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- Network Working Group V. Cerf
- Request for Comments: 1210 CNRI
- P. Kirstein
- UCL
- B. Randell
- Newcastle on Tyne
- Editors
- March 1991
-
-
- Network and Infrastructure User Requirements for
- Transatlantic Research Collaboration
- Brussels, July 16-18, and Washington July 24-25, 1990
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This report complements a shorter printed version which appeared in a
- summary report of all the committees which met in Brussels and
- Washington last July, 1990. This memo provides information for the
- Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard.
- Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- Abstract
-
- This report summarises user requirements for networking and related
- infrastructure facilities needed to enable effective cooperation
- between US and European research teams participating in the planned
- ESPRIT-DARPA/NSF programme of collaborative research in Information
- Science and Technology. It analyses the problems and disparities of
- the current facilities, and suggests appropriate one and three year
- targets for improvements. It proposes a number of initial actions
- aimed at achieving these targets. Finally, the workshop has
- identified a non-exhaustive set of important issues upon which
- support of future research will depend. These issues could be
- studied in the short term, with the aim of initiating a programme of
- joint research in collaboration technology within the next year.
-
- SUMMARY OF PRINCIPAL RECOMMENDATIONS AND TARGETS
-
- EMAIL (6.1) Initiate an intercontinental email operations forum
- involving email service providers in the US and Europe to define and
- implement operational procedures leading to high reliability. The
- forum should be tasked with analysing interoperability problems in
- the existing email systems, and with developing functional and
- performance specifications for email gateways (relays). In addition
- an international email user support group should be organized. The
- target would be to achieve, within one year, routine expectation of
- proper and timely (less than one hour campus to campus) delivery of
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- messages. The three year target would be to provide global directory
- services, a return/receipt facility, and support for privacy and
- authenticity.
-
- COMPOUND DOCUMENTS (6.2) Hold a workshop to review the ongoing
- compound document research and development programmes in the two
- regions. One aim would be to recommend services, based on
- proprietary compound document email for groups using specific
- conforming products, for deployment within the first year. Another
- would be to propose work items in the NSF/DARPA and ESPRIT programmes
- to ensure a timely collaborative programme could start in mid-1991,
- with a three year target of supporting open system compound document
- email.
-
- DIRECTORY SERVICES (6.3) Initiate a formal collaboration between
- ongoing US and European efforts to implement and maintain the
- relevant directory databases. Within the first year provide
- effective access to existing directory services, and coverage of
- relevant NSF/DARPA and ESPRIT communities. Within three years
- provide database maintenance tools, knowledge-based navigation
- software, and authentication and capability-based access control
- facilities.
-
- INTERACTIVE LOGIN (6.4) Identify for which protocol suites
- interactive login will be supported including the provision of
- protocol translation facilities. Within one year identify and
- install the best available interactive software at all interested
- sites. Develop a cooperative effort on authentication and privacy
- support, to provide such facilities within three years, together with
- support for "type of service", and remote X-windows even through
- different protocol suites.
-
- FILE SERVICES (6.5) Identify and deploy within one year the best
- available products for double-hop (staged) multi-megabyte file
- transfer. Within three years define and obtain or develop multi-
- protocol facilities with automated staging, security and management
- facilities; develop access control models, policies and mechanisms to
- support collaborative file access by ad hoc groups.
-
- GROUP COMMUNICATIONS SERVICES (6.6) Form a support/working group on
- the use of tools, standards and facilities for group communication
- services; set up a working group to harmonize current development
- activities in group communications with the aim of early deployment;
- hold a workshop to propose a harmonized programme of work in the
- future programmes of ESPRIT and DARPA/NSF. The one year target is to
- provide administrative support for maintaining email mailing lists,
- bulletin boards and shared databases, and to deploy facilities for
- multi-site interactive blackboards. The main three year target is to
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- provide intercontinental services based on mature "advanced
- groupware" facilities.
-
- VIDEO CONFERENCING (6.7) Within a year install existing technology at
- a limited number of sites in both regions; within three years extend
- these, probably according to international standards, to have enough
- sites to be available without undue travel; organize a workshop on
- packet/ISDN/ATM video conferencing.
-
- COMPUTER SUPPORTED COLLABORATIVE GROUP WORKING (6.8 and 7) Set up a
- workshop to study the needs of a collaborative effort to provide
- intercontinental packet video, multimedia conferencing and computer
- supported collaborative group technology facilities. The workshop
- should, within a year, propose actions which could be made the basis
- of a future harmonized ESPRIT and DARPA/NSF work program. Within
- three years set up a transatlantic testbed facility to support
- collaborative research programs.
-
- ACCESS TO UNIQUE RESOURCES (6.9) Organize a workshop dedicated to
- analysing the needs, and defining the steps required, to provide
- pilot access to one or more specific such resources - with due
- attention to networking needs, security provisions, documentation and
- advisory requirements, and usage policies. This is to be done within
- a year - within three years one or more significant transatlantic
- pilots should be set up demonstrating remote secured access.
-
- DISTRIBUTED VISUALIZATION (6.10) A working group should be set up to
- select which current development efforts in distributed visualization
- to support, identify required standards and begin to distribute
- techniques and software, all within a year. Its year 3 target should
- be to establish mutually agreed upon standards and demonstrate
- transatlantic distributed visualization applications.
-
- NETWORK MANAGEMENT (6.11) Convene an international research network
- operations, planning and management team to develop and apply
- procedural and technical recommendations for international network
- management; organize a set of international network operations
- centers devoted to configuration management, fault detection,
- isolation and repair of network problems; form one or more
- intercontinental Computer Emergency Response Teams to coordinate
- response to attacks against hosts and networks and to develop
- procedures for collecting actionable evidence. Within one year put
- in place an administrative structure to coordinate existing
- facilities manually and to plan technical solutions; within three
- years technology for automating international network management
- should have been developed and deployed.
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- MULTI-PROTOCOL SUPPORT (6.12) Validate current multi-protocol
- solutions, with a one year target of supporting campus-to-campus
- communication for a subset of coexisting protocol suites (at least
- OSI and TCP/IP), and of deploying internationally supported versions
- of existing application level (protocol-translating) gateways;
- collaborate on research and experimentation with multi-protocol
- routing and resource allocation; make recommendations, to funders and
- national research network service providers, on technical solutions
- and standards for multi-protocol support. Within three years deploy
- improved management and resource allocation facilities for multi-
- protocol routers in order to provide service guarantees.
-
- CLIENT-SERVER FACILITIES (6.13) Within one year provide limited
- bandwidth intercontinental X-windows, and convene workshops to
- achieve agreements on Remote Procedure Call and Intercontinental
- Distributed File System protocols; form a working group on support
- for X-Windows in OSI and to validate performance through TCP/TPn
- protocol translating gateways; initiate collaboration on
- implementation and test of intercontinental RPC and distributed file
- systems. The main three year target is to achieve support for
- intercontinental RPC and Distributed File Systems.
-
- ARCHIVAL STORAGE FOR DISTRIBUTED COMPUTING ENVIRONMENTS (6.14)
- Convene an international workshop whose goals are to ascertain the
- relevance to this group of the data storage reference model that is
- nearly ready to be declared an official standard guide; to carry out
- an on-going discussion of the system issues that have to be developed
- as a result of this model; to arrive at solutions to be proposed by
- vendors and users for implementations of Data Systems Storage
- Solutions which are modular, interconnectable, and standard.
