The 'Common Desktop Environment' ('CDE') is a
proprietary desktop environment for
Unix, based on the
Motif widget toolkit. It is also the standard desktop environment on
HP's OpenVMS.
CDE was announced in June
1993 as a joint development of
Hewlett-Packard,
IBM,
Novell and
Sun Microsystems as part of the
Common Open Software Environment (COSE) initiative. The primary environment was based on HP's
VUE (Visual User Environment), itself derived from the
Motif Window Manager (mwm). IBM contributed its
Common User Access model and Workplace Shell. Novell provided desktop manager components and scalable systems technologies from UNIX System V. Sun contributed its
ToolTalk application interaction framework and a port of its DeskSet productivity tools, including mail and calendar clients, from its
OpenWindows environment.
In March 1994 CDE became the responsibility of the "new OSF", a merger of the
Open Software Foundation and
Unix International; in September 1995, the merger of Motif and CDE into a single project, CDE/Motif, was announced. OSF became part of the newly formed
Open Group in 1996.
Until about
2000, CDE was considered the
de facto standard for Unix desktops, but at that time,
free software desktop environments such as
KDE and
GNOME were quickly becoming mature, and became almost universal on the
Linux platform, which already had a larger user base than most commercial Unixes in total. Red Hat is the only Linux OS which has had CDE ported to it, but phased out in favour of KDE and GNOME.
In
2001, Hewlett-Packard (
HP-UX) and Sun (
Solaris) announced that they would phase out CDE as the standard desktop on their workstations, in favor of
GNOME. However, in April
2003, HP reportedly opted to return to CDE, as
GNOME had not stabilised sufficiently for their preference. It has been suggested that GNOME's non-frozen
APIs were the main complaint.
Sun's
Solaris 10, released in early 2005, includes both CDE and the GNOME-based
Java Desktop System. Sun has gone on record stating that CDE will not be part of
OpenSolaris.
[1]
There is also a petition to release the source code of CDE and Motif under a free license. Motif was released in 2000 as
OpenMotif under a license that does not fully meet either the
open source or
free software definitions. (The Open Group had wished to make it open source, but were not quite able to.
[2])
Operating systems using CDE
★
AIX (
IBM)
★
Digital UNIX (
Digital Equipment Corporation)
★
HP-UX (
Hewlett Packard)
★
OpenVMS (Digital Equipment Corporation)
★
Solaris (
Sun Microsystems)
★
Unixware (
Univel)
★
IRIX (For a short time SGI offered CDE as an alternative to
IID)
References
★
CDE press release
★
Petition to Open Source CDE and Motif
External links
★
AIX -
CDE (from Wayback archive)
★
HP-UX -
CDE
★
Solaris -
CDE
★
Tutorial for the CDE
★
Open Group - CDE