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- Network Working Group E. Harslem - Rand
- Request For Comments: 131 J. Heafner - Rand
- April 1971
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- Response to RFC #116 (May NWG Meeting)
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- Phase One
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- Software Status of 360/65
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- 1) Our software is currently being changed to reflect the new NCP
- protocol delineated in RFC #107. These changes will be completed
- before the end of May.
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- 2) We are implementing a logger that, after an automatic ICP
- dialog, can be driven from a local console. Any desirable messages
- can be sent or received in EBCDIC, ASCII (8), or as binary streams.
- The purpose of the logger is to allow sites to checkout remote log in
- procedures. Since no production-oriented services will be offered on
- the 360/65, the logger is for experimental purposes only. It will be
- completed before the end of May.
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- 3) We have not planned a TELNET. We will, however, implement both
- server and user TELNETs once a specification is generally accepted.
- Implementation time will be on the order of two weeks.
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- Transition from 360/65 to PDP-10
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- 1) We plan to move from our 360/65 to a PDP-10. Rand will offer
- Network services on the PDP-10. The hardware and software status of
- the PDP-10 will be reported later.
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- 2) The 360/65 Network connection will remain for some time due to
- its production use by another ARPA-sponsored project at Rand.
- Maintenance of the 360/65 Network software will be provided for the
- lifetime of the connection but no new programs will be developed on
- the 360/65 after September.
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- [Page 1]
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- Network Related Activities
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- 1) The UCSB/Rand Network activities were recently reported in RFC
- #113 and earlier in RFC #78. The Climate Dynamics Project (CDP) at
- Rand will continue to use this facility (more heavily) in the future.
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- 2) In conjunction with the above facility, the Rand Network team
- has planned and implemented a front-end graphics program to allow the
- reduced data from UCSB to be displayed and interacted with locally as
- graphs, contours, plots, and lists. This will be used in about three
- months after an intermediate program, being written by the CDP
- personnel, is completed.
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- Phase Two
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- Experimental Data Reconfiguration Service (Form Machine)
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- 1) A working session was held recently at Rand on the Data
- reconfiguration Service (DRS), the results of which have been drafted
- and are being edited by the participants. These data will be
- published soon as an RFC. Eric Harslem will be prepared to make an
- oral report at the NWG meeting on the DRS.
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- Protocol Manager
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- 1) We plan to submit a positional paper on a proposed Protocol
- Manager, which will allow flexibility in both experimental and
- production use of connection protocols. This will be presented as a
- Request for Comments on a software package that Rand intends to
- implement for its use on the PDP-10. For example, it should obviate a
- fixed logger on our forthcoming PDP-10.
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- [Page 2]
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- Phase Three
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- Comments on Goals and Organization of the NWG
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- 1) We have been proponents of the collective NWG as a forum to
- raise issues and as a general information transfer mechanism of what
- sites are doing and thinking. More recently small working groups and
- committees have been formed to generate particular specifications such
- as TELNET, the new NCP protocol, etc. We favor continuance of these
- methods as long as any site with a willingness, an interest, and
- contribution is not excluded from any group or committee. We feel
- that these groups will limit themselves to a small functional size a
- priori because they are directed toward special interests.
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- The long lead time between the formation of such a group and
- their final output (and subsequent implementation of the plan) has
- been accepted by the NWG Technical Chairman and is rather
- disconcerting. The NCP glitch cleaning committee is an example of
- expedient work. UTAH, for example, has already implemented the new NCP
- protocol. Other groups (including the DRS) have not been as
- responsive. Perhaps the technical problems addressed by other groups
- are more complex and the needs for their solutions are not as
- immediate as the NCP glitches. We offer no nice solution except that
- perhaps some guidelines should be established concerning timely
- publication of reports.
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- 2) Regarding long range goals of the NWG, we do not think that
- the NWG is the right body to establish the long range goals. By long
- range goals of the NWG, we are really concerned (in part) with long
- range goals of the Network. We feel that the Principal Investigators
- are in a position to have a better perspective of long range Network
- goals than the NWG members. As a suggestion, one way of converting
- their views into NWG tasks is to have the NWG Technical Chairman host
- a one day opinion session of the Principal Investigators, then report
- these views to the NWG for the generation of their implied tasks.
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- [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]
- [ into the online RFC archives by Jim Thompson 4/97 ]
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- [Page 3]
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