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- Network Working Group S. Crocker
- Request for Comments: 37 UCLA
- 20 March 1970
-
- Network Meeting Epilogue, etc.
-
- The Meeting
- -----------
-
- On Tuesday, March 17, 1970, I hosted a Network meeting at UCLA.
- About 25 people attended, including representatives from MIT, LL,
- BBN, Harvard, SRI, Utah, UCSB, SDC, RAND and UCLA. I presented a
- modification of the protocol in NWG/RFC #33; the modifications are
- sketchily documented in NWG/RFC #36. The main modification is the
- facility for dynamic reconnection.
-
- The protocol based on sockets and undistinguished simplex
- connections is quite different from the previous protocol as
- documented in NWG/RFC #11. The impetus for making such changes came
- out of the network meeting on December 8, 1969, at Utah, at which
- time the limitations of a log-in requirement and the inability to
- connect arbitrary processes was seriously challenged. Accordingly,
- the primary reason for the recent meeting was to sample opinion on
- the new protocol.
-
- Recollections may vary, but it is my opinion that the protocol was
- widely accepted and that the criticism and discussion fell into two
- categories:
-
- 1. Questioning the complexity and usefulness of the full protocol,
- especially the need for dynamic reconnection.
-
- 2. Other topics, particularly character set translation, higher
- level languages, incompatible equipment, etc.
-
- Notably lacking was any criticism of the basic concepts of sockets
- and connections. (Some have since surfaced.) The following
- agreements were made:
-
- 1. By April 30, I would be responsible for publishing an
- implementable specification along lines presented.
-
- 2. Any interested party would communicate with me (at least)
- immediately if he wished to modify the protocol.
-
-
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-
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- [Page 1]
-
- RFC 37 Network Meeting Epilogue, etc. 20 March 1970
-
- 3. If major modifications come under consideration, interested
- parties would meet again. This would happen in two to three
- weeks.
-
- 4. Jim Forgie of Lincoln Labs tentatively agreed to host a meeting
- on higher level network languages, probably near Spring Joint
- time.
-
- Mailing List Changes
- --------------------
-
- Paul Rovner of LL is replaced by
-
- James Forgie
- Mass. Institute of Technology
- Lincoln Laboratory C158
- P.O. Box 73
- Lexington, Mass. 02173
-
- telephone at (617) 862-5500 ext. 7173
-
- Professor George MEaly is added
-
- George Mealy
- Rm. 220
- Aitken Computation Lab.
- Harvard University
- Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
-
- telephone at (617) 868-1020 ext. 4355
-
- Process
- -------
-
- In all of our writing we have used the term process, to mean a
- program which has an assigned location counter and an address space.
- A program is merely a pattern of bits stored in some file. A new
- process is created only by an already existing process. The
- previous process must execute an atomic operation (forc, attach,
- etc.) to cause such a creation. Processes may either cause their
- own demise or be terminated by another (usually superior) process.
-
- The above definition corresponds to the definition given by
- Vyssotsky, et al on pp. 206, 207 of "Structure of the Multics
- Supervisor" in the FJCC proceedings, 1965.
-
-
-
-
- [Page 2]
-
- RFC 37 Network Meeting Epilogue, etc. 20 March 1970
-
- Because a process may create another process, and because in general
- the two processes are indistinguishable when viewed externally, I
- know of no reasonable way for two processes to request connection
- directly with each other. The function of sockets is to provide a
- standard interface between processes.
-
- The Days After
- --------------
-
- In the time since the meeting I have had conversations with Steve
- Wolfe (UCLA-CCN), Bill Crowther (BBN), and John Heafner and Erick
- Harslem (RAND). Wolf's comments will appear as NWG/RFC #38 and fall
- into a class I will comment on below.
-
- Crowther submitted the following:
-
- "A brief description of two ideas for simplifying the host protocol
- described at the March meeting. These ideas have not been carefully
- worked out.
-
- Idea 1. To Reconnect.
- --------------------
-
- "A NCP wanting to Reconnect tells each of his neighbors "I want to
- reconnect". They wait until there are no messages in transit and
- respond "OK". He then says "Reconnect as follows" and they do it.
- In the Rare condition, the NCP gets back an "I want to reconnect
- instead of an "OK", then one must go and one must stop. So treat a
- "reconnect" from a higher Host user etc. as an ok and from a lower
- as a "No-wait until I reconnect you" and do the connection.
-
- Idea 2
- ------
-
- "Decouple connections and links. Still establish connections, but
- use any handy link for the messages. Don't send another message on
- a connection until a FRNM comes back. Include source and
- destination socket numbers in the packet.
-
- "To reconnect, say to each of neighbors "please reconnect me as
- follows...". Hold onto the connect for a short time (seconds) and
- send both packets and connection messages along toward their
- destinations. I haven't worked out how to keep the in-transit
- messages in order, but probably everything works if you don't send
- out a reconnect when RFNM's are pending."
-
-
-
-
- [Page 3]
-
- RFC 37 Network Meeting Epilogue, etc. 20 March 1970
-
- Bill's first idea does not seem to me to be either decisively better
- or (after some thought) very different, and I am considering it. I
- have no strong feelings about it yet, but I am trying to develop
- some.
-
- Bill's second idea seems contrary to my conception of the role of
- links. An argument in favor of decoupling connections and links
- that the number of connections between two hosts might want to
- exceed 255, and that even if not, it is sounder practice to isolate
- dependancies in design. On the other hand, the newly provided Cease
- on Link facility* (page 22 of the soon to be released BBN report
- #1822 revised Febuary 1970) becomes useless. (Bill, who just put
- the feature in, doesn't care.) Another objection is that it seems
- intuitively bad to waste the possibility of using the link field to
- carry information. (Note the conflict of gut level feelings).
-
- In a conversation with John Haefner and Eric Harslem of RAND, the
- pointed out that the current protocol makes no provision for error
- detection and reporting, status testing and reporting, and expansion
- and experimentation. Error detection and status testing will
- require some extended discussion to see what is useful, and I expect
- that such discussion will take place while implementation proceeds.
- Leaving room for protocol expansion and experimentation, however, is
- best done now.
-
- I suggest that two areas for expansion be reserved. One is that
- only a fraction of the 256 links be used, say the first 32. The
- other area is to use command codes from 255 downward, with permanent
- codes assigned from the number of links in use to 32, I feel that it
- is quite unlikely that we would need more than 32 for quite some
- time, and moreover, the network probably wouldn't handle traffic
- implied by heavy link assignment. (These two things aren't
- necessarily strongly coupled: one can have many links assigned but
- only a few carrying traffic at any given time.)
-
- Some of Heafner's and Harslen's other ideas may appear in NWG/RFC
- form.
-
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- [Page 4]
-
- RFC 37 Network Meeting Epilogue, etc. 20 March 1970
-
- Immediate Interaction
- ---------------------
-
- During the next several days, I will still be interested in those
- editicisms of current protocol which might lead to rejection or
- serious modification of it. Thereafter, the focus will be a
- refinement, implementation, extension, and utilization. I may be
- reached at UCLA through my secretary Mrs. Benita Kristel at (213)
- 825-2368. Also, everyone is invited to contribuet to the NWG/RFC
- series. Unique numbers are assigned by Benita.
-
- * The Cease on Link facility is a way a receiving host modifies
- RFNM's so as to carry a flow-quenching meaning. An alternative
- proceedure is to use a host-to-host control command.
-
- [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]
- [ into the online RFC archives by Ron Fitzherbert 1/97 ]
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