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- From: spaf@cs.purdue.EDU (Gene Spafford)
- Newsgroups: news.admin,news.announce.newusers,news.software.readers,news.software.b,news.answers
- Subject: USENET Software: History and Sources
- Message-ID: <spaf-software_705196254@cs.purdue.edu>
- Date: 6 May 92 23:50:55 GMT
- Expires: 6 Jul 92 11:50:54 GMT
- Followup-To: news.admin
- Organization: Dept. of Computer Sciences, Purdue Univ.
- Lines: 367
- Approved: spaf@cs.purdue.EDU
- Supersedes: <spaf-software_698911822@cs.purdue.edu>
-
- Archive-name: usenet-software/part1
- Original from: spaf@purdue (Gene Spafford)
- Last-change: 5 May 1992 by spaf@cs.purdue.edu (Gene Spafford)
-
-
- Currently, Usenet readers interact with the news using a number of
- software packages and programs. This article mentions the important
- ones and a little of their history, gives pointers where you can look
- for more information and ends with some special notes about "foreign"
- and "obsolete" software. At the very end is a list of sites from which
- current versions of the Usenet software may be obtained.
-
- Note that the number of software packages available to run news,
- especially on PCs, is increasing. This article lists only a few of
- the many news packages available, and the presence or absence of any
- particular software package should not be construed as indicating
- anything about its suitability usefulness.
-
- History
- -------
- Usenet came into being in late 1979, shortly after the release of V7
- Unix with UUCP. Two Duke University grad students in North Carolina,
- Tom Truscott and Jim Ellis, thought of hooking computers together to
- exchange information with the Unix community. Steve Bellovin, a grad
- student at the University of North Carolina, put together the first
- version of the news software using shell scripts and installed it on
- the first two sites: "unc" and "duke." At the beginning of 1980 the
- network consisted of those two sites and "phs" (another machine at
- Duke), and was described at the January Usenix conference. Steve
- Bellovin later rewrote the scripts into C programs, but they were never
- released beyond "unc" and "duke." Shortly thereafter, Steve Daniel did
- another implementation in C for public distribution. Tom Truscott made
- further modifications, and this became the "A" news release.
-
- In 1981 at U. C. Berkeley, grad student Mark Horton and high school
- student Matt Glickman rewrote the news software to add functionality
- and to cope with the ever increasing volume of news -- "A" News was
- intended for only a few articles per group per day. This rewrite was
- the "B" News version. The first public release was version 2.1 in
- 1982; the 1.* versions were all beta test. As the net grew, the news
- software was expanded and modified. The last version maintained and
- released primarily by Mark was 2.10.1.
-
- Rick Adams, at the Center for Seismic Studies, took over coordination
- of the maintenance and enhancement of the B News software with the
- 2.10.2 release in 1984. By this time, the increasing volume of news
- was becoming a concern, and the mechanism for moderated groups was
- added to the software at 2.10.2. Moderated groups were inspired by
- ARPA mailing lists and experience with other bulletin board systems.
- In late 1986, version 2.11 of B News was released, including a number
- of changes to support a new naming structure for newsgroups, enhanced
- batching and compression, enhanced ihave/sendme control messages, and
- other features.
-
- The current release of B News is 2.11, patchlevel 19. Article format
- is specified in RFC 1036 (see below). B News has been declared "dead"
- by a number of people, and is unlikely to be upgraded further; most
- new sites are using C News (see next paragraph).
-
- A new version of news, known as C News, was developed at the
- University of Toronto by Geoff Collyer and Henry Spencer. This
- version is a rewrite of the lowest levels of news to increase article
- processing speed, decrease article expiration processing and improve
- the reliability of the news system through better locking, etc. The
- package was released to the net in the autumn of 1987. For more
- information, see the paper "News Need Not Be Slow," published in The
- Winter 1987 Usenix Technical Conference proceedings. The current
- version of C News is labeled 27-Aug-1991. C News can be obtained from
- its official archive site, cs.toronto.edu, using FTP.
