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- Network Working Group G. Malkin
- Request for Comments: 1177 FTP Software, Inc.
- FYI: 4 A. Marine
- SRI
- J. Reynolds
- ISI
- August 1990
-
-
- FYI on Questions and Answers
- Answers to Commonly asked "New Internet User" Questions
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This FYI RFC is one of three FYI's called, "Questions and Answers"
- (Q/A), produced by the User Services Working Group (USWG) of the
- Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). The goal is to document the
- most commonly asked questions and answers in the Internet.
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
- not specify any standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction.................................................... 1
- 2. Acknowledgements................................................ 2
- 3. Questions About the Internet.................................... 2
- 4. Questions About TCP/IP.......................................... 3
- 5. Questions About Internet Documentation.......................... 4
- 6. Questions about Internet Organizations and Contacts............. 6
- 7. Questions About Services........................................ 9
- 8. Mailing Lists................................................... 11
- 9. References...................................................... 11
- 10. Suggested Reading.............................................. 12
- 11. Condensed Glossary............................................. 12
- 12. Security Considerations........................................ 23
- 13. Authors' Addresses............................................. 24
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- New users joining the Internet community for the first time have had
- the same questions as did everyone else who has ever joined. Our
- quest is to provide the Internet community with up to date, basic
- Internet knowledge and experience, while moving the redundancies away
- from the electronic mailing lists so that the lists' subscribers do
- not have to read the same queries and answers over and over again.
-
- Future updates of this memo will be produced as USWG members become
-
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
-
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- aware of additional questions that should be included, and of
- deficiencies or inaccuracies that should be amended in this document.
- Additional FYI Q/A's will be published which will deal with
- intermediate and advanced Q/A topics.
-
- The Q/A mailing lists are maintained by Gary Malkin at FTP.COM. They
- are used by a subgroup of the USWG to discuss the Q/A FYIs. They
- include:
-
- quail@ftp.com This is a discussion mailing list. Its
- primary use is for pre-release (to the
- USWG) review of the Q/A FYIs.
-
- quail-request@ftp.com This is how you join the quail mailing list.
-
- quail-box@ftp.com This is where the questions and answers
- will be forwarded-and-stored. It is
- not necessary to be on the quail mailing
- list to forward to the quail-box.
-
- 2. Acknowledgements
-
- The following people deserve thanks for their help and contributions
- to the FYI Q/As: Berlin Moore (PREPNet), Craig Partridge (BBN),
- Jon Postel (ISI), Karen Roubicek (BBNST), James Van Bokkelen (FTP
- Software, Inc.), John Wobus (Syracuse University), and David Paul
- Zimmerman (Rutgers).
-
- 3. Questions About the Internet
-
- I just got on the Internet. What can I do now?
-
- You now have access to all the resources you are authorized to use
- on your own Internet host, on any other Internet host on which you
- have an account, and on any other Internet host that offers
- publicly accessible information. The Internet gives you the
- ability to move information between these hosts via file
- transfers. Once you are logged into one host, you can use the
- Internet to open a connection to another, log in, and use its
- services interactively. In addition, you can send electronic mail
- to users at any Internet site and to users on many non-Internet
- sites that are accessible via electronic mail.
-
- There are various other services you can use. For example, some
- hosts provide access to specialized databases or to archives of
- information. The Internet Resource Guide provides information
- regarding some of these sites. The Internet Resource Guide lists
- facilities on the Internet that are available to users. Such
-
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 2]
-
- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
-
-
- facilities include supercomputer centers, library catalogs and
- specialized data collections. The guide is published by the NSF
- Network Service Center (NNSC) and is continuously being updated.
- The Resource Guide is distributed free via e-mail (send a note to
- resource-guide-request@nnsc.nsf.net to join the e-mail
- distribution) and via anonymous FTP (in nnsc.nsf.net:resource-
- guide/*). Hardcopy is available at a nominal fee (to cover
- reproduction costs) from the NNSC. Call the NNSC at 617-873-3400
- for more information.
-
- How do I find out if a site has a computer on the Internet?
-
- Three good sources to consult are "!%@:: A Directory of Electronic
- Mail Addressing and Networks" by Donnalyn Frey and Rick Adams;
- "The User's Directory to Computer Networks", by Tracy LaQuey; and
- "The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems
- Worldwide", by John Quarterman.
-
- In addition, it is possible to find some information about
- Internet sites in the WHOIS database maintained at the DDN NIC at
- SRI International. The DDN NIC provides an information retrieval
- interface to the database that is also called WHOIS. To use this
- interface, Telnet to NIC.DDN.MIL and type "whois" (carriage
- return). No login is necessary. Type "help" at the whois prompt
- for more information on using the facility. WHOIS will show many
- sites, but may not show every site registered with the DDN NIC
- (simply for reasons having to do with how the program is set up to
- search the database).
