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- - G L O B E T R O T T E R -
- +=+=+=||===============================================================||=+=+=+
- + Volume #3, File #1 Date: 29/03/1988 +
- + +
- + +
- + Written By: ----====} THE FORCE {====---- From The depths of THE REALM +
- +=+=+=||:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::||=+=+=+
-
-
- TO CONTACT US:
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
- Germany: ALTOS Username: force
- Australia: Any Good BBS In Melbourne or The Realm
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
-
- CONTRIBUTORS: NOM
-
-
- FROM THE EDITOR:
-
- We still need a lot of material to create the next few issues. If you have
- anything you can contribute please contribute. Write an article anything.
-
- I was going to publish a list of the best hackers in OZ, but we came to the
- conclussion that it wouldn't be a good idea, particularly since so many things
- are going on at the moment. Instead Volume #4 or possibly #5 will have a
- list of the top five loosers of all time. It should be quite interesting,
- and I would like your help with this one, so if you know anyone who qualifies,
- please mail me.
-
- I must apologise for the lateness of this edition, but due to circumstances
- which you may know about, it was not possible to finish this file in time. If
- you don't know what has been happening, I guess you should be filled in.
- A reasonably large majority of Realm Members got busted. Seems like someone
- gave out a phone number (won't mention names, but it doesn't take much
- imagination to figure out who it was). The number was given out to save ones
- ass, which was rather stupid since it revealed possible witnesses agains't that
- person. DO YOU KNOW YOUR FRIEDS?? Or I think you should ask yourself
- DO YOUR FRIENDS KNOW YOU?? If so, It might be a good idea to think about it.
-
- Reason number two... Rumour has it that telescum have traced a large number
- of people and compiled a list of hackers using Viatel or Austpac. From what
- I hear (source reasonably reliable) is that they have been going round talking
- to people on that list, trying to obtain info on some of the more notorious
- characters. To add more weight to the rumour, a person close to the telescum
- war machine has confirmed the existence of such a list.
- Aparently I am at the top of the list, with some of the other more active
- people. (If nothing else I guess it's nice to be appreciated.)
-
- With all these things going on, we had to take some security precautions like
- encryption of all data, spliting the realm into sections and running each at
- a different location etc. This is the major reason for the delay.
-
- I guess if you read volume #4 things will still be going great. If not, you
- can pretty well guess the reason for the compulsory retirement.
- (Hehehe Is that possible??)
-
- May your lines be untraceable.
-
- CATCH YA LATER
- ----====} THE FORCE {====----
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- I N D E X
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- R E G U L A R F E A T U R E S
- --------------------------------
-
- - Outdial Systems: There is great demand and no supply, so only
- a little something to wet your appetite.
-
-
- - Unusual Systems: You all know about the 03106 Tymnet Gateway,
- well, there are others you can t5ry.
-
- - System Passwords: It's been a bonanza as far as VAX and PRIME
- accounts go, so it's been an ordinary month
- I guess. You again get the sour cream of the
- hacks that were made this month.
-
-
- - Trix of The Trade A run in with sys 09 operator and strange OTC
- tactics to catch hackers.
-
- - Hack Of The Month A Super User VAX account.
-
-
- - Network Profile: This month we feature DATAPAC nad I have the
- first part of DATAPAC NUA's.
-
- N O T S O R E G U L A R F E A T U R E S
- ---------------------------------------------
-
-
- - Bt Gold Hacked The greatest defeat in hacking a system ever,
- which I didn't even hack boooo.
-
- - X.xx Info A nice file explaining the workings of X.xx
- Protocals, thanx to NOM.
-
- - JANET User Docs #1 Part one of the JANET (UK Academic Network)
- User Documentations.
-
- ===============================================================================
-
-
- OUTDIAL SYSTEMS
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Nope, as a matter of policy, no more outdials. This is the second last Issue,
- where you can pick up some outdials, (not so flash). They die to quickly
- and there are only 2 more international I know off. I suggest for your
- outdial needs, use either Unix, Primes or VAX's with an outdial modem. There
- is a lot of them out there.
-
-
- 3106072912 HOUSTON OUTDIAL
- 3106007376 HOUSTON OUTDIAL This one used to be a very good, but due
- to obuse once again the old NUA has been
- changed. An additional complication is a
- password protection they have added.