-
- ANU-NEWS is news package written by Geoff Huston of Australia for VMS
- systems. ANU-NEWS is complete news system that allows reading,
- posting, direct replies, moderated newsgroups, etc. in a fashion
- closely related to regular news. The implementation includes the RFC
- 1036 news propagation algorithms and integrated use of the NNTP
- protocols (see below) to support remote news servers, implemented as a
- VAX/VMS Decnet object. An RFC 977 server implemented as a Decnet
- object is also included. The ANU-NEWS interface is similar to
- standard DEC screen oriented systems. The license for the software is
- free, and there are no restrictions on the re-distribution. For more
- info, contact gih900@fac.anu.oz.au (Geoff Huston). ANU-NEWS is
- available for FTP from kuhub.cc.ukans.edu. Contact
- SLOANE@KUHUB.CC.UKANS.EDU for more info.
-
- A screen-oriented NEWS client for VMS is also available via ftp from
- ftpvms.ira.uka.de (contact Bernd Onasch <ONASCH@iravcl.ira.uka.de> for
- details).
-
- A port of C News for the Commodore Amiga under AmigaDOS (NOT Unix), is
- available. The port was done by Frank J. Edwards <crash@ckctpa.uucp>,
- and available from Larry Rosenman <ler@lerami.lerctr.org>. Also,
- Matt Dillon <dillon@overload.berkely.ca.us>, has greatly improved the
- UUCP clone for AmigaDOS, currently V1.15D, available for ftp from
- ftp.uu.net in /systems/amiga/dillon. The package also includes a
- newsreader very loosely like the real rn. Dillon also has a "vn" port
- provided by Eric Lee Green. This software is also available on Bix,
- and for ftp from ab20.larc.nasa.gov.
-
- Several popular screen-oriented news reading interfaces have been
- developed in the last few years to replace the traditional "readnews"
- interface. The first of these was "vnews" and it was written by
- Kenneth Almquist. "vnews" provides a "readnews"-like command
- interface, but displays articles using direct screen positioning. It
- appears to have been inspired, to some extent, by the "notes" system
- (described below). "vnews" is currently distributed with the standard
- 2.11 news source.
-
- A second, more versatile interface, "rn", was developed by Larry Wall
- (the author of Perl) and released in 1984. This interface also uses
- full-screen display with direct positioning, but it includes many
- other useful features and is very popular with many regular net
- readers. The interface includes reading, discarding, and/or
- processing of articles based on user-definable patterns, and the
- ability of the user to develop customized macros for display and
- keyboard interaction. "rn" is currently at release 4.4. It is being
- maintained by Stan Barber of the Baylor College of Medicine. "rn" is
- not provided with the standard news software release, but is very
- widely available because of its popularity. The software can be
- obtained from its official archive site, lib.tmc.edu, using FTP, and
- via mail from archive-server@bcm.tmc.edu
-
- A variant of "rn" is "trn" by Wayne Davison. Trn adds the ability to
- follow "threads of discussions" in newsgroups; its latest version 2.2
- is based on rn 4.4. It uses a Reference-line database to allow the
- user to take advantage of the "discussion tree" formed by an article
- and its replies. This results in a true reply-ordered reading of the
- articles, complete with a small ascii representation of the current
- article's position in the discussion tree. Trn can be obtained from
- ftp.coe.montana.edu in the /pub/trn directory, from uunet in the
- news subdirectory, and from many other archive servers world-wide.
-
- xrn is an X11-based interface to NNTP that was written by Rick
- Spickelmier and Ellen Sentovich (UC Berkeley). The current version is
- 6.17. xrn supports many features, including sorting by subject,
- user-settable key bindings, graceful handling of NNTP server crashes,
- and many of the features of rn (including KILL files and key bindings
- similar to rn). xrn is actively supported by the authors with bug
- fixing and feature addition support from many of the users. xrn can
- be retrieved from most of the popular FTP sites (gatekeeper.dec.com,
- ftp.uu.net, export.lcs.mit.edu).