-
- DATA REPRESENTATION AND EXCHANGE (6.15) It is proposed that an
- international working group be established to recommend a standard
- collection of software encompassing a variety of data
- representations. This working group should address the issue of data
- identification embedded in the data stream to allow for later
- extensions. After an initial planning meeting, the group would
- schedule subsequent meetings annually to finalise the current data
- exchange standard recommendation, and to define new work scopes. The
- working group would also make their recommendation known to other
- standards bodies.
-
- TRANSATLANTIC AND CONTINENTAL DISTRIBUTION FACILITIES (6.16) This
- item is put last only because it is a corollary of the preceding
- recommendations. Use existing joint US/European coordination
- mechanisms (e.g., CCIRN) for planning of higher speed, transatlantic
- links; convene a special CEC/DARPA/NSF task force to consider much
- higher speed transatlantic capacity sharing options; ensure that
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- there is an infrastructure in Europe paralleling the US one of
- providing the majority of relevant campuses access at speeds
- approaching 1.5 Mb/s; encourage European user groups with high data
- transmission requirements to aggregate their data transmission
- facilities; attempt to integrate European application projects (like
- the RACE Applications Pilots) to assist in providing an appropriate
- European distribution network with 10-500 Mb/s access to appropriate
- campuses. The one year targets are to install 2 Mb/s multi-protocol
- distribution facilities in Europe, and 1.5 Mb/s (or higher)
- transatlantic capacity. The three year targets are to install 2
- additional 1.5 Mb/s (or higher) transatlantic links, and to determine
- the feasibility of sharing much higher bandwidth transatlantic links.
-
- 1. INTRODUCTION
-
- The Networks and Infrastructure Working Group (NIWG) attempted to
- synthesize requirements and identify potential cooperative
- development efforts for network-based capabilities both by internal
- discussion within the working group and through interaction with the
- other working groups in the workshop.
-
- It is essential for the facilities supporting DARPA/NSF-ESPRIT
- collaboration to be consistent with services being used by the US and
- European projects for their own internal collaboration. We have,
- therefore, had to consider both what facilities must be available in
- the two regions separately and then what must be done to facilitate
- US-European collaboration.
-
- Between the US and Europe, the Coordinating Committee for
- Intercontinental Research Networks (CCIRN) is addressing the
- improvement of coordination of network services. To support US
- DARPA/NSF and ESPRIT collaboration, it will be necessary to extend
- the use of network services in each region as well as to improve the
- quality of services linking the regions.
-
- The NIWG met both in Brussels and in Washington. It was led by Ira
- Richer (DARPA) and Rolf Speth (CEC) in Brussels, and Tom Weber (NSF)
- and Rosalie Zobel (CEC) in Washington. The participants were largely
- different in the two meetings, but it was agreed that there would be
- a common set of minutes. It is a commentary on the quality of the
- infrastructure available to some of the participants that nine
- people, from both sides of the Atlantic, contributed to these minutes
- over five days - all by email. The participants are listed in
- Appendix A; a complete set of addresses (including telephone,
- facsimile and email) are given in Appendix B. Because many of the
- abbreviations used here may not be familiar to all the readers, a
- Glossary of Terms is given in Appendix C.
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- 2. SCOPE AND OBJECTIVES
-
- The scope of the working group was to concentrate on generic,
- network-based user services considered helpful for a wide range of
- collaborative work between US and European groups. We distinguished
- between the capabilities which would benefit from immediate attention
- or were required in the short term (e.g., within a year), and those
- which required longer term development. While the prescribed scope
- was to act only in support of the other groups by making use of
- available technology, we identified one area where we felt more
- research and development was an important adjunct to our scope.
-
- The working group agreed that the major objectives, based on
- instructions given in the opening plenary sessions, were to identify
- the following:
-
- (i) user requirements which must be satisfied to support
- cooperative US/European research;
-
- (ii) technical and other infrastructure requirements which must be
- satisfied to support cooperative US/European research;
-
- (iii) opportunities and potential means for satisfying these
- requirements;
-
- (iv) potential obstacles to achieving the desired support;
-
- (v) mutual benefits which would accrue to the participants in
- recommended cooperative projects;
-
- (vi) promising collaborative development activities needed for
- a better infrastructure.
-
- 3. MOTIVATION FOR COLLABORATION ON NETWORKING AND INFRASTRUCTURE
-
- Computer networking, by its very nature, requires cooperation and
- collaboration among the participants developing, implementing,
- deploying and operating the hardware and software comprising the
- system. The long-term vision is the creation of an infrastructure
- which provides the user (rather than the network) with a distributed
- multi-vendor heterogeneous computing environment - with transatlantic
- facilities approaching those available locally.
-
- A major element of successful networking is the agreement on
- standards which are to be met by all systems included in the network.
- Beyond technical agreements, there must also be concurrence on
- operational procedures, performance objectives, support for the users
- of the network and ability to plan for enhancement and growth of
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- network services.
-
- A consequence of these observations is that virtually any effort to
- provide network service support to ESPRIT-DARPA/NSF collaboration
- should be carried out cooperatively between the US and European
- network research, design, development, engineering and operations
- communities.
-
- 4. CURRENT STATE OF NETWORKING IN THE US AND EUROPE
-
- In the DARPA/NSF communities, there is heavy use of electronic mail
- and computer networking to support a wide range of scientific
- research. There is heavy use of the TCP/IP and DECNET protocols as
- well as special electronic mail protocols in the BITNET and Unix
- users networks (e.g., UUNET). Email use varies in intensity among
- different research disciplines.
-
- There is an emerging interest in and use of OSI-based protocols,
- particularly for email (X.400) and directory services (X.500). Most
- of the backbone networks making up the Internet use 1.5 Mb/s
- telecommunications facilities although the NSFNET will be installing
- a high speed, 45 Mb/s subnetwork during 1990. There are many Local
- Area Networks (LANs). Plans are in place to support both IP (as in
- TCP/IP) and CLNP (as in OSI) datagram protocols in backbone and
- regional networks. Most of these protocols are already supported on
- LANs. On a selective research basis, a set of 1000 Mb/s research
- testbeds are being installed during 1990-1993.
-
- In Europe, especially amongst the ESPRIT collaborators, there is more
- limited use of computer networking, with the primary emphasis on the
- use of electronic mail and bulletin boards. There is a strong focus
- on OSI protocols in European wide-area networks, but there is a
- considerably amount of TCP/IP use on LANs, and growing use of TCP/IP
- in Wide Area Networks (WANs) in some countries. Most of the national
- wide-area networks are based on the CCITT X.25 protocols with access
- speeds up to 64 Kb/s, though higher access speeds in the 2 Mb/s range
- are planned for many countries, and just becoming available in some.
- An X.25 international backbone (IXI) has just become operational,
- which connects in the National Research Networks and/or the Public
- Packet Data Networks in each Western Europe country at 64 Kb/s. The
- funding of this network has only been agreed for a further short
- period, and plans to upgrade it to higher speed access are not
- agreed. There are many LANs in place. The OSI connection-oriented
- network service (CONS) is layered above X.25, but there is growing
- interest in supporting the connectionless service (CLNS) concurrently
- with the Internet IP in national and international backbone networks.
- Application testbeds at higher speeds are planned under the CEC RACE
- programme. Many of its higher level user services have not been
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- specified collaboratively - as would be required for wide deployment.
- These points are explained further in Section 6.