-
- 4. Questions About TCP/IP
-
- What is TCP/IP?
-
- TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) [4,5,6]
- is the common name for a family of data-communications protocols
- used to tie computers and data-communications equipment into
- computer networks. TCP/IP originated for use on a network called
- ARPANET, but it is currently used on a large international network
- of universities, other research institutions, government
- facilities, and some corporations called the Internet. TCP/IP is
- also sometimes used for other networks, particularly local area
- networks that tie together numerous different kinds of computers
- or tie together engineering workstations.
-
- What are the other standard protocols in the TCP/IP family?
-
- Other than TCP and IP, the three main protocols in the TCP/IP
- suite are the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP), the File
-
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 3]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
-
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- Transfer Protocol (FTP), and the Telnet Protocol. There are many
- other protocols in use on the Internet. The Internet Activities
- Board (IAB) regularly publishes an RFC [2] that describes the
- state of standardization of the various Internet protocols. This
- document is the best guide to the current status of Internet
- protocols and their recommended usage.
-
- 5. Questions About Internet Documentation
-
- What is an RFC?
-
- The Request for Comments documents (RFCs) are working notes of the
- Internet research and development community. A document in this
- series may be on essentially any topic related to computer
- communication, and may be anything from a meeting report to the
- specification of a standard. Submissions for Requests for
- Comments may be sent to the RFC Editor, Jon Postel
- (POSTEL@ISI.EDU).
-
- Most RFCs are the descriptions of network protocols or services,
- often giving detailed procedures and formats providing the
- information necessary for creating implementations. Other RFCs
- report on the results of policy studies or summarize the work of
- technical committees or workshops.
-
- While RFCs are not refereed publications, they do receive
- technical review from either the task forces, individual technical
- experts, or the RFC Editor, as appropriate. Currently, most
- standards are published as RFCs, but not all RFCs specify
- standards.
-
- Anyone can submit a document for publication as an RFC.
- Submissions must be made via electronic mail to the RFC Editor.
- RFCs are distributed online by being stored as public access
- files, and a short message is sent to the distribution list
- indicating the availability of the memo. Requests to be added to
- this distribution list should be sent to RFC-REQUEST@NIC.DDN.MIL.
-
- The online files are copied by interested people and printed or
- displayed at their sites on their equipment. (An RFC may also be
- returned via electronic mail in response to an electronic mail
- query.) This means that the format of the online files must meet
- the constraints of a wide variety of printing and display
- equipment.
-
- Once a document is assigned an RFC number and published, that RFC
- is never revised or re-issued with the same number. There is
- never a question of having the most recent version of a particular
-
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 4]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
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- RFC. However, a protocol (such as File Transfer Protocol (FTP))
- may be improved and re-documented many times in several different
- RFCs. It is important to verify that you have the most recent RFC
- on a particular protocol. The "IAB Official Protocol Standards"
- [2] memo is the reference for determining the correct RFC to refer
- to for the current specification of each protocol.
-
- How do I obtain RFCs?
-
- RFCs can be obtained via FTP from NIC.DDN.MIL, with the pathname
- RFC:RFCnnnn.TXT or RFC:RFCnnnn.PS (where "nnnn" refers to the
- number of the RFC). Login with FTP, username "anonymous" and
- password "guest". The NIC also provides an automatic mail service
- for those sites which cannot use FTP. Address the request to
- SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL and in the subject field of the message
- indicate the RFC number, as in "Subject: RFC nnnn" (or "Subject:
- RFC nnnn.PS" for PostScript RFCs).
-
- RFCs can also be obtained via FTP from NIS.NSF.NET. Using FTP,
- login with username "anonymous" and password "guest"; then connect
- to the RFC directory ("cd RFC"). The file name is of the form
- RFCnnnn.TXT-1 (where "nnnn" refers to the number of the RFC). The
- NIS also provides an automatic mail service for those sites which
- cannot use FTP. Address the request to NIS-INFO@NIS.NSF.NET and
- leave the subject field of the message blank. The first line of
- the text of the message must be "SEND RFCnnnn.TXT-1", where nnnn
- is replaced by the RFC number.
-
- Requests for special distribution should be addressed to either
- the author of the RFC in question, or to NIC@NIC.DDN.MIL. Unless
- specifically noted otherwise on the RFC itself, all RFCs are for
- unlimited distribution.
-
- Which RFCs are Standards?
-
- See "IAB Official Protocol Standards" (currently, RFC 1140) [2].
-
- How do I obtain OSI Standards documents from the Internet?
-
- OSI Standards documents are NOT available from the Internet via
- anonymous FTP due to copyright restrictions. These are available
- from:
-
- Omnicom Information Service
- 501 Church Street NE
- Suite 304
- Vienna, VA 22180 USA
- Telephone: (800) 666-4266 or (703) 281-1135 Fax: (703) 281-1505
-
-
-
- User Services Working Group [Page 5]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
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-
- 6. Questions about Internet Organizations and Contacts
-
- What is the IAB?