-
- Another X11-based newsreader is xvnews. This is a news reader
- designed primarily for Sun workstations running OpenWindows. It runs
- with NNTP and is compatible with rn style commands. Available from
- export.lcs.mit.edu in the contrib directory.
-
- There are two popular macro packages named "GNUS" and "Gnews" that can
- be used with the GNU Emacs text editor. These allow reading,
- replying, and posting interaction with the news from inside the Emacs
- text editor. Client code exists to get the articles using NNTP rather
- than from a local disk. Copies can be found on most archive sites
- that carry the GNU archives.
-
- "nn" is yet another reader interface, developed by Kim F. Storm of
- Texas Instruments A/S, Denmark, and released in 1989. nn differs from
- the traditional readnews and vnews by presenting a menu of article
- subject and sender-name lines, allowing you to preselect articles to
- read. nn is also a very fast newsreader, as it keeps a database of
- article headers on-line. (I.e. it trades space for time. A good rule
- of thumb is that the nn database size is 5%-10% of your news spool.
- So up to 110% of your news spool is the amount of space news and the
- nn database will take.) The current version of nn is 6.4.16. nn can
- be obtained via anonymous FTP from dkuug.dk, uop.uop.edu,
- mthvax.cs.miami.edu or various other sites; European sites should
- request the sources from their nearest backbone site.
-
- yet another newsreader is the "tin" reader. It operates with threads,
- has different article organization methods, and is full-screen
- oriented. tin works on a local news spool or over an NNTP connection.
- It has been posted to alt.sources, and further information is
- available from becker@med-in.uni-sb.de (Dieter Becker). The current
- release of tin is 1.1.
-
- "notes" is a software package popular at some sites. It uses a
- different internal organization of articles, and a different
- interchange format than that of the standard Usenet software. It was
- inspired by the notesfiles available in the PLATO system and was
- developed independently from the Usenet news. Eventually, the "notes"
- network and Usenet were joined via gateways doing (sometimes
- imperfect) protocol translation. The interface for "notes" is similar
- to "rn" but implements different features, many of which are dictated
- by its internal organization. "notes" was written in 1980-1981 by Ray
- Essick and Rob Kolstad, (then) grad students at the University of
- Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The first public release of "notes" was
- at the January 1982 Usenix conference. The current release of notes
- is version 1.7.
-
- In March 1986 a package was released implementing news transmission,
- posting, and reading using the Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)
- (as specified in RFC 977). This protocol allows hosts to exchange
- articles via TCP/IP connections rather than using the traditional
- uucp. It also permits users to read and post news (using a modified
- version of "rn" or other user agents) from machines which cannot or
- choose not to install the USENET news software. Reading and posting
- are done using TCP/IP messages to a server host which does run the
- USENET software. Sites which have many workstations like the Sun and
- Apollo products find this a convenient way to allow workstation users
- to read news without having to store articles on each system. Many of
- the Usenet hosts that are also on the Internet exchange news articles
- using NNTP because the load impact of NNTP is much lower than uucp
- (and NNTP ensures much faster propagation).
-
- NNTP grew out of independent work in 1984-1985 by Brian Kantor at U.
- C. San Diego and Phil Lapsley at U. C. Berkeley. It is now in
- release 1.5.11 dated 11 february 1991, with the next planned release
- at 1.6. NNTP includes support for System V UNIX with Excelan Ethernet
- cards and DECNET under Ultrix. NNTP was developed at U. C. Berkeley
- by Phil Lapsley with help from Erik Fair, Steven Grady, and Mike
- Meyer, among others. The NNTP package is distributed on the 4.3BSD
- release tape (although that is version 1.2a and out-of-date) and is
- also available from the various authors, many major hosts, and by
- anonymous FTP from lib.tmc.edu, mthvax.cs.miami.edu and ftp.uu.net.
