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172 lines
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172 lines
10 KiB
Text
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==Phrack Inc.==
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Volume One, Issue Six, Phile 8 of 13
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!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!
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Jester Sluggo presents
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an insight on
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Wide-Area Networks
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Part 2
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!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!.!
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Part 1 contains information on ARPANET and CSNET.
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Part 2 contains information on BITNET, MFENET, UUCP and USENET.
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It is best if you read both files to better understand each other.
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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These files will cover general information on wide-area networks, (I.E.
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ARPANET, CSNET, BITNET, MFENET, UUCP and USENET), but may contain information
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in relationship with other networks not emphasized in these files. These files
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are NOT a hacker's tutorial/guide on these systems.
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BITNET
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~~~~~~
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BITNET. In 1981, City University of New York (CUNY) surveyed universities on
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the East Coast of the U.S. and Canada, inquiring whether there was interest in
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creating and easy-to-use, economical network for interuniversity communication
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between scholars. The response was positive. Many shared the CUNY belief in
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the importance of computer-assisted communication between scholars. The first
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link of the new network, called BITNET, was established between CUNY and Yale
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University in May 1981.
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The network technology chosen for BITNET was determined by the
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availability of the RSCS software on the IBM computers at the initial sites.
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[The name BITNET stands for Because It's Time NETwork.] The RSCS software is
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simple but effective, and most IBM VM-CMS computer systems have it installed
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for local communications, supporting file transfer and remote job entry
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services. The standard BITNET links are leased telephone lines running at 9600
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bps. Although all the initial nodes were IBM machines in university computer
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centers, the network is in no way restricted to such systems. Any computer
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with an RSCS emulator can be connected to BITNET. Emulators are available for
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DEC VAX-VMS systems, VAX-UNIX systems, and for Control Data Corp. Cyber systems
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and others. Today, more than one-third of the computers on BITNET are non-IBM
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systems.
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BITNET is a store-and-forward network with files and messages sent from
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computer to computer across the network. It provides electronic mail, remote
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job entry, and file transfer services, and supports and interactive message
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facility and a limited remote logon facility. Most BITNET sites use the same
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electronic mail procedures and standards as the ARPANET, and as a result of the
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installation of electronic mail gateway systems at the University of California
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at Berkley and at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, most BITNET users can
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communicate electronically with users on CSNET and the ARPANET.
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BITNET has expanded extremely rapidly -- a clear indication that is
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providing service that people need and want. The simplicity of the connection
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to the network -- acquiring a 9600-bps leased line to the nearest neighboring
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computer node and in installing an additional line interface and modem --
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provides the service at the right price. By the end of 1985 the number of
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computers connected was expected to exceed 600, at more than 175 institutions
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of higher education throughout the U.S. BITNET is open without restriction to
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any college or university. It is not limited to specific academic disciplines,
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and may be used for any academic purpose. However, use for commercial purposes
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is prohibited. In special cases, connection of commercial organizations may be
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sponsored by universities. A particular case is the connection of Boeing
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Computer Services to BITNET, as part of the NSFnet initiative, to provide
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remote job entry services to their Cray X-MP/24 to NSF supercomputer grantees
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who have access to BITNET.
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Until recently BITNET had no central management structure, and was
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coordinated by an executive board consisting of members from the major
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institutions participating. This worked because most of the computers
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connected were managed and operated by professional service organizations in
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university computer centers. However, the growth in the network made it
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possible to continue in this ad hoc fashion, and a central support organization
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was established with support from an IBM grant. The central support
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organization, called the BITNET network support center (BITNSC), has two parts:
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A user services organization, the network information center (BITNSC), which
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provides user support, a name server and a variety of databases, and the
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development and operations center (BITDOC) to develop and operate the network.
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A major question facing the members of BITNET is how the funding of this
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central organization will be continued when the IBM grant expires in 1987.
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BITNET, with support from the NSFnet Program, is now examining ways to
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provide ARPANET-like services to existing BITNET sites. The project, which is
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similar to the CSNET CYPRESS project, will explore a strategy to provide an
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optional path to the use of the TCP-IP procedures on existing 9.6-kbps leased
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lines. The possibility of upgrading these lines to multiple alternate links,
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providing higher reliability and availability, or to higher speed 56-kbps links
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is also being studied. The project will offer a higher level of service to
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BITNET sites choosing this path and also enable a low-cost connection to
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NSFnet.