-
- Thus although provisions or plans regarding National networks in some
- CEC member states are not so far behind the American facilities, one
- must note that in effect, because of continental backbone
- limitations, Pan-European facilities are at least a generation
- behind. Specifically, both with respect to existing and planned
- backbone provisions, there is a factor of 25 difference between
- Europe and the USA. In addition, this approximate comparison
- flatters the European scene, since it compares facilities that are
- just coming into existence, and plans that are not yet agreed or
- funded, on the European side with facilities that have been available
- for some time, and plans that will be realised before the end of this
- year, in the USA.
-
- 5. POLLS OF THE OTHER WORKING GROUPS
-
- The NIWG polled the other seven working groups meeting in Brussels
- and Washington to find out what networking and infrastructure support
- their collaborations might require. In general, a strong emphasis
- was placed on the provision of reliable and timely email, easier
- accessibility of email service, user support and information on
- existence and use of available services. There was serious concern
- about privacy, and great interest in transparency (i.e., hiding the
- details of intercontinental networking).
-
- Some users mentioned that FAX was easier to use and apparently more
- ubiquitous than email for their communities (there are over 12 M
- facsimile machines installed world-wide). Interest in integrating
- FAX and email was noticeable. Most users recognised the many
- advantages of email for multiple addressees, subsequent reprocessing,
- relaying and cost.
-
- The requirement for large file transfer was patchy. Many did not
- require such facilities, but several groups required transfer of 100
- MB files and some even 1 GB. Many groups desired remote log-in, but
- found present performance - even on the Internet - inadequate.
- Several wanted global file services and file sharing.
-
- Many groups wished to use video conferencing - but only if they did
- not have to travel more than two hours to a suitable facility. Some
- groups were interested in computer supported group collaboration -
- but most did not understand this term.
-
- One group (Vision) desired real time transfer at 300 Mb/s, but most
- had much more modest user-user needs. The needs for less visible
- features like network management, client-user technology, remote
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- visualization standards and data representation and exchange formats
- were not voiced explicitly. However they could be deduced from the
- services which the users did request.
-
- 6. USER SERVICES NEEDED IN THE SHORT AND MEDIUM TERM
-
- To support collaboration between the research workers, we need a
- number of services between the end users. These require provisions
- which impinge on many management domains: inside individual campuses;
- campus-wide area gateways; national distribution; regional-
- intercontinental gateways; intercontinental distribution. However,
- from the users' viewpoint, this set of services should constitute a
- system whose internal details are not, or at least should not, be of
- concern. It is the overall performance and reliability exhibited,
- and the facilities made available to the user (and their cost), which
- matter. Inadequacies of bandwidth, protocols, or administrative
- support anywhere in the chain between the end users are, to them,
- inadequacies in the system as a whole.
-
- To some extent more funding from DARPA/NSF and the CEC can alleviate
- the current difficulties. However it is likely that such funding
- will impact only the international and intercontinental components.
- It is essential that the end-user distribution be strengthened also.
- In the US this requires both Regional and Campus Networks. In
- Europe, it requires activity by the National network authorities
- (usually represented in RARE and/or COSINE), and by the Campus
- network providers. Moreover, not only must the transmission
- facilities be strengthened, but also the appropriate protocol suites
- must be supported; this may require policy decisions as well as
- technical measures.
-
- We indicate below the services which are required immediately, and
- are visible to the end-users. They often have implications to the
- service providers which have far-reaching consequences. Some of the
- services are urgent user services; some are underpinning requirements
- needed to assure the user services; some are longer term needs.
- There is clearly a strong interaction between the user services and
- the underpinning ones; there is also some between the user services
- themselves. Partly as a result of our own deliberations, and partly
- as a result of our polls of the other working groups, we have
- identified needs in the areas below.
-
- USER SERVICES
-
- In most cases these are services which are available in local or
- homogeneous environments. For the proposed collaborations they must
- be available on an intercontinental basis between heterogeneous
- systems.
-
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- 6.1 Electronic Mail
-
- The current email services between the US and Europe suffer from gaps
- in connectivity, lack of reliability and poor responsiveness. These
- problems stem, in part, from the multiplicity of protocols used (and
- requiring translation) and in part from an inadequate operations and
- maintenance infrastructure. There are few user and directory support
- services available; access to, and use of, email service varies
- dramatically. However, some initial cooperative work has started
- already between RARE Working Group 1 and participants in the Internet
- Engineering Task Force in the area of email.
-
- 6.1.1 One Year Targets
-
- (i) Provide management structure to support user assistance and
- reliable operation of email relays;
-
- (ii) Achieve routine expectation of proper and timely (less than
- 1 hour campus-campus) delivery.
-
- 6.1.2 Three Year Targets
-
- (i) Provide global, email directory services;
-
- (ii) Develop and deploy a return/receipt facility;
-
- (iii) Provide support for privacy and authenticity.
-
- 6.1.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Initiate an intercontinental email operations forum involving
- email service providers in the US and Europe to define and
- implement operational procedures leading to high reliability;
-
- (ii) Task the email operations forum to develop functional and
- performance specifications for email gateways (relays);
-
- (iii) Organize an international email user support group;
-
- (iv) Organize a collaborative working group to analyse email
- interoperability problems (X.400, UUCP, SMTP, EARN, EUROKOM,
- BITNET) and make recommendations for specific developments to
- improve interoperability.
-
- Included in the terms of reference should be requirements for
- cryptographic support for privacy, authenticity and integrity of
- email. This work could include specific collaboration on X.400 and
- SMTP privacy enhancement methods. (Note there are serious
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- international obstacles to achieving progress in areas involving
- cryptographic technology.)
-
- See Directory Services section for further possible actions.
-
- 6.2 Compound Document Electronic Mail
-
- While proprietary solutions for compound documents (text, font
- support, geometric graphics, bit-map graphic, spread-sheets, voice
- annotation, etc.) exist, these are limited to products of single
- manufacturers. While international standards for compound documents
- exist, these are still evolving, and few real commercial products
- based on the standards exist. Nevertheless, both proprietary and
- open systems compound document mail services could be made available
- reasonably quickly.
-
- 6.2.1 One Year Targets
-
- (i) Support proprietary compound document email for groups
- interested in using specific conforming products;
-
- (ii) Provide experimental services to groups with open systems
- offerings using several products. Support interoperation
- for multi-font text, bit-mapped and geometric graphics. The
- software could be provided from that arising from the
- combination of a previous NSF and an ESPRIT proposal.
-
- 6.2.2 Three Year Targets
-
- Provide support for open system compound document email and document
- exchange including the following facilities: spreadsheets; integrity,
- authentication and non-repudiation of origin of document parts;
- confidentiality of document parts.
-
- 6.2.3 Recommended Actions
-
- Hold a workshop to review the ongoing compound document research and
- development programmes in the two regions. One aim would be to
- recommend services for deployment in the short term. Another would
- be to propose work items in the NSF/DARPA and ESPRIT programmes to
- ensure a timely collaborative programme could start in mid-1991.
-
- 6.3 Directory Services
-
- White pages services to assist network users to find email addresses,
- computer services and other on-line facilities are, at best, only
- lightly deployed in both the US and Europe. If networked services
- are to become infrastructural in nature, directory services must be
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- widely implemented, deployed and easily accessible. In addition to
- working with international standards such as CCITT X.500, access to
- the installed base of white pages services (such as the US WHOIS
- service and the UK NRS service) is essential. These facilities are
- also needed to support key management for cryptographic services
- required for authenticity, integrity and confidentiality of email and
- other communications. Because there are different legal and
- organizational views of directory service information, it will also
- be critical to address organizational and international differences
- in the sensitivity of such data and its accessibility.