-
- The Internet Activities Board (IAB) is the coordinating committee
- for Internet design, engineering and management [7]. IAB members
- are deeply committed to making the Internet function effectively
- and evolve to meet a large scale, high speed future. The chairman
- serves a term of two years and is elected by the members of the
- IAB. The current Chair of the IAB is Vint Cerf. The IAB focuses
- on the TCP/IP protocol suite, and extensions to the Internet
- system to support multiple protocol suites.
-
- The IAB performs the following functions:
-
- 1) Sets Internet Standards,
-
- 2) Manages the RFC publication process,
-
- 3) Reviews the operation of the IETF and IRTF,
-
- 4) Performs strategic planning for the Internet, identifying
- long-range problems and opportunities,
-
- 5) Acts as an international technical policy liaison and
- representative for the Internet community, and
-
- 6) Resolves technical issues which cannot be treated within
- the IETF or IRTF frameworks.
-
- The IAB has two principal subsidiary task forces:
-
- 1) Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
-
- 2) Internet Research Task Force (IRTF)
-
- Each of these Task Forces is led by a chairman and guided by a
- Steering Group which reports to the IAB through its chairman. For
- the most part, a collection of Research or Working Groups carries
- out the work program of each Task Force.
-
- All decisions of the IAB are made public. The principal vehicle
- by which IAB decisions are propagated to the parties interested in
- the Internet and its TCP/IP protocol suite is the Request for
- Comments (RFC) note series and the Internet Monthly Report.
-
-
-
-
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 6]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
-
-
- What is the IANA?
-
- The task of coordinating the use of the parameters of protocols is
- delegated by the Internet Activities Board (IAB) to the Internet
- Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA). These protocol parameters are
- op-codes, type fields, terminal types, system names, object
- identifiers, and so on. The "Assigned Numbers" Request for
- Comments (RFC) [1] documents the currently assigned values from
- several series of numbers used in network protocol
- implementations.
-
- Current types of assignments listed in Assigned Numbers and
- maintained by the IANA are:
-
- Address Resolution Protocol Parameters
- ARPANET and MILNET X.25 Address Mappings
- ARPANET and MILNET Logical Addresses
- ARPANET and MILNET Link Numbers
- BOOTP Parameters and BOOTP Extension Codes
- Domain System Parameters
- IANA Ethernet Address Blocks
- Ethernet Numbers of Interest
- IEEE 802 Numbers of Interest
- Internet Protocol Numbers
- Internet Version Numbers
- IP Time to Live Parameter
- IP TOS Parameters
- Machine Names
- Mail Encryption Types
- Multicast Addresses
- Network Management Parameters
- PRONET 80 Type Numbers
- Port Assignments
- Protocol and Service Names
- Protocol/Type Field Assignments
- Public Data Network Numbers
- Reverse Address Resolution Protocol Operation Codes
- Telnet Options
- Terminal Type Names
- Unix Ports
- X.25 Type Numbers
-
- For more information on number assignments, contact IANA@ISI.EDU.
-
- What is "The NIC"?
-
- "The NIC" is the Defense Data Network, Network Information Center
- (DDN NIC) at SRI International, which is a network information
-
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 7]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
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-
- center which holds a primary repository for RFCs and Internet
- drafts. The host name is NIC.DDN.MIL. Shadow copies of the RFCs
- and the Internet Drafts are maintained by the NSFnet on
- NNSC.NSF.NET and on MERIT.EDU.
-
- The DDN NIC also provides various user assistance services for DDN
- users; contact NIC@NIC.DDN.MIL or call 1-800-235-3155 for more
- information. In addition, the DDN NIC is the Internet
- registration authority for the root domain and several top and
- second level domains; maintains the official DoD Internet Host
- Table; is the site of the Internet Registry (IR); and maintains
- the whois database of network users, hosts, domains, networks, and
- Points of Contact.
-
- What is the IR?
-
- The Internet Registry (IR) is the organization that is responsible
- for assigning identifiers, such as IP network numbers and
- autonomous system numbers, to networks. The IR also gathers and
- registers such assigned information. The IR may, in the future,
- allocate the authority to assign network identifiers to other
- organizations; however, it will continue to gather data regarding
- such assignments. At present, the DDN NIC at SRI International
- serves as the IR.
-
- What is the IETF?
-
- The Internet has grown to encompass a large number of widely
- geographically dispersed networks in academic and research
- communities. It now provides an infrastructure for a broad
- community with various interests. Moreover, the family of
- Internet protocols and system components has moved from
- experimental to commercial development. To help coordinate the
- operation, management and evolution of the Internet, the IAB
- established the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
-
- The IETF is chaired by Phill Gross and managed by its Internet
- Engineering Steering Group (IESG). The IETF is a large open
- community of network designers, operators, vendors, and
- researchers concerned with the Internet and the Internet protocol
- suite. It is organized around a set of eight technical areas,
- each managed by a technical area director. In addition to the
- IETF Chairman, the area directors make up the IESG membership.