-
- Reader NNTP clients for VMS are also available, including VMS/VNEWS
- (current release 1.4) and an upcoming reader only version of ANU-NEWS.
- VMS/VNEWS is available via anonymous ftp from arizona.edu (contact
- jms@arizona.edu for more information) or at any site which archives
- vmsnet.source. Although the current release of ANU-NEWS is usable as
- a reader it can be difficult when used with a UNIX server.
-
- An NNTP newsreader for Macintoshs is available called HyperNews. It
- is implemented as a HyperCard stack and depends on MacTCP. It is
- available from many Mac archives, including apple.com and
- sumex-aim.stanford.edu
-
- There is also an NNTP-based netnews reader for Symbolics Lisp Machines
- (under Genera 7) available for anonymous FTP from ucbvax.berkeley.edu
- [128.32.133.1] in pub/nntp-clients/lispm written by Ian Connolly
- <connolly@coins.cs.umass.edu> and maintained by Richard Welty
- <welty@lewis.crd.ge.com>. In addition, another NNTP-based news
- browser is available running under Genera 7 and Genera 8. It provides
- mouse driven hierarchic browsing of newsgroups and articles, with
- support for X11 servers on remote machines. It is available for
- anonymous FTP on flash.bellcore.com [128.96.32.20] in the directory
- pub/lispm/news-reader/. It is written and maintained by Peter
- Clitherow <pc@bellcore.com>
-
- A TOPS-20 reader was developed by Dave Edwards of SRI
- <dle@kl.sri.com>, but current availability is unknown. An NNTP reader
- suite for PC's running MS-DOS and having Excelan boards is available
- for ftp from ames.arc.nasa.gov; get the pcrrn files. There are two
- MS-DOS news readers that can be obtained from bcm.tmc.edu in the "nfs"
- directory. They both require PC-NFS (from Sun) to work. They will
- both work under PC/TCP from FTP Software early this year. Source will
- be provided at that time.
-
- At least one IBM VM/SP (CMS) version of the Usenet software is
- available. It is known as PSU NetNews, and it is maintained by Linda
- Littleton (lrl@psuvm.bitnet/psuvm.psu.edu). Version 2.4 of the
- software is available from LISTSERV@PSUVM. PSU NetNews supports only
- 3270 terminals, and uses XEDIT as its screen driver. Most major VM
- sites appear to use this package. NetNews supports locally-stored
- news, not NNTP reading.
-
- There is NNTP support for PSU NetNews for bulk news receipt: NNTPXFER
- will poll another site for news, and NNTPRCVR will receive news sent
- from a Unix NNTPXMIT process. Either program sends the news articles
- to NetNews for processing. Contact Andy Hooper (hooper@qucdn.bitnet
- or qucdn.queensu.ca) for more information, or obtain them from
- listserv@qucdn in PUBLIC FILELIST. These programs are provided with
- source, and require IBM's FAL TCP/IP and Pascal.
-
- There is at least one NNTP news-readers for VM using XEDIT as its
- screen manager. Contact Paul Campbell (pc@mbunix.mitre.org) for
- information. The program requires IBM's FAL TCP/IP and Pascal. The
- software is available for anonymous ftp from
- rusmv1.rus.uni-stuttgart.de [129.69.1.12] in the directory
- soft/kommunikation/news/beginner/software/vm-cms/*.
-
- An NNTP news reader is available for TSO/ISPF, called NNMVS. NNMVS is
- written by Stephen Bacher <seb1525@mvs.draper.com> at Draper
- Laboratory. It requires C/370 V1R2 (though V1R1 will work) and uses
- TCP/IP sockets. Contact Steve for distribution details.