-
- It is essential that directory service databases be built and
- maintained throughout the US and European research communities.
-
- 6.3.1 One Year Targets
-
- (i) Get effective access to existing directory services
- (X.500 and others);
-
- (ii) Put in data for relevant NSF/DARPA and ESPRIT communities.
-
- 6.3.2 Three Year Targets
-
- (i) Provide tools to support database maintenance;
-
- (ii) Provide good knowledge-based navigation software;
-
- (iii) Provide strong authentication facilities;
-
- (iv) Provide capability-based access restrictions.
-
- 6.3.3 Recommended Actions
-
- Initiate a formal collaboration between ongoing US and European
- (e.g., RARE WG3) efforts to implement and maintain the relevant
- directory databases.
-
- 6.4 Interactive Login
-
- Interactive access to service systems in the US and Europe is, at
- present, only partly feasible. One inhibiting factor is incompatible
- protocol suites in use in the provision of such services. The
- implementation and deployment of common protocols, and the provision
- of protocol translation gateways, are needed to improve this
- situation.
-
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- 6.4.1 One Year Target
-
- Identify and install the best available interactive login software
- (using staging gateways, if necessary) on all interested sites.
-
- 6.4.2 Three Year Targets
-
- Improve interactive login performance to include support for:
-
- (i) "type of service" (quality or grade-of-service);
-
- (ii) support for privacy;
-
- (iii) support for authentication;
-
- (iv) support for remote X-windows even through different protocol
- suites.
-
- 6.4.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Identify for which protocol suites interactive login will be
- supported;
-
- (ii) Determine mechanisms for good performance in staged facilities
- (i.e., in which it is necessary to login and then open
- manually new connections from the intermediate gateways);
-
- (iii) Develop a cooperative effort on authentication and privacy
- support.
-
- 6.5 File Services
-
- File transfers are not easily achieved in the multi-protocol
- environment, and long files cannot be transferred reliably. Manual
- movement of files through staged, protocol-translating gateways is
- awkward and often unreliable. Performance of file transfer software
- varies substantially. Improvements in file transfer facilities are
- needed, but there should also be other forms of file service based on
- shared file systems.
-
- 6.5.1 One Year Targets
-
- Develop or identify and install the best available file transfer
- software (providing staging gateways, if necessary) to support:
-
- (i) Multi-megabyte file transfers;
-
- (ii) Translation between distinct file transfer protocols;
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 13]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- (iii) High performance and robustness;
-
- (iv) Use of wide-area file systems, e.g., Andrew;
-
- (v) Ad hoc sharing of sections of file systems across two machines.
-
- 6.5.2 Three Year Targets
-
- Develop (or obtain) and deploy file transfer services with:
-
- (i) support for privacy, authentication and integrity;
-
- (ii) support for automatic staging through several file transfer
- relays;
-
- (iii) support for multi-party access of selected portions of file
- systems across multiple machines.
-
- 6.5.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) In conjunction with RARE WG4 and IETF, identify best available
- products for multi-hop (staged) file transfer;
-
- (ii) Define and carry out comparative performance tests to select
- best available file transfer software, including checkpointing;
-
- (iii) Define and implement fuller multi-hop, multi-protocol
- facilities with automated staging, security and management
- facilities;
-
- (iv) Develop access control models, policies and mechanisms to
- support collaborative file access by ad hoc groups.
-
- 6.6 Group Communication Services
-
- Coordination of collaborative efforts can be substantially enhanced
- through provision of mailing lists, bulletin boards and shared
- databases. Setting up and managing such facilities, however,
- typically requires special knowledge and privileges. Making it
- possible to set up and operate such facilities easily and without
- special privileges would enhance the infrastructure of support for
- collaborative activities between the US and Europe (and within each
- region as well).
-
- More advanced group communication services such as shared screens
- with voice teleconferencing, distributed publishing through
- electronic libraries, and various forms of teleconferencing, might
- relieve some of the necessity for face-to-face meetings, if
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 14]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- sufficiently reliable and easy to use. The prior use of such
- facilities make subsequent face-to-face meetings much more productive
- also. Of course, time zone differences are a challenge to any real-
- time conferencing schemes, and are often the primary rationale for
- arranging face-to-face conferences which "force" participants to
- enter the same time zone for the duration of the meeting.
-
- 6.6.1 One Year Targets
-
- (i) Provide administrative support for setting up and maintaining
- email mailing lists, bulletin boards and shared databases;
-
- (ii) Provide facilities for multi-site interactive blackboards
- including text, graphics, spreadsheets and program access.
-
- 6.6.2 Three Year Targets
-
- (i) Provide intercontinental services based on more mature "advanced
- groupware" facilities including shared screens and voice
- services;
-
- (ii) Extend interactive blackboard to include slow scan video, voice,
- animation, and using international standards where feasible.
-
- 6.6.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Form a support/working group on the use of tools, standards and
- facilities for group communication services;
-
- (ii) Initiate collaboration on advanced group communications (e.g.,
- shared screens, distributed electronic publishing, etc.).
-
- 6.7 Video Conferencing
-
- Facilities for low bandwidth (under 1 Mb/s) interactive video/voice
- conferencing (e.g., packet-based) are, at present, unavailable for
- support of intercontinental collaboration. Even two-party
- videoconferencing could be beneficial initially. The comments from
- the other seven working groups showed a strong interest in the use of
- videoconferencing, provided the travel to the relevant facilities did
- not exceed two hours. This should impact the eventual deployment
- plans for the facilities.
-
- Minimum facilities needed for video conferencing include at least 256
- Kb/s across the Atlantic for each concurrent conferencing channel. A
- video codec, two cameras and three monitors are needed at each site
- along with suitable packetizing equipment if a packet-mode system is
- to be deployed. There exists at least one such system in use in the
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 15]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- US, developed by DARPA and used regularly for transcontinental
- working group meetings. Another such system is just being
- commissioned (at University College London).
-
- 6.7.1 One Year Target
-
- Deploy two-party videoconferencing facilities in at least four sites
- on each continent.
-
- 6.7.2 Three Year Target
-
- Develop and deploy multi-party conferencing capability on a larger
- scale on both continents, to make the facilities accessible more
- widely to the collaborators with less travel penalty.
-
- 6.7.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Install existing technology at a limited number of sites in
- both regions, in line with the desire to limit travel
- mentioned above;
-
- (ii) Organize a workshop on packet/ISDN/ATM videoconferencing.
-
- 6.8 Multimedia Computer Supported Group Working
-
- The NSF has initiated an effort on collaboration technology
- development and experimentation under the rubric: Collaboratory.
- Similar research is in progress under the ESPRIT programme. While
- the subject of the NIWG's discussions was designated as
- infrastructure support for the other research collaborations, we
- believe it is very appropriate to mount a collaborative programme
- among US and European researchers, which would enhance Collaboratory
- efforts and force both groups to come to grips with problems of
- supporting collaboration techniques across intercontinental
- distances.
-
- 6.8.1 One Year Target
-
- Harmonise the ESPRIT and NSF Collaboratory research programmes.
-
- 6.8.2 Three Year Target
-
- Set up a common, transatlantic testbed facility to support
- collaborative research programmes.
-
- 6.8.3 Recommended Actions
-
- Set up a workshop to study the needs of a collaborative effort to
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 16]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- provide intercontinental packet video, multimedia conferencing and
- computer supported collaborative group technology facilities. The
- workshop should propose actions which could be made the basis of a
- future harmonised ESPRIT and DARPA/NSF work programme.
