operating system (from "
bootstrap" or "to pull oneself up
by one's bootstraps") A short
program that was read in from
which it gave control.
On early computers the bootstrap loader was always very short
(great efforts were expended on making it short in order to
minimise the labour and chance of error involved in toggling
it in), but was just smart enough to read in a slightly more
reader), to which it handed control; this
program in turn
in successive steps, the
computer "pulled itself up by its
bootstraps" to a useful operating state. Nowadays the
bootstrap is usually found in
ROM or
EPROM, and reads the
first stage in from a fixed location on the
disk, called the
powerful enough to load the actual
OS and hand control over
to it.
(27 November 1995)