-
- The IAB has delegated to the IESG the general responsibility for
- making the Internet work and for the resolution of all short- and
- mid-range protocol and architectural issues required to make the
- Internet function effectively.
-
-
-
- User Services Working Group [Page 8]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
-
-
- What is the IRTF?
-
- To promote research in networking and the development of new
- technology, the IAB established the Internet Research Task Force
- (IRTF).
-
- In the area of network protocols, the distinction between research
- and engineering is not always clear, so there will sometimes be
- overlap between activities of the IETF and the IRTF. There is, in
- fact, considerable overlap in membership between the two groups.
- This overlap is regarded as vital for cross-fertilization and
- technology transfer.
-
- The IRTF is a community of network researchers, generally with an
- Internet focus. The work of the IRTF is governed by its Internet
- Research Steering Group (IRSG). The chairman of the IRTF and IRSG
- is David Clark.
-
- 7. Questions About Services
-
- How do I find someone's electronic mail address?
-
- There are a number of directories on the Internet; however, all of
- them are far from complete. The two largest directories are the
- WHOIS database at the DDN NIC and the PSInet White Pages.
- Generally, it is still necessary to ask the person for his or her
- email address.
-
- How do I use the WHOIS program at the DDN NIC?
-
- To use the WHOIS program to search the WHOIS database at the DDN
- NIC, telnet to the NIC host, NIC.DDN.MIL. There is no need to
- login. Type "whois" to call up the information retrieval program.
- Next, type the name of the person, host, domain, network, or
- mailbox for which you need information. If you are only typing
- part of the name, end your search string with a period. Type
- "help" for a more in-depth explanation of what you can search for
- and how you can search. If you have trouble, send a message to
- NIC@NIC.DDN.MIL or call 1-800-235-3155. Bug reports can be sent
- to BUG-WHOIS@NIC.DDN.MIL and suggestions for improvements to the
- program can be sent to SUGGESTIONS@NIC.DDN.MIL.
-
- How do I become registered in the DDN NIC's WHOIS database?
-
- If you would like to be listed in the WHOIS database, you must
- have an electronic mailbox accessible from the Internet. First
- obtain the file NETINFO:USER-TEMPLATE.TXT. You can either
- retrieve this file via anonymous FTP from NIC.DDN.MIL or get it
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 9]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
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- through electronic mail. To obtain the file via electronic mail,
- send a message to SERVICE@NIC.DDN.MIL and put the file name in the
- subject line of the message; that is, "Subject: NETINFO USER-
- TEMPLATE.TXT". The file will be returned to you overnight.
-
- Fill out the name and address information requested in the file
- and return it to REGISTRAR@NIC.DDN.MIL. Your application will be
- processed and you will be added to the database. Unless you are
- an official Point of Contact for a network entity registered at
- the DDN NIC, the DDN NIC will not regularly poll you for updates,
- so you should remember to send corrections to your information as
- your contact data changes.
-
- How do I use the White Pages at PSI?
-
- Performance Systems International, Inc. (PSI), sponsors a White
- Pages Pilot Project that collects personnel information from
- member organizations into a database and provides online access to
- that data. This effort is based on the OSI X.500 Directory
- standard.
-
- To access the data, telnet to WP.PSI.COM and login as "fred" (no
- password is necessary). You may now look up information on
- participating organizations. The program provides help on usage.
- For example, typing "help" will show you a list of commands,
- "manual" will give detailed documentation, and "whois" will
- provide information regarding how to find references to people.
- For a list of the organizations that are participating in the
- pilot project by providing information regarding their members,
- type "whois -org *".
-
- For more information, send a message to INFO@PSI.COM.
-
- What is Usenet? What is Netnews?
-
- Usenet and Netnews are common names of a distributed computer
- bulletin board system that some computers on the Internet
- participate in. It is not strictly an Internet service: many
- computers not on the Internet also participate.
-
- How do I get on Usenet? How do I get Netnews on my computer?
-
- To get on Usenet, you must acquire the software, which is
- available for some computers at no cost from some anonymous ftp
- sites across the Internet, and you must find an existing Usenet
- site that is willing to support a connection to your computer.
-
-
-
-
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- User Services Working Group [Page 10]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
-
-
- What is anonymous FTP?
-
- Anonymous FTP is a conventional way of allowing you to sign on to
- a computer on the Internet and copy specified public files from it
- [3]. Some sites offer anonymous FTP to distribute software and
- various kinds of information. You use it like any FTP, but the
- username is "anonymous" and the password is "guest".
-
- 8. Mailing Lists
-
- What are some good mailing lists or news groups?