-
-
- 3106002046 MITEL/CANATA This one has been used long time ago, and
- like the houston O/D it has password
- protection. I didn't get this one, and I
- am not sure who did, so I don't know who
- to give credit to. Sorry.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- UNUSUAL SYSTEMS
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- You all know the 03106 gateway. To connect to it, you just use that NUA.
- Here are some more interesting ones you may not have.
-
- 03104 - MCII IMPACS
- 03132 - Compuserve
- 03113 - RCA-LSDS
- 03119 - TRT-DATAPAK
- 03740 - TEXTEL Trinidad
- 04542 - C & W INTELPAK Hong Kong
- 04877 - ITA UDAS Taiwan
-
- I'll have some more for you, possibly next month. One thing to note, is that
- I have connected to these from DATEX-P, so some may not work from AUSTPAC
- or MIDAS.
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- SYSTEM PASSWORDS
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- I am very sorry about this, but due to my obsession with Primes, you will
- just have to put up with them for a little longer.
-
- 31106030002015 Primos 18.2.1 DPC1 This is the DARTMOUTH PRIME I have
- Listed previously, but try logging
- is as DOS/DOS instead of GAMES/GAMES
-
- 26245890090831 Primos 19.3.4-Z GRAF LOGIN TEST
-
-
- 26245221040595 Primos 20.2.4v TWF_K LOGIN PRIME/PRIME
-
-
- This leaves me with 3 more primes to go, but don't be afraid, in the next
- issue I promis I will have something slightly better, like a VAX or two
- in ISRAEL.
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- TRIX OF THE TRADE
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Minerva Now has some very claver ways as far as detecting hackers. They have
- learned that there are certain systems frequently visited by hackers, like
- Altos for example. If you connect to altos directly from minerva, you can
- say bye bye to your account. This has been known for a while, but here
- is a slightly new one.
-
- I have been on altos late one evening, (Going via a PAD in GERMANY), when an
- operator breaks in. We had a short chat, but I failed to get him going in
- any sort of a decent conversation. You can usually pick up some usefull
- information. In a situation like this, there is really no need to hang up
- or be paranoid about getting traced, since if they wanted to, they could
- have traced any time. Even if it was their intention to trace you, they would
- have done it before revealing themselves to you.
- I managed to capture the last bits of the convo (Remembered to Turn on My
- Buffer. A little late, but still)
-
- THE ACTUAL CONVO: (Operator is in lower case)
- ...............................................................................
-
- HELLO OPERATOR
-
- * OPERATOR user 10 *
- you realise i am going to kill this account
- I KNOW, AND I WILL GET A NEW ONE. WE HAVE PLAYED THIS GAME FOR UHH 3 YEARS NOW OR SO
- not when i am finished with you
-
- A WELL, IT'S LIKE A SPORT TO ME. IT GETS RATHER ADDICTIVE.
- HOW LONG WERE YOU AN OPERATOR HERE?
-
- bye bye
-
-
- Bye at 20:22
- HANG ON
-
-
- ***From PRIMOS: Forced off.
- Off At 20:22 24/02/88 AEST
- Time used: 04h 42m connect, 04m 01s CPU, 00m 28s I/O.
-
- Mail call (6 Unread)
-
- CLR PAD
- ...............................................................................
-
-
- This is nothing dramatic, since anyone who ever used minerva for a while
- would have had a simmilar experience. The account, naturally, died the
- minute I was forced off, but surelly the next day, it was back up working
- as usual under the old password?? A hah, it's enough for anyone to
- smell a trap. This is all leading up to the point I am making and that is,
- don't use minerva accounts given to you by other people and don't give out
- accounts you use. I gave the ID do an italian hacker, and he would have
- had no knowldge of this event and anything he would have done on the ID would
- have most probably been recorded. I actually went on the account and changed
- the pw myself so he couldn't use it before I had the chance to contact him.
- I think the reason OTC does that is to see what addresses are being used, so
- that they can more easilly determine a hacker on another ID, just by the
- address used from it. This is not an isolated incident, because it has
- happened on several occasions in the past. What I don't understand, is why
- they kill the account and then bring it back up?
- Another, even more likelly explanation, is simply the real user finds his
- account not working, dials Minerva gets the password changed, and restores
- it to his old one. In that case, it would mean Minerva is trying to cover
- up something shocking. I would imagine they wipe the bill off, and don't
- tell the user that a hacker has been on the account, but who knows??
-
- This is all bad anough, but minerva actually goes one step further. There
- are regular hackers of minerva, who have actually been given their own
- ID's to use, which they can check on. Now, if that isn't low, I don't know
- what is.
