4-Nov-82 04:10:36-PST,15056;000000000001 Mail-from: ARPANET host BRL rcvd at 4-Nov-82 0405-PST UUCP-From: decvax!brl-bmd!tcp-ip Sender: Mike Muuss From: TCP-IP at BRL To: TCP-IP at BRL Date: 1 Nov 1982 Subject: TCP-IP Digest, Vol 1 #24 Via: Brl-Bmd; 4 Nov 82 0:25-EST TCP/IP Digest Monday, 1 Nov 1982 Volume 1 : Issue 24 Today's Topics: SRI 2.8 BSD with TCP/IP for PDP-11s now being distributed. Clarification about DTI TCP/IP product "ACCESS" Courier: The Remote Procedure Call Protocol: In InterNet? TCP-only throughput figures of ArpaNet DCEC gateway up on SatNet! Results of DCEC Gateway Test Looking for DECNet between UNIX and VMS on VAXen. Looking for TCP/IP for Bell UNIX System III ---------------------------------------------------------------------- LIMITED DISTRIBUTION For Research Use Only --- Not for Public Distribution ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 13 Oct 1982 at 2322-PDT From: Bill Croft Subject: distribution announcement Distribution of 2.8 BSD with TCP/IP. Our port of the 4.1a BSD VAX networking code to the PDP11/44 or /70 is now essentially complete. We have been running the software on our SRI-PRMH and SRI-WARF systems for about a month now with very good results. The local net drivers tested and running at this time are: INTERLAN 10 megabit ethernet, ACC LH-DH, and our locally built SRI1822. Converting an existing VAX network device driver to run with the 11 requires editing just a few lines. The DEC IMP11A driver has been converted but not yet tested. I wish we had the time to make this distribution a really polished one, but we don't. We make the assumption that you already have installed 2.8 BSD on your machine, and understand kernel configuration and debugging. If you brought up an early 2.8 distribution, I think you qualify. To avoid licensing difficulties, we are restricting distribution to holders of Berkeley UNIX licenses (x.x BSD). Within a few months we hope that the PDP11 group at Berkeley can take over and incorporate this distribution into their next 2.82 release. We are making this release available from SRI due to the fast approaching ARPA TCP conversion deadline. The tape we can send you contains the new kernel, user level network code, and other necessary tools (such as "cpp" from the VAX that understands long identifier names). Here is a copy of the entry recently submitted to SRI-NIC, for the "tcp-ip-status.txt" document: 5. SRI UNIX 11/44,11/70 V7 (2.8 BSD) Date: 13 October 1982 From: Bill Croft This TCP was ported from the Berkeley VAX 4.1a version. IP, TCP, ICMP, UDP, and RAW layers are all kernel resident. This means we can run faster than older PDP11 TCPs that require auxiliary daemons (such as BBN's V6 or 3COM's UNET). Typical TCP interprocess thruput between a VAX 750 running 4.1a BSD and the 11/44 running 2.8 BSD is 300000 baud; this was measured with INTERLAN 10 megabit ethernet hardware. For programmers, there is easy access to all layers of protocol, so that (e.g.) IP or UDP services can be written. Service protocols available are all of those supplied with the VAX version: FTP, TELNET, ECHO, rlogin, rsh, rexec, talk, routing daemons. 1. Hardware - currently requires an I/D machine, such as an 11/44 or 11/70 with at least a half megabyte of memory. The total kernel size (text, data, and buffers) is about 200K bytes; so it won't fit if you have only 256K bytes. Although this sounds like a lot of bytes, comparison with our older 2.8 BSD NCP-only system shows that the kernel has only grown by about 60K bytes. This is very reasonable considering that the entire network is now resident versus the NCP case which used a hulking NCP daemon. A number of net interfaces are supported. See the Berkeley VAX documentation. The ones specifically ported to the 11 are: INTERLAN 10 megabit ethernet, ACC LH/DH, SRI 1822, DEC IMP11A. Porting a new VAX interface driver to the 11 involves changing less than 10 lines of code. 2. Software - ported from the 4.1a Berkeley VAX UNIX system. Manipulates I and D space mapping registers to reference more than 65K bytes of instructions and data at a time. 3. Documentation - supplied on tape as manual pages. Contact for further information: Dan Chernikoff, dan@sri-tsc, (415) 859 4144. We can mail