-
- The TCP-IP, IETF, and RFC Distribution lists are primary lists for
- new Internet users who desire further information about current
- and emerging developments in the Internet. The first two lists
- are unmoderated discussion lists, and the latter is an
- announcement service used by the RFC Editor.
-
- How do I subscribe to the TCP-IP mailing list?
-
- To be added to the TCP-IP mailing list, send a message to:
-
- TCP-IP-REQUEST@NIC.DDN.MIL
-
- How do I subscribe to the IETF mailing list?
-
- To be added to the IETF mailing list, send a message to:
-
- IETF-REQUEST@ISI.EDU
-
- How do I subscribe to the RFC Distribution list?
-
- To be added to the RFC Distribution list, send a message to:
-
- RFC-REQUEST@NIC.DDN.MIL
-
- 9. References
-
- [1] Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", RFC 1060,
- USC/Information Sciences Institute, March 1990.
-
- [2] Postel, J., Editor, "IAB Official Protocol Standards", RFC 1140,
- Internet Activities Board, May 1990.
-
- [3] Postel, J., and J. Reynolds, "File Transfer Protocol (FTP), RFC
- 959, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October 1985.
-
- [4] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol - DARPA Internet Program Protocol
-
-
-
- User Services Working Group [Page 11]
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- RFC 1177 FYI Q/A - for New Internet Users August 1990
-
-
- Specification", RFC 791, DARPA, September 1981.
-
- [5] Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol - DARPA Internet
- Program Protocol Specification", RFC 793, DARPA, September 1981.
-
- [6] Leiner, B., R. Cole, J. Postel, and D. Mills, "The DARPA Internet
- Protocol Suite", IEEE INFOCOM85, Washington D.C., March 1985.
- Also in IEEE Communications Magazine, March 1985. Also as
- ISI/RS-85-153.
-
- [7] Cerf, V., "The Internet Activities Board" RFC 1160, CNRI, May
- 1990.
-
- 10. Suggested Reading
-
- For further information about the Internet and its protocols in
- general, you may choose to obtain copies of the following works:
-
- Bowers, K., T. LaQuey, J. Reynolds, K. Roubicek, M. Stahl, and A.
- Yuan, "Where to Start - A Bibliography of General Internetworking
- Information", RFC 1175, FYI 3, CNRI, U Texas, ISI, BBN, SRI,
- Mitre, August 1990.
-
- Comer, D., "Internetworking with TCP/IP: Principles, Protocols,
- and Architecture", Prentice Hall, New Jersey, 1989.
-
- Krol, E., "The Hitchhikers Guide to the Internet", RFC 1118,
- University of Illinois Urbana, September 1989.
-
- 11. Condensed Glossary
-
- As with any profession, computers have a particular terminology all
- their own. Below is a condensed glossary to assist in making some
- sense of the Internet world.
-
- address There are two separate uses of this term in internet
- networking: "electronic mail address" and "internet
- address". An electronic mail address is the string
- of characters that you must give an electronic mail
- program to direct a message to a particular person.
- See "internet address" for its definition.
-
- AI Artificial Intelligence
- The branch of computer science which deals with the
- simulation of human intelligence by computer systems.
-
- AIX Advanced Interactive Executive
- IBM's version of Unix.
-
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- ANSI American National Standards Institute
- A group that defines U.S. standards for the information
- processing industry. ANSI participates in defining
- network protocol standards.
-
- ARP Address Resolution Protocol
- An Internet protocol which runs on Ethernets and
- Token Rings which maps internet addresses to MAC addresses.
-
- ARPA Advanced Research Projects Agency
- The former name of what is now called DARPA.
-
- ARPANET Advanced Research Projects Agency Network
- A pioneering long haul network funded by ARPA. It
- served as the basis for early networking research as
- well as a central backbone during the development of
- the Internet. The ARPANET consisted of individual
- packet switching computers interconnected by leased lines.
-
- ASCII American Standard Code for Information Interchange
-
-
- B Byte
- One character of information, usually eight bits wide.
-
- b bit - binary digit
- The smallest amount of information which may be stored
- in a computer.
-
- BBN Bolt, Beranek, and Newman, Inc.
- The Cambridge, MA company responsible for development,
- operation and monitoring of the ARPANET, and later,
- the Internet core gateway system, the CSNET Coordination
- and Information Center (CIC), and NSFnet Network
- Service Center (NNSC).
-
- BITNET Because It's Time Network
- BITNET has about 2,500 host computers, primarily at
- universities, in many countries. It is managed by
- EDUCOM, which provides administrative support and
- information services. There are three
- main constituents of the network: BITNET in the United
- States and Mexico, NETNORTH in Canada, and EARN in
- Europe. There are also AsiaNet, in Japan, and
- connections in South America. See CREN.
-
- bps bits per second
- A measure of data transmission speed.
-
-
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- BSD Berkeley Software Distribution
- Term used when describing different versions
- of the Berkeley UNIX software, as in "4.3BSD
- UNIX".