- An interesting solution to the problem would be to mail all the real users
- and tell them the NUA for altos. If someone does that, they will think twice
- before killing off the real users. (if anyone is game enuff, please check
- with the altos sysops first)
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- HACK OF THE MONTH
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- System: Micro VMS
- Location: USA
- Network: TYMNET
- Date: 07/03/1988
- Hacked By: ----====} THE FORCE {====----
-
- Sample Login:
-
- ..............................................................................
-
-
- @ c :03106xxxxxx -fcty
- Circuit #1
- 03106xxxxxx Connected
-
-
- [2J[H(0
- #3meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeem
- #4meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeem
- #4x x
- #3x x
- #4x x
- #3x S I A M E x
- #4x x
- #6x M I C R O V A X x
- #3x x
- #4x x
- #3meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeem
- #4meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeem(B
-
- Username: xxxxxxxxx
-
- Password:
- Welcome to MicroVMS V4.4
-
- Last interactive login on Tuesday, 29-DEC-1987 21:13
- Last non-interactive login on Thursday, 6-FEB-1986 20:41
- Z[c[0c
- %SET-W-NOTSET, error modifying NVA8:
- -SET-I-UNKTERM, unknown terminal type
-
- |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
- || 7-MAR-1988 16:36:48.08||
- |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
-
-
- $ SET PROC/PRIV=(all)
-
- $ SET DEF SYS$SYSTEM
-
- $ RUN AUTHORIZE
- UAF> EXIT
-
- UAF-I-NOMODS, no modifications made to system authorization file
- %UAF-I-RDBNOMODS, no modifications made to rights database
-
- $ LOG
-
- xxxxxxx logged out at 7-MAR-1988 16:37:45.52
-
- 03106xxxxxx Disconnected
-
- @
- ...............................................................................
-
- NOTES: I know there are more exiting hacks out there, like NASA, ESA etc, so
- please, edit your sample logins so they can't be recognised and send
- them in. If you can, please include any sort of a proof of the
- hack, I will not put it in here unless I am sure it is genuine. I
- have had a fantasized file of someone being one <CR> away from
- starting the third world war. I mean really!
-
- ===============================================================================
-
- BT GOLD
- ~~~~~~~
-
- I have spent so much time hacking BT GOLD, that it really isn't funny. I didn't
- actually spend a lot of time on it, just small bits extended over the past few
- years. Some of you may recal the good ole days when minerva was
- actually minerva not keyling (a Dominant system) and Telememo was Telememo not
- keylink a (Shitty system). Keylink is now a shitty system and Telememo has
- improved a bit, but on the whole it still sux. Good after this rambling,
- I refering to late 1984-1985 where there was no such thing as security on
- Minerva. Them were the days where one could spend 24 hrs Sprinting and
- not worry about the account dying. It was the time where every second
- password was the users first name and everyone had a supply of at least 200+
- accounts at the one time.
-
- Ahh what a flashback. Would be nice to have a time machine. Anyway, as you
- all know, minerva is only one system, a part of the entire DIALCOM Network.
- (Ok, 3 systems if you want to be picky 07,08 and 09). A lot of countries
- have a dialcom system of their own, and there is no reason why there can't
- be one at the stage of minerva 4 years ago. Somehow I don't see the operators
- worried about hackers in countries like Singapore, HONG-KONG etc (The list
- goes on and on). I hope you can now appreciate the potential to find a nice
- ripe system, ready for the taking.
-
- In order to be usefull, a dialcom must have the NETLINK Facility, and it must
- have an ONLINE USERLISTING. Without a Netlink, you can't use it as a pad,
- and you can't use it for sprinting. Without a User Directory, it is
- very difficult indeed to hack another account once the ones that you have
- information on are exhausted.
-
- PRIMECON NETWORK - Us Dialcoms systems are useless, since they don't have
- an online user list. I have only chacked system 41
- and systems in the same cluster namelly in the high
- thirties and fifties. There could still be hope for
- SYSTEMS 90-99 including the inhouse dialcom system 98.
-
- BT GOLD - A fantastic system. The user directory is more
- - Comprehensive than that on Minerva. Only problem is
- that there is no NETLINK, which makes it rather useless.
- There is however a netlink on system 80, which is used
- by BT GOLD Staff.
-
- As you can see, BT GOLD was an incredible waist of time, but because there is
- hope of finding an unripe dialcom ready for raping dialcoms are all go.