a copy of our distribution tape. Eventually the software will be incorporated in Berkeley's next PDP11 distribution (2.82 BSD). This tape is supplied as-is to 2.8 BSD licenses, with no warrantees or support expressed or implied. The terms of your original Berkeley license apply: the software cannot be resold or redistributed. To get the software, send a magnetic tape and a copy of your 2.8 or 4.x license to: Dan Chernikoff SRI International 333 Ravenswood Ave. Menlo Park, CA 94025 As far as updates and bug fixes go, this mailing list (ucbtcp11@sri-tsc) can be used as a distribution point. Send a note to dan@sri-tsc to add or delete names from the list. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 27 Sep 1982 1703-CDT From: grg at Dti (Gary Grossman) Subject: TCP/IP for VAX/VMS This is to clarify a misconception that might be fostered by the note from Y. Pin Foo in TCP-IP Digest #1:23. Digital Technology Incorporated (DTI) does indeed market software including TCP/IP under the name "ACCESS". Our software is available for connection to the ARPANET via the ACC LH/DH-11. It is also available in an Ethernet version using 3COM's Unibus Ethernet interface. The only 3COM software that we use is the device driver that is supplied with the 3COM hardware. All other software, including IP, TCP, TELNET, FTP, and MAIL, was produced at DTI. The first copy of the software package costs $15K. Additional copies to the same site cost $6K. Gary Grossman ------------------------------ Date: 18 Oct 1982 13:10:48-EST From: Chris Kent Via: Brl; 18 Oct 82 15:20-EDT Am in the process of reading this "Xerox System Integration Standard", and was wondering if anyone had thought about implementing this on top of IP and/or TCP... and what progress you've made. Cheers, chris ------------------------------ Date: 7 Oct 1982 9:01:06 EDT (Thursday) From: Andrew Malis Subject: TCP-only throughput figures Mike, Vint Cerf suggested that you may be interested in including the following figures in some form in the TCP-IP digest. Basically, they are a comparison of the number of packets going through the net during the TCP-only test, as compared to the previous day during the same time period. They show that during the test, the network had about 47% of the number of packets flowing as it did during the previous day at the same time. You may want to include the figures as is, or you may want to just present the totals. I'll leave that up to you. Andy Malis HOST THROUGHPUT SUMMARY, OCTOBER 1ST Packets Received Inter-node Intra-Node Total From Fri Oct 1 12:13:51 1982 To Fri Oct 1 13:02:44 1982 Net Totals: 338765 33679 372444 From Fri Oct 1 13:02:46 1982 To Fri Oct 1 13:51:39 1982 Net Totals: 336164 82056 418220 From Fri Oct 1 13:51:39 1982 To Fri Oct 1 14:40:32 1982 Net Totals: 446443 40376 486819 From Fri Oct 1 14:40:34 1982 To Fri Oct 1 15:29:27 1982 Net Totals: 451627 66647 518274 From Fri Oct 1 15:29:27 1982 To Fri Oct 1 16:00:00 1982 Net Totals: 399462 42043 441505 ________________________________________ Net Totals: 1972461 264801 2237262 ======================================================== HOST THROUGHPUT SUMMARY, SEPTEMBER 30TH Packets Received Inter-node Intra-Node Total From Thu Sep 30 12:17:18 1982 To Thu Sep 30 13:06:11 1982 Net Totals: 662445 74644 737089 From Thu Sep 30 13:06:19 1982 To Thu Sep 30 13:55:12 1982 Net Totals: 671169 174553 845722 From Thu Sep 30 13:55:14 1982 To Thu Sep 30 14:44:07 1982 Net Totals: 823234 156222 979456 From Thu Sep 30 14:44:17 1982 To Thu Sep 30 15:33:10 1982 Net Totals: 905026 138187 1043213 From Thu Sep 30 15:33:07 1982 To Thu Sep 30 16:00:00 1982 Net Totals: 987427 132308 1119735 ________________________________________ Net Totals: 4049301 675914 4725215 ------------------------------ Date: 26 Oct 1982 18:55:33 EDT (Tuesday) From: Michael Brescia To: Cain at Edn-Unix, mcneill at Bbn-Unix, control at Bbn-Unix Subject: DCEC gateway up on satnet Redistributed-by: Bob Hinden Redistributed-to: gateway-info at BBN-UNIX Redistributed-date: 27 Oct 1982 8:49:50 EDT (Wednesday) Gateway 15 DCEC 10.1.0.20 (Arpanet) Tue Oct 26 18:47:25 1982 Version 1002 Interfaces: UP: DCEC 4.0.0.24 (Satnet) !!!!!!!! UP: DCEC 10.1.0.20 (Arpanet) UP: DCEC 21.0.0.2 (EDN) Neighbors: UP: NTARE 4.0.0.38 (Satnet) !!!!!! UP: UCL 4.0.0.60 (Satnet) !!!! ... gstatus terminated at Tue Oct 26 18:47:26 1982 ------ thanks to dale, peter, mike, mike, bill, cathy, &c, and WUI The line from DCEC to ETAM has come up for real. DCEC gateway sees the satnet, and also its satnet neighbors. That ought to create real fun for the gateway routing. We expect to watch this for a while to make sure it settles in for good. Mike ------------------------------ Date: 29 Oct 1982 11:18:37 EDT (Friday) From: Bob Hinden Subject: Results of DCEC Gateway Test To: gateway-info at Bbn-Unix Yesterdays test, which consisted of looping away the VDH line of the BBN gateway, was very successfull. All the traffic which normally used the BBN gateway as a route between Satnet and the Arpanet was redirected to the DCEC gateway. I have included throughput data for the period before and during the test, showing that the traffic load switched to the DCEC gateway after the VDH line was looped. [ Here is the correct throughput data for the DCEC gateway test. The first message included the data for the period before the test twice. -Bob Hinden ] Throughput Summary from 0300 to 0900 EST 28 Oct 82 GWY GWY RCVD RCVD IP % IP DEST % DST NO. NAME DGRAMS BYTES ERRORS ERRORS UNRCH UNRCH 2 BBN 77,702 3,328,454 0 0.00% 8 0.01% 15 DCEC 54,625 2,342,132 0 0.00% 13 0.02% TOTALS 132,327 5,670,586 0 0.00% 21 0.02% GWY GWY SENT SENT DROPPED % DROPPED NO. NAME DGRAMS BYTES DGRAMS DGRAMS 2 BBN 82,797 3,417,237 0 0.00% 15 DCEC 53,983 2,222,390 0 0.00% TOTALS 136,780 5,639,627 0 0.00% Throughput Summary 0900 to 1500 EST 28 Oct 82 GWY GWY RCVD RCVD IP % IP DEST % DST NO. NAME DGRAMS BYTES ERRORS ERRORS UNRCH UNRCH 2 BBN 43,025 1,265,324 1 0.00% 19 0.04% 15 DCEC 101,881 4,979,852 1 0.00% 154 0.15% TOTALS 144,906 6,245,176 2 0.00% 173 0.12% GWY GWY SENT SENT DROPPED % DROPPED NO. NAME DGRAMS BYTES DGRAMS DGRAMS 2 BBN 49,409 1,402,482 0 0.00% 15 DCEC 102,607 4,873,176 4 0.00% TOTALS 152,016 6,275,658 4 0.00% We are now seeing evidence that having two gateways between the Arpanet and Satnet is improving the quality of service for the Satnet users. This in conjuction with some TCP fixes made to the TAC software should result in more reliable service. Bob ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 06 Oct 82 15:46:52 CDT From: estell at NWC-387B Subject: VMS to UNIX software for DECNet We are looking for a reliable and affordable software package that implements a "DEC Net" interface between a UNIX host and a VMS host (both VAX computers). The idea is that, if we must have UNIX as an ARPANET interface, we want to be able to connect that host VAX to our other VAX computers, via DECNet. Also, we have a VAX here at NWC that is running UNIX now; someday they may want to join our NWCNet (LAN), via "DEC Net." Do you know of such software? If not, do you WANT to know about it? (i.e., If I go hunting, do you want to be informed of my findings?) Please reply to ESTELL at NWC-387B. Thanks, Bob ------------------------------ Date: 15 Oct 82 13:42:29-EDT (Fri) From: Rick To: tcp-ip at BRL cc: unix-wizards at Sri-Unix Subject: TCP/IP &/or NCP for 3.0 UNIX We are running UNIX 3.0 on an 11/70 and we're trying to get it running on the net. We are currently using the CSNET as a gateway to Arpanet, but want to get our system(s) directly into it. We are looking at various places to get a reasonable NCP (short-term) and TCP/IP (longer) that we can port over to 3.0. Is there anyone else out there in UNIX-land who is trying to get to NCP and/or TCP/IP under these circumstances? rick ------------------------------ Date: 18 Oct 1982 23:28:47-EST From: Chris Kent Reply-to: cak at Purdue To: rturner.xls-onyx02 at Udel-Relay, tcp-ip at BRL Subject: Re: TCP/IP &/or NCP for 3.0 UNIX Seems like you could get the Greep NCP front end that runs on VAXen to work. But I'm not sure it would be worth the effort for a little over two months of access. As for TCP, you might want to look at the work that Bill Croft has just completed. Are you tied to a 3.0 kernel? If not, you can just put his up (it's based on 2.8bsd). Otherwise, you have some work to do, but his code should be a good guideline. Cheers, chris ------------------------------ END OF TCP-IP DIGEST ********************