An Introduction to Cygwin | Search for a title, author or keyword | ||||||||
An Introduction to Cygwin By George B. Moody, Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology. Installing Cygwin, Using Cygwin, Using Cygwin/X. Cygwin is free software that provides a Unix-like environment and software tool set to users of any modern version of MS-Windows for x86 CPUs ( NT/2000/XP/Vista/7 ) and ( using an older version of Cygwin ) some obsolete versions ( 95/98/ME ) as well. With Cygwin installed, users have access to many standard UNIX utilities. They can be used from one of the provided shells such as bash or from the Windows Command Prompt. Cygwin consists of a Unix system call emulation library, cygwin1.dll, together with a vast set of GNU and other free software applications ( high-quality compilers and other software development tools, a complete X11 development toolkit, GNU emacs, TeX and LaTeX, OpenSSH - client and server, and much more ) organized into a large number of optional packages. Cygwin does not provide a means for running GNU/Linux or other Unix binary executables under MS-Windows. In order to run such software using Cygwin, that software must be compiled from its sources. Cygwin provides all of the components needed to do this in most cases; most POSIX-compliant software, including X11 applications, can easily be ported to MS-Windows using Cygwin. This page is provided as a service to help PhysioNet users, a diverse group of computer scientists, physicists, mathematicians, biomedical researchers, clinicians, and educators at MIT ( Cambridge, MA, USA ), the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center/Harvard Medical School ( Boston, MA, USA ), Boston University ( Boston, MA, USA ), and McGill University ( Montréal, QC, Canada ), and others get started using Cygwin.
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