-
-
- catenet A network in which hosts are connected to networks
- with varying characteristics, and the networks
- are interconnected by gateways (routers). The
- Internet is an example of a catenet.
-
- CCITT International Consultative Committee for
- Telegraphy and Telephony.
-
- core gateway
- Historically, one of a set of gateways (routers)
- operated by the Internet Network Operations Center
- at BBN. The core gateway system forms a central part
- of Internet routing in that all groups must advertise
- paths to their networks from a core gateway.
-
- CREN The Corporation for Research and Educational Networking
- BITNET and CSNET have recently merged to form CREN.
-
- CSNET Computer + Science Network
- A large data communications network for institutions doing
- research in computer science. It uses several different
- protocols including some of its own. CSNET sites include
- universities, research laboratories, and commercial
- companies. See CREN.
-
-
- DARPA U.S. Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
- The government agency that funded the ARPANET and later
- started the Internet.
-
- datagram
- The unit transmitted between a pair of internet modules.
- The Internet Protocol provides for transmitting blocks of
- data, called datagrams, from sources to destinations.
- The Internet Protocol does not provide a reliable
- communication facility. There are no acknowledgements
- either end-to-end or hop-by-hop. There is no error
- control for data, only a header checksum. There are
- no retransmissions. There is no flow control. See IP.
-
- DCA Defense Communications Agency
- The government agency responsible for installation of
-
-
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-
-
- the Defense Data Network (DDN), including the ARPANET
- and MILNET lines and PSNs. Currently, DCA administers
- the DDN, and supports the user assistance and network
- registration services of the DDN NIC.
-
- DDN Defense Data Network
- Comprises the MILNET and several other DoD networks.
-
- DDN NIC The network information center at SRI International.
- It is the primary repository for RFCs and Internet drafts,
- as well as providing other services.
-
- DEC Digital Equipment Corporation
-
- DECnet Digital Equipment Corporation network
- A networking protocol for DEC computers and network devices.
-
- default route
- A routing table entry which is used to direct any data
- addressed to any network numbers not explicitly listed
- in the routing table.
-
- DOD U.S. Department of Defense
-
- DOE U.S. Department of Energy
-
- DNS The Domain Name System is a mechanism used in
- the Internet for translating names of host computers
- into addresses. The DNS also allows host computers
- not directly on the Internet to have registered
- names in the same style.
-
-
- EARN European Academic Research Network
- One of three main constituents of BITNET.
-
- EBCDIC Extended Binary-coded Decimal Interchange Code
-
- EGP External Gateway Protocol
- A protocol which distributes routing information to
- the routers and gateways which interconnect networks.
-
- Ethernet
- A network standard for the hardware and data link levels.
- There are two types of Ethernet: Digital/Intel/Xerox (DIX)
- and IEEE 802.3.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- FIPS Federal Information Processing Standard
-
- FTP File Transfer Protocol
- The Internet standard high-level protocol for
- transferring files from one computer to another.
-
-
- gateway A special-purpose dedicated computer that attaches to
- two or more networks and routes packets from one
- network to the other. In particular, an Internet
- gateway routes IP datagrams among the networks it
- connects. Gateways route packets to other
- gateways until they can be delivered to the final
- destination directly across one physical network.
-
- GB Gigabyte
- A unit of data storage size which represents 2^30 (over
- 1 billion) characters of information.
-
- Gb Gigabit
- 2^30 bits of information (usually used to express a
- data transfer rate; as in, 1 gigabit/second = 1Gbps).
-
- GNU Gnu's Not UNIX
- A UNIX-compatible operating system developed by the
- Free Software Foundation.
-
-
- header The portion of a packet, preceding the actual data,
- containing source and destination addresses and
- error-checking fields.
-
- host number
- The part of an internet address that designates which
- node on the (sub)network is being addressed.
-
- HP Hewlett-Packard
-
- HYPERchannel
- High-speed communications link.
-
-
- I/O Input/Output
-
- IAB Internet Activities Board
- The IAB is the coordinating committee for Internet
- design, engineering and management.
-
-
-
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-
- IBM International Business Machines Corporation
-
- IEEE Institute for Electrical and Electronics Engineers
-
- IETF Internet Engineering Task Force
- The IETF is a large open community of network designers,
- operators, vendors, and researchers whose purpose is to
- coordinate the operation, management and evolution of
- the Internet, and to resolve short- and mid-range
- protocol and architectural issues. It is a major source
- of proposed protocol standards which are submitted to the
- Internet Activities Board for final approval. The IETF
- meets three times a year and extensive minutes of the
- plenary proceedings are issued.
-
- internet
- internetwork
- Any connection of two or more local or wide-area networks.
-
- Internet
- The global collection of interconnected regional and
- wide-area networks which use IP as the network
- layer protocol.
-
- internet address
- An assigned number which identifies a host in an internet.