-
- 6.9 Access to Unique Resources
-
- A number of resources can be labelled unique in the scope of
- ESPRIT/DARPA/NSF or even on a worldwide basis. Their uniqueness may
- derive from their nature (e.g., large test facilities or a focus
- point of knowledge in a discipline) or be such in a transitory phase.
- In the spirit of the future EC/US cooperation, it is clear that there
- should be agreed access to some such resources. This will require:
-
- (i) Provision of appropriate access and usage information;
-
- (ii) Physical access for visitors;
-
- (iii) Continued non-local access.
-
- The third point has clear networking implication. Appropriate remote
- access to the resources, connectivity to the users and adequate
- access speeds have to be provided, possibly together with access
- control facilities.
-
- The most demanding cases are those of newly developed products; their
- transitory uniqueness does not allow one to amortise costs over
- substantial periods as would be reasonable for large scale centres
- like NCAR or CERN.
-
- 6.9.1 One Year Target
-
- (i) Identify appropriate unique transitory resources
- (e.g., Touchstone);
-
- (ii) Specify the provisions needed to make at least one such
- resource available.
-
- 6.9.2 Three Year Target
-
- Set up one or more significant transatlantic pilots demonstrating
- remote, secured access.
-
- 6.9.3 Recommended Actions
-
- Organise a workshop dedicated to analysing the needs and defining the
- steps required to provide pilot access to one or more specific such
- resources. The workshop may need to address networking needs,
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 17]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- security provisions, documentation and advisory requirements,
- modification of current access capabilities, and usage policies.
-
- 6.10 Distributed Visualization
-
- Scientific visualization applications often involve multiple
- resources. These resources can span a complete range of
- sophistication, from simple hardcopy at one end to elaborate
- rendering at the other end. Interactive graphics workstations,
- supercomputers and specialized scientific databases may all be
- involved in a single application. The scientist at a workstation
- should be able to view all of these resources as a single network
- resource, although they may be physically distributed over
- considerable distances. A typical example is a high performance
- graphics workstation, a supercomputer and a network to connect them
- together, all with appropriate software. The workstation may be
- close to the supercomputer or distant from it.
-
- Currently there are efforts underway at several installations -
- including ones funded by NSF/DARPA and ESPRIT - to develop
- techniques, interfaces and software necessary to create this
- environment. In limited instances it already exists. Better
- coordination of these efforts on both sides of the Atlantic would be
- desirable. Coordinating such efforts across the Atlantic will be
- necessary for effective collaboration in end-user visualization
- applications in a variety of disciplines to take place in the future.
-
- 6.10.1 One Year Targets
-
- Identify the significant current development efforts in these areas
- and determine which ones to support. Identify the areas requiring
- standards. Minimize duplication of effort and begin to distribute
- the techniques and software.
-
- 6.10.2 Three Year Targets
-
- Establish mutually agreed upon standards. Demonstrate transatlantic
- distributed visualization applications.
-
- 6.10.3 Recommended Actions
-
- Establish a working group to further refine and to implement the one
- year and three year targets and to identify additional distributed
- visualization topics that would benefit from coordinated efforts.
- Determine the appropriate mechanisms for supporting such
- collaborations.
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- UNDERLYING SERVICES
-
- Most of the services described below are required to achieve the
- goals of reliability, availability and transparency of the user
- services.
-
- 6.11 Network Management
-
- Current network management technology and practice are not adequate
- to support large scale, international research networks. Time-zone
- differences and lack of organizational operational network management
- agreements combine to make international network management a serious
- challenge. To be effective, network management must operate on a
- campus-to-campus basis, since the campuses are the sources and sinks
- of traffic in the system.
-
- 6.11.1 One Year Target
-
- Put in place an administrative structure to coordinate existing
- facilities manually and to plan technical solutions.
-
- 6.11.2 Three Year Target
-
- Develop and deploy technology for automating international network
- management.
-
- 6.11.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Convene an international research network operations,
- planning and management team to develop and apply
- procedural and technical recommendations for international
- network management;
-
- (ii) Organize a set of international network operations centres
- devoted to configuration management, fault detection,
- isolation and repair of network problems;
-
- (iii) Form one or more intercontinental Computer Emergency Response
- Teams to coordinate response to attacks against hosts and
- networks and to develop procedures for collecting actionable
- evidence.
-
- 6.12 Multi-protocol Support
-
- Users depend on a variety of protocols to support their research.
- The international network infrastructure does not uniformly support
- the use of multiple protocols (e.g., DECNET, TCP/IP/ST, OSI) on an
- end-to-end basis. The use of various portions of the international
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 19]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- network also may be restricted by policy, and this must be
- accommodated in implementing routing for campus-to-campus protocols.
-
- Support for campus-to-campus multi-protocol transmission and routing
- is needed at a minimum of 64 Kb/s end-to-end - higher for the support
- of some of the services. Where the end-users have adopted similar
- protocols, the intervening networks should not impede the full
- exploitation of the facilities available in the chosen protocol
- suite. Where different protocol suites are used, high quality
- application-level gateways which can translate among protocols are
- needed also; to the greatest extent possible, these should allow
- people to use their own procedures, even though they are
- communicating with services which use different ones. For some
- services, this will lead to a requirement to upgrade access, and
- possibly even transparent access (including protocol conversion), to
- at least 1.5 Mb/s between individual campuses in the US and Europe.
-
- 6.12.1 One Year Targets
-
- (i) Support campus-to-campus communication for a subset of
- coexisting protocol suites (at least OSI and TCP/IP) at a
- minimum of 64 Kb/s;
-
- (ii) Deploy internationally supported versions of existing
- application level (protocol-translating) gateways.
-
- 6.12.2 Three Year Targets
-
- (i) Improve management and resource allocation for multi-protocol
- routers (e.g., to achieve service guarantees);
-
- (ii) Support campus-to-campus communication at a minimum of 1.5 Mb/s.
-
- 6.12.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Validate current multi-protocol solutions for intercontinental,
- and indeed campus-to-campus use;
-
- (ii) Collaborate on research and experimentation with multi-protocol
- routing and resource allocation;
-
- (iii) Make recommendations, to funders and national research network
- service providers, on technical solutions and standards for
- multi-protocol support.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- 6.13 Client-Server Technology
-
- Among the more important computer communications techniques emerging
- on a widespread basis during the last decade is the client-server
- model of interprocess communication. This notion was actually
- developed during the earliest stages of packet network exploration
- and dramatically enhanced with the invention of local area networks
- (such as Ethernet) which could support very high speed, low delay
- inter-computer exchanges. Applications of this concept range from
- remote procedure calls to remote file access and support for remote,
- bit-mapped graphics.
-
- At present, these techniques work best in a high bandwidth, low delay
- environment; they are generally not well-supported in wide-area,
- intercontinental networks. Collaborative efforts between the US and
- Europe could be enhanced substantially by support for client-server
- services on an intercontinental basis. Such facilities would permit
- collaborative use of distributed filing systems, X-windows
- applications and other distributed computing applications. High
- capacity, low-delay channels will be needed on an intercontinental
- basis to support serious use of this technology. In addition,
- agreement must be reached on which protocols should be used to
- support this technology.
-
- 6.13.1 One Year Targets
-
- (i) Provide limited bandwidth intercontinental X-Windows support
- for graphical user interfaces;
-
- (ii) Achieve agreements on intercontinental Remote Procedure Call
- and Distributed File System protocols;
-
- (iii) Validate support of X-Windows under OSI and through protocol
- translating gateways.
