SUMMARY
This article discusses the limitations of the Portable Operating System
Interface (POSIX) applications on Windows NT. POSIX is a standard set by
ANSI/IEEE to promote source level compatibility that allows applications to
run on a wide variety of systems and architectures. The POSIX interface on
Windows NT strictly follows the POSIX 1003.1-1990 standards.
MORE INFORMATION
Following are some of the POSIX limitations:
- POSIX applications only launch other POSIX applications. They can
not launch DOS, OS/2, Win16 or Win32 applications.
- POSIX applications can not call any Win32 APIs. They do not have
any access to DDE, OLE, memory mapped files, named pipes, windows
sockets and other Win32 features.
- POSIX applications can not implicitly or explicitly load a Win32 DLL.
- POSIX applications do not have access to any networking APIs such as
pipes or sockets. They are not network aware, but they can access
files over the network.
- POSIX applications do not have any source level debugger support.
You cannot use Windbg or the Microsoft Visual C++ debugger to
debug POSIX applications on Windows NT.
For additional information, please see the following article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q99361 Specifying Filenames Under the POSIX Subsystem
REFERENCES
MSDN Development Library, "Understanding Windows NT POSIX Compatibility",
by Ray Cort.
Additional query words:
3.50 POSIX
Keywords : SubSys
Version : 3.50 3.51 4.00
Platform : NT WINDOWS
Issue type :
Last Reviewed: March 9, 1999