- It has two or three parts: network number, optional subnet
- number, and host number.
-
- IP Internet Protocol
- The network layer protocol for the Internet. It the
- datagram protocol defined by RFC 791.
-
- IRTF Internet Research Task Force
- The IRTF is a community of network researchers,
- generally with an Internet focus. The work of the IRTF
- is governed by its Internet Research Steering Group (IRSG).
-
- ISO International Standards Organization
-
-
- JvNC John von Neumann National Supercomputer Center
-
-
- KB Kilobyte
- A unit of data storage size which represents 2^10
- (1024) characters of information.
-
-
-
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-
-
- Kb Kilobit
- 2^10 bits of information (usually used to express a
- data transfer rate; as in, 1 kilobit/second = 1Kbps = 1Kb).
-
- KNET Kangaroo Network
- Hardware/software product (Spartacus/Fibronics) that enables
- IBM mainframes to communicate over networks with the TCP/IP
- protocol suite.
-
-
- LAN Local Area Network
- A network that takes advantage of the proximity of computers
- to offer relatively efficient, higher speed communications
- than long-haul or wide-area networks.
-
- LISP List Processing Language
-
-
- MAC Medium Access Control
- For broadcast networks, it is the method which devices use
- to determine which device has line access at any given
- time.
-
- Mac Apple Macintosh computer.
-
- MB Megabyte
- A unit of data storage size which represents over
- 2^20 (one million) characters of information.
-
- Mb Megabit
- 2^20 bits of information (usually used to express a
- data transfer rate; as in, 1 megabit/second = 1Mbps).
-
- MILNET Military Network
- A network used for unclassified military production
- applications. It is part of the Internet.
-
- MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology
-
- MTTF Mean Time to Failure
- The average time between hardware breakdown or loss of
- service. This may be an empirical measurement or a
- calculation based on the MTTF of component parts.
-
- MTTR Mean Time to Recovery
- The average time it takes to restore service after a
- breakdown or loss. This is usually an empirical measurement.
-
-
-
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-
-
- MVS Multiple Virtual Storage
- An IBM operating system based on OS/1.
-
-
- NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration
-
- NBS National Bureau of Standards
- Now called NIST.
-
- network number
- The part of an internet address which designates the
- network to which the addressed node belongs.
-
- NFS Network File System
- A network service that lets a program running on one
- computer to use data stored on a different computer on
- the same internet as if it were on its own disk.
-
- NIC Network Information Center
- An organization which provides network users with
- information about services provided by the network.
-
- NOC Network Operations Center
- An organization which is responsible for maintaining
- a network.
-
- NIST National Institute of Standards and Technology
- Formerly NBS.
-
- NSF National Science Foundation
-
- NSFNET National Science Foundation Network
- A high-speed internet that spans the country, and is
- intended for research applications. It is made up of
- the NSFnet Backbone and the NSFnet regional networks.
- It is part of the Internet.
-
- NSFNET Backbone
- A network connecting 13 sites across the continental United
- States. It is the central component of NSFnet.
-
- NSFNET Regional
- A network connected to the NSFnet Backbone that covers a
- region of the United States. It is to the regionals that
- local sites connect.
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- NYSERnet
- New York State Educational and Research Network
- An internet which serves NY educational and research
- institutions. It also serves as the NSFnet regional
- network for New York State.
-
-
- OSI Open Systems Interconnection
- A set of protocols designed to be an international standard
- method for connecting unlike computers and networks. Europe
- has done most of the work developing OSI and will probably
- use it as soon as possible.
-
- OSI Reference Model
- An "outline" of OSI which defines its seven layers and
- their functions. Sometimes used to help describe other
- networks.
-
- OSPFIGP Open Shortest-Path First Internet Gateway Protocol
- An experimental replacement for RIP. It addresses some
- problems of RIP and is based upon principles that have
- been well-tested in non-internet protocols. Often referred
- to simply as OSPF.
-
-
- packet The unit of data sent across a packet switching network.
- The term is used loosely. While some Internet
- literature uses it to refer specifically to data sent
- across a physical network, other literature views
- the Internet as a packet switching network
- and describes IP datagrams as packets.
-
- PC Personal Computer
-
- PCNFS Personal Computer Network File System
-
- POSIX Portable Operating System Interface
- Operating system based on UNIX.
-
- protocol
- A formal description of message formats and the rules
- two computers must follow to exchange those messages.
- Protocols can describe low-level details of
- machine-to-machine interfaces (e.g., the order in
- which bits and bytes are sent across a wire)
- or high-level exchanges between allocation
- programs (e.g., the way in which two programs
- transfer a file across the Internet).
-
-
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-
- PSC Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
-
- PSCNET Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center Network
-
-
- RFC The Internet's Request for Comments documents series
- The RFCs are working notes of the Internet research and
- development community. A document in this series may be on
- essentially any topic related to computer communication, and
- may be anything from a meeting report to the specification of
- a standard.
