Difference between revisions of "IOS"

From The iPhone Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(10.0.1.)
m
Line 28: Line 28:
 
Prior to iOS 4, the OS would take up ~350 MB of the device's storage; this means that users will not get their full storage space.
 
Prior to iOS 4, the OS would take up ~350 MB of the device's storage; this means that users will not get their full storage space.
   
In iOS 4.0, it takes up ~800 MB of space, changing the root partition from 500 MB to 1000 MB, due to the 2x graphics that have been added for the [[N90AP|iPhone 4 (iPhone3,1)]] and [[N81AP|iPod touch 4G]] retina displays.
+
In iOS 4.0, it takes up ~800 MB of space, changing the root partition from 500 MB to 1000 MB, due to the 2x graphics that have been added for the [[N90AP|iPhone 4 (iPhone3,1)]] and [[N81AP|iPod touch (4th generation)]] retina displays.
   
 
In iOS 5.0, Apple began pushing towards a computer-less experience for iOS. (e.g.- Devices can be activated and updated over the air.) In addition, multitasking gestures are now enabled by default. It takes up ~700MB for [[N88AP|iPhone 3GS]], ~800MB for [[A4]] and [[A5]].
 
In iOS 5.0, Apple began pushing towards a computer-less experience for iOS. (e.g.- Devices can be activated and updated over the air.) In addition, multitasking gestures are now enabled by default. It takes up ~700MB for [[N88AP|iPhone 3GS]], ~800MB for [[A4]] and [[A5]].

Revision as of 10:11, 26 March 2017

iOS
IOS logo.png
Company / developer Apple Inc.
Programmed in ARM assembly, C, C++, and Objective‑C
OS family Unix-like (OS X)
Working state Current
Source model Closed source
Initial release 27 June 2007
Update method iTunes and OTA Updates
Package manager App Store
Supported platforms Apple TV, iPad, iPad mini, iPhone, iPod touch
Kernel type Hybrid (XNU)
Default user interface SpringBoard
License Proprietary
Official website www.apple.com

iOS, formerly known as iPhone OS (and just Mac OS X), is the operating system for the Apple TV, iPad, iPad mini, iPhone, iPod touch. iOS has four abstraction layers: the Core OS layer, the Core Services layer, the Media layer, and the Cocoa Touch layer.

Size Growth

As new devices and frameworks come out, the root partition needs to hold more and more stuff. Consequently, Apple can't just add a separate NAND chip to hold the operating system as new releases would use more than available on the chip. As such, with each release, users get less and less usable storage space.

When jailbroken, Cydia "stashes" certain folders under the user partition to avoid filling the root partition when tweaks and apps are installed. However, Cydia doesn't shrink the root partition (and grow the user partition), so users get even less available storage space (e.g. if for a 16 GiB device with a 2 GiB root partition, Cydia "stashes" 1 GiB, the usable storage space will be 13 GiB). It is unknown if there exist tools to resize and move the partitions around in order to reclaim the empty space on the root partition (what was occupied by the stashed files).

Prior to iOS 4, the OS would take up ~350 MB of the device's storage; this means that users will not get their full storage space.

In iOS 4.0, it takes up ~800 MB of space, changing the root partition from 500 MB to 1000 MB, due to the 2x graphics that have been added for the iPhone 4 (iPhone3,1) and iPod touch (4th generation) retina displays.

In iOS 5.0, Apple began pushing towards a computer-less experience for iOS. (e.g.- Devices can be activated and updated over the air.) In addition, multitasking gestures are now enabled by default. It takes up ~700MB for iPhone 3GS, ~800MB for A4 and A5.

In iOS 6.0, it takes up ~850 MB of space on the A4 and A5 series and ~1.2 GB on the A6 series.

In iOS 8.0, it takes up ~4 GB on the A7 series.

In iOS 10.0.1, it takes up ~3.9 GB on the A9 series.

See Also

External Links