-
- 6.13.2 Three Year Targets
-
- (i) Achieve selective support for intercontinental remote
- visualization;
-
- (ii) Achieve support for intercontinental RPC and Distributed File
- Systems.
-
- 6.13.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Convene workshops to achieve agreements on intercontinental
- Remote Procedure Call and Distributed File System protocols;
-
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 21]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- (ii) Form working group on support for X-Windows in OSI and to
- validate performance through TCP/TPn protocol translating
- gateways;
-
- (iii) Initiate collaboration on implementation and test of
- intercontinental RPC and distributed file systems.
-
- Section 6.14 Archival Storage for Distributed Computing Environments
-
- There are several major issues that must be addressed by distributed
- computing environments (DCEs) containing supercomputers. Resolution
- of these issues is likely to evolve over the next five to ten years.
-
- One such issue is archival storage and bitfile management for the
- complete environment. Several problems have to be resolved to
- appropriately handle this situation. The first problem is the
- global-naming of bitfiles that are being moved through the DCE
- to/from the archive. Second, the file system hierarchy must be
- defined. Third, there is the question of how the DCE knows the file
- system hierarchy for which it is responsible, and the location of the
- boundary through which the network and the archival system operate.
- Lastly, there is the question how the file system hierarchy is
- divided across a DCE and within a supercomputer.
-
- A second issue in the DCE is the need for all nodes obtaining or
- storing data to know the storage media differences. For future
- systems, this requirement manifests itself both at the distributed
- nodes and at the supercomputer because of the differences in the
- physical media structure.
-
- The third issue is the delineation of the bitfile attributes. This
- relates to how the data must be maintained as it migrates through the
- hierarchy, as well as through the DCE. The bitfile carries
- attributes based upon its location in the hierarchy, or in the DCE,
- that may be different from those needed at the supercomputer level.
- Many of these attributes are related to the data content and where it
- resides in time within the DCE. Section 6.15 discusses some of the
- possible meta-data representation methodologies that may be used but
- are not yet standardized.
-
- Another issue is the determination and implementation of the site
- policy that is to dictate data migration and allocation inside the
- DCE archival storage system.
-
- Several working committees are attacking the various problems
- delineated above, and are trying to confront the difficulties in
- these environments. This work is progressing mostly in the United
- States. The IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Mass
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- Storage Systems is in the process of developing a Computer Society
- draft standard on data storage systems. The current working draft
- provides a consistent terminology and an object-oriented design for
- defining storage subsystem components, whether they are being built
- around a single system or in a DCE. Other groups in the computing
- community are currently dealing with the problems of data migration
- within a distributed environment. This distributed environment may
- or may not include a supercomputer, but it almost always includes a
- high-volume storage system of some sort delineated as a "mass storage
- system." This subject was not discussed long enough at the meeting to
- deduce one year or three year targets - indeed these may well be set
- by the relevant National working groups.
-
- 6.14.1 Recommended Actions
-
- Convene an international workshop whose goals are:
-
- 1. An understanding of the contents of the data storage reference
- model that is nearly ready to be declared an official standard
- guide;
-
- 2. To continue discussion of the various system issues that have
- to be developed as a result of this model;
-
- 3. To arrive at solutions to be proposed by vendors and users for
- implementations of Data Systems Storage Solutions which are
- modular, interconnectable, and standard.
-
- 6.15 Data Representation and Exchange
-
- The problem of data exchange between different computer architectures
- and operating systems has been existent since the deployment of the
- early computers. This problem has been exacerbated by the acceptance
- of the client-server paradigm as the provider of distributed
- services. Distributed computer services require immediate data
- exchange. In the past, data was exchanged on some medium, such as
- tape, and could be examined at leisure. Ad hoc data conversion
- routines were created to process the data, and were often embedded in
- the programs using the data. Data exchange in the client-server
- paradigm does not permit this leisurely data examination. Both the
- client and the server must be able to "call" software that is
- guaranteed to convert the exchanged data "on the spot." This
- guarantee also implies a standard format rather than the ability to
- convert all formats because it would be impossible to maintain
- multiple architecture conversion software and, of course, the size of
- such conversion software would be enormous.
-
- The issue of data exchange has been addressed resulting in many data
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- exchange software packages. A few of the currently more popular
- packages are XDR, HDF, NetCDF, PostScript and CCSDS. Each of these
- packages addresses a specific type of data. Some address bitmap
- data; one addresses the general encoding of "display" information.
- Some of these packages address various numerical representations in
- computers. It is unclear whether any existing package could or
- should be extended to solve all data exchange problems. However, a
- more realistic approach would be a collection of data exchange
- packages formed as the "standard."
-
- This item was discussed only briefly at the meeting, so that no one
- year or three year targets were specified.
-
- 6.15.1 Recommended Actions
-
- It is proposed that an international working group be established to
- recommend a standard collection of software encompassing a variety of
- data representations. This working group should address the issue of
- embedding identification of the data representations in the data
- stream to allow for later extensions. The working group would meet
- initially to establish a work-scope and to assign the members tasks.
- The group would schedule subsequent meetings (probably annually) to
- finalise the current data exchange standard recommendation, and to
- define new work scopes. The working group would also make their
- recommendation known to other standards bodies such as X/OPEN, UI,
- OSF, X Consortium, NIST, IEEE, ACM, etc.
-
- 6.16 Transatlantic Links and Continental Distribution
-
- At present, there is inadequate transatlantic capacity to support
- research collaborations involving significant amounts of computer-
- mediated communication. There is also considerable room for
- improvement in the distribution of capacity and enhancement of
- reliability of network service in Europe. Moreover, the point was
- made strongly that collaboration would be very difficult unless the
- infrastructure on the two sides was broadly comparable - even if the
- transatlantic capacity was per force lower. Moreover, it was sharply
- emphasised that there was a large requirement for transatlantic data
- flow in other fields - e.g., Space Science, Atmospheric Science and
- High Energy Physics. In the US these needs are being aggregated in
- the National Research and Engineering Network; such aggregation is
- required also in Europe and on a transatlantic basis.
-
- 6.16.1 One Year Targets
-
- (i) Install 2 Mb/s multi-protocol distribution facilities in Europe;
-
- (ii) Install 1.5 Mb/s (or higher) transatlantic capacity.
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- 6.16.2 Three Year Targets
-
- (i) Install 2 additional 1.5 Mb/s (or higher) transatlantic links
- by 1993;
-
- (ii) Determine feasibility of sharing much higher bandwidth
- intercontinental links (e.g., in the 51 Mb/s STS-1 range).
-
- 6.16.3 Recommended Actions
-
- (i) Use existing joint US/European coordination mechanisms
- (e.g., CCIRN) for planning of higher speed, transatlantic
- links;
-
- (ii) Convene a special CEC/DARPA/NSF task force to consider much
- higher speed transatlantic capacity sharing options;
-
- (iii) Ensure that there is an infrastructure in Europe, paralleling
- the US one, providing the majority of relevant campuses access
- at speeds approaching 1.5 Mb/s;
-
- (iv) Encourage European user groups with high data transmission
- requirements to aggregate their data transmission facilities.
- Attempt to integrate European application projects (like the
- RACE Applications Pilots) to assist in providing an appropriate
- European distribution network with 10 - 500 Mb/s access to
- appropriate campuses.