-
- RIP Routing Interchange Protocol
- One protocol which may be used on internets simply to pass
- routing information between gateways. It is used on may
- LANs and on some of the NSFnet regional networks.
-
- RJE Remote Job Entry
- The general protocol for submitting batch jobs and
- retrieving the results.
-
- RLOGIN Remote Login
- A service on internets very similar to TELNET. RLOGIN was
- invented for use between Berkeley Unix systems on the same
- LAN at a time when TELNET programs didn't provide all the
- services users wanted. Berkeley plans to phase it out.
-
- RPC Remote Procedure Call
- An easy and popular paradigm for implementing the
- client-server model of distributed computing.
-
-
- server A computer that shares its resources, such as printers
- and files, with other computers on the network. An
- example of this is a Network Files System (NFS)
- Server which shares its disk space with a workstations
- that does not have a disk drive of its own.
-
- SESQUINET
- Sesquicentennial Network
- Texas-based regional network named for their sesquicentennial
- celebration
-
- SMTP Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
- The Internet standard protocol for transferring
- electronic mail messages from one computer to another.
- SMTP specifies how two mail systems interact and the
- format of control messages they exchange to transfer mail.
-
-
-
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-
-
- SNA System Network Architecture
- IBM's data communications protocol.
-
- subnet A portion of a network, which may be a physically independent
- network, which shares a network address with other portions
- of the network and is distinguished by a subnet number. A
- subnet is to a network what a network is to an internet.
-
- subnet number
- A part of the internet address which designates a subnet.
- It is ignored for the purposes internet routing, but is
- used for intranet routing.
-
- SURANET Southeastern Universities Research Association Network
- An NSFNET regional network.
-
-
- T1 A term for a digital carrier facility used to transmit a
- DS-1 formatted digital signal at 1.544 megabits per second.
-
- T3 A term for a digital carrier facility used to transmit a DS-3
- formatted digital signal at 44.746 megabits per second.
-
- TCP Transmission Control Protocol
- A transport layer protocol for the Internet. It is a
- connection oriented, stream protocol defined by RFC 793.
-
- TCP/IP Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol
- This is a common shorthand which refers to the suite
- of application and transport protocols which run over IP.
- These include FTP, Telnet, SMTP, and UDP (a transport
- layer protocol).
-
- Telenet A public packet-switching network operated by US Sprint.
-
- Telnet The Internet standard protocol for remote terminal
- connection service. Telnet allows a user at one site
- to interact with a remote timesharing system at
- another site as if the user's terminal was connected
- directly to the remote computer.
-
- Token Ring
- A type of LAN. Examples are IEEE 802.5, ProNET-10/80 and
- FDDI. The term "token ring" is often used to denote 802.5
-
- Tymnet A public packet-switching network operated by McDonnell
- Douglas Network Systems Company.
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- UDP User Datagram Protocol
- A transport layer protocol for the Internet. It is a
- datagram protocol which simply adds a level of reliability
- to IP datagrams. It is defined by RFC 768.
-
- ULTRIX UNIX-based operating system for Digital Equipment Corporation
- computers.
-
- UNIX An operating system developed by Bell Laboratories that
- supports multiuser and multitasking operations.
-
- UUCP UNIX-to-UNIX Copy Program
- A protocol used for communication between consenting
- UNIX systems.
-
-
- VMS Virtual Memory System
- A Digital Equipment Corporation operating system.
-
-
- WAN Wide Area Network
-
- WESTNET One of the National Science Foundation funded regional
- TCP/IP networks that covers the states of Arizona,
- Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming.
-
- WHOIS An Internet program which allows users to query a database of
- people and other Internet entities, such as domains, networks,
- and hosts, kept at the NIC. The information for people shows
- a person's company name, address, phone number and email
- address.
-
-
- XNS Xerox Network System
- A data communications protocol developed by Xerox. It
- uses Ethernet to move the data between computers.
-
- X.25 A data communications protocol developed to describe how
- data passes into and out of public data communications
- networks. The public networks such as Telenet and Tymnet,
- use X.25 to interface to customer computers.
-
- 12. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-
- 13. Authors' Addresses
-
- Gary Scott Malkin
- FTP Software, Inc.
- 26 Princess Street
- Wakefield, MA 01880
- Phone: (617) 246-0900
- EMail: gmalkin@ftp.com
-
-
- April N. Marine
- SRI International
- Network Information Systems Center
- 333 Ravenswood Avenue, EJ294
- Menlo Park, CA 94025
- Phone: (415) 859-5318
- EMail: APRIL@NIC.DDN.MIL
-
-
- Joyce K. Reynolds
- USC/Information Sciences Institute
- 4676 Admiralty Way
- Marina del Rey, CA 90292-6695
- Phone: (213) 822-1511
- EMail: jkrey@isi.edu
-
-
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