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MFENET
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~~~~~~
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MFENET. The DOE's magnetic fusion energy research network was established in
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the mid-1970's to support access to the MFE Cray 1 supercomputer at the
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Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. The network uses 56-kbs satellite
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links, and is designed to provide terminal access to the Cray time-sharing
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system (CTSS), also developed at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory. The
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network currently supports access to Cray 1, Cray X-MP/2, Cray 2, and Cyber 205
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supercomputers. The network uses special-purpose networking software developed
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at Livermore, and, in addition to terminal access, provides file transfer,
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remote output queuing, and electronic mail, and includes some specialized
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application procedures supporting interactive graphics terminals and local
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personal computer (PC)-based editing. Access to the network is in general
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restricted to DOE-funded researchers. Recently the network has been expanded
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to include the DOE-funded supercomputer at Florida State University. MFENET is
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funded by DOE and managed by Livermore.
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MFENET has been successful in supporting DOE supercomputer users. However,
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the specialized nature of the communications protocols is now creating
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difficulties for researchers who need advanced graphics workstations that use
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the UNIX BSD 4.2 operating system and the TCP-IP protocols on LAN's. For these
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and other reasons, DOE is examining how best to migrate MFENET to the TCP-IP,
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and later to the OSI, protocols.
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The combination of the CTSS operating system and the MFENET protocols
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creates an effective interactive computing environment for researchers using
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Cray supercomputers. For this reason, two of the new NSF national
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supercomputer centers -- San Diego (SDSC) and Illinois -- have chosen the CTSS
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operating system. In SDSC's case, the MFENET protocols have also been chosen
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to support the SDSC Consortium network. In Illinois case, a project to
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implement the TCP-IP protocols for the CTSS operating system has been funded by
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the NSFnet program, and these developments will be shared with SDSC (and with
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DOE) to provide a migration path for the SDSC Consortium network.
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UUCP and USENET
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~~~~ ~~~~~~
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UUCP and USENET. The UUCP network was started in the 1970's to provide
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electronic mail and file transfer between UNIX systems. The network is a
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host-based store-and-forward network using dialup telephone circuits and
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operates by having each member site dialup the next UUCP host computer and send
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and receive files and electronic mail messages. The network uses addresses
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based on the physical path established by this sequence of dialups connections.
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UUCP is open to any UNIX system which chooses to participate. There are
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"informal" electronic mail gateways between UUCP and ARPANET, BITNET, or CSNET,
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so that users of any of these networks can exchange electronic mail.
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USENET is a UNIX news facility based on the UUCP network that provides a
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news bulletin board service. Neither UUCP nor USENET has a central management;
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volunteers maintain and distribute the routing tables for the network. Each
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member site pays its own costs and agrees to carry traffic. Despite this
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reliance on mutual cooperation and anarchic management style, the network
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operates and provides a useful, if somewhat unreliable, and low-cost service to
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its members. Over the years the network has grown into a world-wide network
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with thousands of computers participating.
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OTHERS
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~~~~~~
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Other Wide-Area Networks. Of necessity this file of wide-area networks has
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been incomplete: Other networks of interest include the Space Plasma Analysis
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Network (SPAN) -- a network of DEC VAX computers using 9.6-kbps links and the
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DECNET protocols for National Aeronautics and Space Administration's
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researchers; the planned Numerical and Atmospheric Sciences (NAS) network
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centered at Ames Research Center -- a network that is expected to use existing
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and planned NASA communications links and the TCP-IP protocols; and the planned
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high-energy physics network -- a network based largely on VAX computers and
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using the standard X.25 network level protocols plus the so called "coloured
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books" protocols developed in the United Kingdom. Also, many high-energy
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physicists, at the Stanford Linear Accelerator, at the Lawrence Berkley
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Laboratory, and at Fermi Laboratory, among others, have used DECNET to connect
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their DEC VAX computers together.
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/
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\
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/ luggo !!
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Please give full credit for references to the following:
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Dennis M. Jennings, Lawrence H. Landweber, Ira H. Fuchs, David J. Faber, and W.
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Richards Adrion.
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Any questions, comments or Sluggestions can be emailed to me at Metal Shop, or
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sent via snailmail to the following address until 12-31-1986:
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J. Sluggo
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P.O. Box 93
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East Grand Forks, MN 56721
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