-
- 7. LONGER TERM INITIATIVES
-
- Although these were not discussed in any detail, for lack of time,
- the following areas emerged as of interest for longer term
- collaborative work:
-
- (i) Electronic Library Services (includes an important
- intellectual property rights component);
-
- (ii) Multi-media Computer Supported Collaborative Work;
-
- (iii) Portable Computing/Communications Environments;
-
- (iv) Distributed Computing using heterogeneous machines and unique
- facilities;
-
- (v) Compatible approaches to computer networks with Gb/s access
- speeds, and appropriate systems switching, transmission and
- protocols.
-
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 25]
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- It was felt that some collaborative research in these areas would
- have immense medium term benefits to the other communities - and
- would integrate well with the ongoing research programmes on both
- sides of the Atlantic.
-
- 8. OBSTACLES
-
- The largest single obstacle to the provision of the facilities
- outlined in this report are that development of the necessary
- facilities do not have priority to most funding agencies. This is
- exemplified by the role of our workshops in this series. Not only
- network provision, but also development of appropriate infrastructure
- application software and testbed activity, are essential.
-
- There are a number of problem areas which could benefit from official
- attention from CEC and US research funding agencies. For example,
- there are a number of open and proprietary protocol suites which are
- candidates for use in US/European collaborative research. However,
- there is lack of political agreement as to how to deal with these
- various suites. It would be politically valuable if the CEC and US
- research agencies could issue a communique outlining common agreement
- on treatment of multiple protocols (e.g., expressing serious interest
- in supporting campus-to-campus communication using multiple
- protocols). Within the OSI protocol suite, there are differences as
- to which features ought to make up the standard profile for use by
- government-sponsored groups. Handling of connection-oriented and
- connectionless protocol elements within the suite is the subject of
- continued debate. Agreement to support at least TCP/IP and the
- connectionless network protocol in the OSI suite on an
- intercontinental basis would be beneficial to both parties; many CEC
- members would like connection-oriented network protocols to be
- supported also.
-
- European international tariffs are relatively high. This has
- inhibited the implementation of private networks and impeded progress
- on collaborative work between the US and Europe. A CEC initiative to
- come to grips with this problem could be quite helpful.
-
- There are a diversity of intra-European networking organizations
- which have technical, operational and policy interests. Planning for
- intercontinental networking infrastructure is sometimes confused by
- the variety of interested parties. Effort towards further
- coordination and rationalization of intra-European networking
- activities could make intercontinental planning somewhat easier.
-
- There is a strong interest in the use of cryptographic methods to
- provide privacy, authenticity and integrity assurance for various
- forms of intercontinental communication and at various levels in the
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- protocol hierarchies. Although there appears to be substantial
- technical activity in this area, progress is now impeded by national
- restrictions on the export of software which utilizes cryptographic
- methods. National use policies vary and the ability to apply these
- valuable and needed techniques is uncertain.
-
- Some national privacy and data protection laws prohibit the creation
- of directories containing personal information (e.g., email and
- postal addresses) and other laws limit what kinds of information (and
- in what form) can be transported across national borders.
-
- Handling of cryptographic exchanges, import/export of supporting
- software and exchanges of keying information are all potentially
- subject to national restrictions and constraints. The government
- agencies interested in promoting international collaboration may need
- to seek alternative international formulations of permitted practice
- to permit the required technical support.
-
- Finally, several organizations in the US and Europe have pointed out
- that the provision of networking infrastructure requires stable
- funding over significant periods of time. Stability for
- infrastructure support has been shaky in the US and in Europe and
- this presents an obstacle to achieving widespread and reliable
- network services to aid collaborative efforts.
-
- 9. CONCLUDING REMARKS
-
- The set of proposals contained in this report provide a realistic,
- staged approach to ameliorating the grave problems caused by the
- disparities with respect to bandwidth provision, user services and
- network protocol issues that impede widespread and close
- transatlantic collaboration at present between the ESPRIT and
- DARPA/NSF research workers. Their implementation will require a
- considerable degree of commitment to resolve present administrative
- difficulties, but the financial resources needed would, we estimate,
- be relatively modest and fully commensurate with the benefits to be
- gained.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Cerf, Kirstein, & Randell [Page 27]
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-
-
- APPENDIX A NIWG PARTICIPANTS
-
- (1) and (2) indicate the Brussels and Washington meetings respectively
-
- Co-chairmen:
-
- Ira Richer (1),(2) Rolf Speth (1) Tom Weber (2) Rosalie Zobel (1),(2)
- DARPA CEC NSF CEC
-
- Rapporteurs:
-
- Vint Cerf (1) Peter Kirstein (1), (2) Mike Levine (2)
- CNRI UCL PSC
-
- Other Participants:
-
- Franco Bigi (1) Adriano Endrizzi (1), (2) Juan Riera(1)
- William Bostwick (1) David Farber (1) Jack Thorpe (1)
- Bill Buzbee (2) Steve Goldstein (1) Jose Torcato (1), (2)
- Mike Eyre (2) Sid Karin (2) Klaus Ullmann (1)
- Robert Cooper (1) Barry Leiner (1) Paul Wilson (2)
- Steve Crocker(2) Jean-Pierre Peltier (2) Bill Wulf (2)
- Karel De Vriendt(1) Brian Randell (1), (2)
-
- APPENDIX B - NETWORKING AND INFRASTRUCTURE WORKING GROUP: TELEPHONE,
- EMAIL AND FAX NUMBERS
-
- Franci Bigi (1)
- CEC
- Rue de la Loi 2000
- B-1049
- Brussels
- BELGIUM
- Tel: +32 2 236 3493
- Fax: +32 2 235 6937
-
- William Bostwick (1)
- US Dept of Energy
- Tel: +1 703 276 3533
- Fax: +1 703 276 2536
- Email: bostwick@darpa.mil
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- Bill Buzbee (2)
- National Center for Atmospheric Research
- P.O. Box 3000
- Boulder, CO 80307
- USA
- Tel +1 303 497 120?