-
- Special note on "notes" and pre-2.11 news
- -----------------------------------------
- Users of these systems may note problems in their interactions with the
- Usenet. In particular, postings may be made by "notes" users to
- moderated groups but they will not usually propagate throughout the
- entire Usenet. The same may happen to users of old B news software.
-
- Users of "notes" or old B news software wishing to post to moderated
- groups should either mail their submissions to the moderator, as
- listed in the monthly posting of "List of Moderators" in the group
- "news.lists", or else they should post from a system running
- up-to-date B news software (i.e., 2.11). "notes" users may obtain
- some patches from the comp.sources.unix archives which enable recent
- versions of "notes" to interact with moderated groups properly.
-
- Users of old B news and "notes" are also not able to take advantage of
- some other current B news features, such as the "checkgroups" message.
- "notes" continues to be a "foreign" system, and B news versions before
- 2.10.2 are considered "obsolete." The various maintainers of the
- Usenet software have never expressed any commitment to maintain
- backwards compatibility with "foreign" or obsolete news systems and
- are unlikely to do so; it is the responsibility of the users to
- maintain compatibility of such software if they wish to continue to
- interact with the Usenet.
-
-
- Software versions & availability
- --------------------------------
- You can obtain the version number of your news software by issuing the
- "v" command in either "vnews" or "readnews." The "rn" version is
- obtainable by typing the "v" command to the top level prompt.
- Type "V" to see the version number of "nn".
-
- Current software is obtainable from almost any major Usenet site.
- Source to the 'rn' newsreader program is also widely available.
-
- The following sites probably have sources to the current news software
- available for anyone needing a copy:
-
- Site Contact
- ---- -------
- munnari kre@munnari.oz.au
- osu-cis postmaster@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu
- philabs usenet@philabs.philips.com
- pyramid usenet@pyramid.com
- rutgers usenet@rutgers.edu
- tektronix news@tektronix.tek.com
- watmath usenet@watmath.waterloo.edu
-
- Sources for news 2.11, C News, "rn", and "trn" are also available in
- the comp.sources.unix archives. European sites should request the
- sources from their nearest Eunet backbone site.
-
- Standards
- ---------
- News programs communicate with each other according to standard protocols,
- some of which are described by RFCs. An RFC is a Request For Comment, a
- de facto standard in the Internet Community. It is a form of published
- software standard, done through the Network Information Center (NIC) at SRI.
- Copies of RFCs are often posted to the net and obtainable from archive sites.
- Current news-related RFCs include the following:
-
- RFC 822 specifies the format of messages; RFC 1036 uses this.
- RFC 977 specifies NNTP, the Network News Transfer Protocol.
- RFC 1036 specifies the format of Usenet articles.
- RFC 1123 amends RFC 822.
- RFC 1153 specifies the digest format some moderated groups use.
-
- Newsgroups
- ----------
-
- The following newsgroups cover issues discussed in this article, and can
- be consulted for recent developments.
-
- gnu.emacs.gnews News reading under GNU Emacs using Weemba's Gnews.
- gnu.emacs.gnus News reading under GNU Emacs using GNUS (in English).
- news.software.anu-news VMS B-news software from Australian National Univ.
- news.software.b Discussion about B-news-compatible software.
- news.software.nn Discussion about the "nn" news reader package.
- news.software.notes Notesfile software from the Univ. of Illinois.
- news.software.readers General discussion about news reading software.
-
- Acknowledgements
- ----------------
- The preparation of this article (and Usenet itself!) was greatly
- enhanced by the contributions and assistance of the following persons:
- Steve Bellovin, Ray Essick, Mark Horton, Brian Kantor, Phil Lapsley,
- Bob Page, Tom Truscott, and Larry Wall. Thanks, folks.
- --
- Gene Spafford
- Software Engineering Research Center & Dept. of Computer Sciences
- Purdue University, W. Lafayette IN 47907-1398
- Internet: spaf@cs.purdue.edu phone: (317) 494-7825
-
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