- Fax +1 303 497 1137
- Email buzbee@bierstadt.ucar.edu
-
- Vinton Cerf (1)
- Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI)
- 1895 Preston White Drive, Suite 100
- Reston, VA 22091
- USA
- Tel: +1 703 620 8990
- Fax: +1 703 620 0913
- Email: vcerf@nri.reston.va.us
-
- Robert Cooper (1)
- Rutherford and Appleton Laboratories
- Didcot, Oxon, 0x11 0QX
- UK
- Tel: +44 23544 5459
- Fax: +44 23544 5808
- Email: R.Cooper@Rutherford.AC.UK
-
- Steve Crocker (2)
- Trusted Information Systems
- 3060 Washington Road
- Glenwood, MD 21738
- USA
- Tel: +1 301 854 6889
- Fax: +1 301 854 5363
- Email: crocker@tis.com
-
- Adriano Endrizzi (1), (2)
- JRC
- 21020 ISPRA
- ITALY
- Tel: +39 332 789213
- Fax: +39 332 789098
- Email: a_endrizzi@cen.jrc.it
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- Michael Eyre (2)
- Architecture Projects Management Ltd (ANSA)
- Poseidon Ho
- Castle Park
- Cambridge
- CB3ORD
- UK
- Tel: +44 223 323010
- Fax: +44 223 359779
- Email: dme@ansa.co.uk
-
- David Farber (1)
- University of Pennsylvania
- 200 South 33rd Street
- Philadelphia, PA 19104-6389
- USA
- Tel: +1 215 898 9508
- Fax: +1 215 274 8293
- Email: farber@cis.upenn.edu
-
- Steve Goldstein (1)
- NSF
- 18th & G Street, NW
- Washington, DC 20550
- USA
- Tel: +1 202 357 9717
- Fax: +1 202 357 0320
- Email: sgoldstein@note.nsf.gov
-
- Sid Karin (2)
- San Diego Supercomputer Center
- University of California at San Diego
- San Diego, CA 92186-9784
- USA
- Tel: +1 619 534 5075
- Fax: +1 619 534 5113
- Email: Karin@sdsc.edu
-
- Peter Kirstein (1) (2)
- University College London
- Gower Street
- London
- WCIE GBT
- UK
- Tel: +44 71 380 7286
- Fax: +44 71 387 1397
- Email: kirstein@cs.ucl.ac.uk
-
-
-
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-
- Barry Leiner (1)
- Research Institute for Advanced Computer Science (RIACS)
- USA
- Tel: +1 415 694 6362
- Fax: +1 415 962 7772
- Email: leiner@riacs.edu
-
- Michael Levine (2)
- Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
- Carnegie Mellon University
- Pittsburgh, PA 15213 USA
- Tel: +1 412 268 4960
- Fax: +1 412 268 5832
- Email: levine @a.psc.edu
-
- Jean-Pierre Peltier (2)
- ONERA
- Chatillon CEDEX
- BP 72
- 92322
- FRANCE
- Tel: +33 1 4657 1160
- Fax: +33 1 4746 9025
- Email: Peltier@Froner81.bitnet
-
- Brian Randell (1), (2)
- Computing Laboratory
- University of Newcastle upon Tyne
- NE1 7RU
- UK
- Tel: +44 91 222 7923
- Fax: +44 91 222 8232
- Email: Brian.Randell@newcastle.ac.uk
-
- Ira Richer (1) (2)
- Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
- 1400 Wilson Bld
- Arlington, VA 22209
- USA
- USA
- Tel: +1 703 614 5800
- Fax: +1 703 614 5004
- Email: richer@darpa.mil
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
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-
- Juan Riera (1)
- University of Madrid
- ETSI
- Ciudad Universitaria
- E-28040
- Madrid
- ESPAGNA
- Tel: +34 1 449 5762
- Fax: +34 1 243 2077
- Email: jriera@dit.upm.es
-
- Rolf Speth (1)
- CEC
- Rue de la Loi 2000
- B-1049
- Brussels
- BELGIUM
- Tel: +32 2 236 0416
- Fax: +32 2 235 0655
- Email: Rolf_speth@eurokom.ie
-
- Jack Thorpe (1)
- Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency - Europe (DARPA-E)
- GERMANY
- Tel: +49 711 715 5418
- Fax: +49 711 715 5448
- Email: thorpe@darpa.mil
-
- Jose Torcato (1), (2)
- CEC, TR 61 0/10
- Rue de la Loi 2000
- B-1049
- Brussels
- BELGIUM
- Tel: +32 2 236 3537
- Fax: +32 2 235 6937
- Email: --
-
- Klaus Ullmann (1)
- Deutsche Forschungsnetz
- Pariserstr. 44
- D-1000 Berlin 15
- GERMANY
- Tel: +49 30 8842 9920
- Fax: +49 30 8842 9970
- Email: ullmann@zpl.dfn.dbp.de
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- Karel De Vriendt (1)
- CEC
- Rue de la Loi 2000
- B-1049
- Brussels
- BELGIUM
- Tel:
- Fax: +32 3 235 0655
- Email: k_d_v@eurokom.ie
-
- Thomas A. Weber (2)
- NSF
- 18th & G Street, NW
- Washington, DC 20550
- USA
- Tel: +1 202 357 7558
- Fax: +1 202 357 0320
- Email: tweber@note.nsf.gov
-
- Paul Wilson
- Computer Sciences Company Ltd.
- Computer Sciences House, Brunel Way
- Slough, Berkshire SL1 1XL
- UK
- Tel: 0753 73232
- Fax: 0753 516178
- Email: wilson@cs.nott.ac.uk
-
- Bill Wulf (2)
- University of Virginia
- Charlottesville, VA 22903-2442
- USA
- Tel: +1 804 982 2223
- Fax: +1 804 982 2214
- Email: wulf@virginia.edu
-
- Rosalie Zobel (1) (2)
- CEC
- Rue de la Loi 2000
- B-1049
- Brussels
- BELGIUM
- Tel: +32 2 236 0324
- Fax: +32 2 236 3031
- Email: R_Zobel@eurokom.ie
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- APPENDIX C GLOSSARY
-
- There is no attempt to provide a comprehensive glossary. However,
- some of the participants were unfamiliar with the terms used on the
- other side of the Atlantic, so some of the more parochial technical
- terms are defined below.
-
- CCITT - The international body responsible for recommendations
- to the National communications authorities.
-
- CLNP - Connectionless Network Protocol. A specific ISO/OSI
- protocol analgous to the IP mentioned below.
-
- CONS - Connection-oriented service. Another specific ISO/OSI
- protocol more aligned to the X.25 protocol mentioned below.
-
- Compound Document - Documents containing different content types
- including some of the following: text (possibly with various
- fonts), geometric graphics, bit-map graphics, spreadsheets,
- tables, animation, voice annotation.
-
- IAB - The Internet Activities Board. This is the body which
- guides the evolution of the TCP/IP protocol suite and the
- general Internet architecture. The Internet Engineering Task
- Force and Internet Research Task Force are subsidiary
- activities of the IAB.
-
- IETF - The Internet Engineering Task Force. This is a working
- group responsible for the specification, development and
- discussion of the operation of facilities in the Internet
- research networks, which are the basis of US research network
- services - but also have European counterparts and
- participation.
-
- Internet - The concatenations of packet-switched networks which
- comprise the research networks used by most of the contractors
- of the NSF and DARPA (amonsgst other US groups). The Internet
- also extends to other countries including some in Europe.
-
- IP - The Internet Protocol. This is the lowest level protocol which
- is the basis of the current Internet.
-
- ISO - The International Standards Organisation. The international
- organisation responsible for the standardisation of a broad
- range of facilities including network ones.
-
- IXI - The international packet switched network which has been
- installed by the European communication authorities as part
-
-
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- of a European project to provide an international backbone
- network linking in the West European National research (and
- public) networks.
-
- OSI - Open Systems Interconnection. An evolving set of ISO
- standards which should allow services on different host
- computers networks to inter-operate.
-
- RARE - The international committee comprising representatives of
- European National and international research networks.
-
- TCP/IP - The transport protocols currently used on the Internet.
-
- X.25 - The Network Access protocols specified by CCITT/OSI as
- standard.
-
- X.400 - The set of protocols for message services specified by
- CCITT/ISO.
-
- X.500 - The set of protocols for directory services specified by
- CCITT/ISO.
-
- Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are discussed in Sections 6.5, 6.9, and 6.11.
-
- Authors' Addresses
-
- Vinton G. Cerf
- Corporation for National Research Initiatives
- 1895 Preston White Drive, Suite 100
- Reston, VA 22091
-
- Phone: +1 703 620 8990
-
- Email: vcerf@nri.reston.va.us
-
-
- Peter Kirstein
- University College London
- Department of Computer Science
- Gower Street
- London WCIE GBT
- UK
-
- Phone: +44 71 380 7286
-
- Email: kirstein@cs.ucl.ac.uk
-
-
-
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- RFC 1210 Network and Infrastructure User Requirements March 1991
-
-
- Brian Randell
- Computing Laboratory
- University of Newcastle upon Tyne
- NE1 7RU
- UK
-
- Phone: +44 91 222 7923
-
- Email: Brian.Randell@newcastle.ac.uk
-
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