- The BT GOLD account I got, came from an italian hacker and has been passed
- around for some time before that.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- GOODIES, GOODIE GOODIE YUM YUM.
-
-
- NETWORK PROFILE: D A T A P A C - Part #1
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Dnic: 3020
- Location: CANADA
- Owners: Telecom Canada
- Host Responce: Fair
- Network Rating: Shitty
- Nua Structure: 3020 000 00 0000 00
- <DNIC> <AREA> <HOST NUMBER> <OPTIONAL SUB-ADDRESS>
-
-
- For More Information, Contact:
-
-
- Telecom Canada
- Room 1890
- 160 Elgin Street
- Ottawa, Ontario
- K1G 3J4, Canada
- Contact: Judith Robertson (613) 567-8798
- OnTyme: INTL.TGMKTG
-
- ACCESS/SPEEDS: Asynchronous dial-in service at 110-300, 1200 bps
- leased line services: 110-300, 1200 bps
- Bell 103, 212A
- Synchronous service at: 2400,4800,9600,14400 bps
-
-
- U.S. Canadian traffic is complicated by many
- factors. the most common kind of traffic originates in
- Canada from a terminal and terminates on a host in the
- U.S. This is Inbound 3101 Collect and is billed by
- Tymnet in U.S. dollars. Whether traffic is 3101 or 3000
- traffic is determined soley by the nature of the
- connection in Canada; 3000 is a host, 3101 is a terminal.
-
- A username is not needed to access Tymnet from Canada
-
-
- NOTES: There is a well defined area code for NUA's in a particular area,
- much like TELENET, however the area codes a unique and don't match
- the PTSN area codes. For reference, look up the datapac outdials
- in Volume #2, which relates their codes to the PTSN ones. There
- are lot more areas then given in the outdial list, but usually there
- is some indication as to where the NUA's are.
-
-
- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
-
- D A T A P A C 302029500xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From The depths of - THE REALM - Last Updated: 09/06/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302029500057 -
- 302029500059 VAX/VMS -
- 302029500060 VAX/VMS -
- 302029500070 - KARDGARD 300-C Motor Fuel Mngmnt. Site 1
- 302029500089 Port Select -
- 302029500092 HP-3000 -
- 302029500098 -
- 302029500900 Outdial Port - 300 Baud
- 302029500901 Outdial Port - 1200 Baud
-
- D A T A P A C 302033400xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From the depths of - THE REALM - 28/12/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302033400012 Honewell - Waterloo Datanet 8
- 302033400018 - "CHANELLS BUSY"
- 302033400048 -
- 302033400069 Port Select - "SERVICE ID="
- 302033400115 Port Select - "SERVICE ID="
- 302033400131 - "CHANELLS BUSY"
- 302033400140 -
- 302033400153 - Conttrell Transport/Kitchener
- 302033400161 -
- 302033400171 -
- 302033400193 -
- 302033400219 Primos 20.1.2 - PRIMENET 20.1.2 SYSF
- 302033400236 -
- 302033400257 VAX/VMS -
- 302033400258 - (needs input filename)
- 302033400276 - (needs Input filename)
- 302033400333 Primos 20.1.2 - PRIMENET 20.1.2 SYSF
- 302033400344 Outdial Port -
- 302033400345 Outdial Port -
- 302033400346 Outdial Port -
- 302033400347 Outdial Port -
- 302033400348 Outdial Port -
- 302033400349 Outdial Port -
- 302033400376 fax -
- 302033400383 -
- 302033400462 - "CHANELLS BUSY"
- 302033400485 -
- 302033400486 -
- 302033400492 -
- 302033400900 Outdial Port - 300 Baud
- 302033400900 Outdial Port - 1200 Baud
-
-
- D A T A P A C 302035600xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From the depths of - THE REALM - 28/12/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302035600110 Outdial Port -
- 302035600111 Outdial Port -
- 302035600113 Outdial Port -
- 302035600114 Outdial Port -
- 302035600115 Outdial Port -
- 302035600116 Outdial Port -
- 302035600273 Port Select - University Hospital Develnet Network
- 302035600279 -
- 302035600280 -
- 302035600298 -
- 302035600318 -
- 302035600329 -
- 302035600330 VAX/VMS -
- 302035600900 Outdial Port - 300 Baud
- 302035600901 Outdial Port - 1200 Baud
-
-
- D A T A P A C 302036700xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From the depths of - THE REALM - 31/12/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302036700010 fax -
- 302036700017 VAX/VMS - "Enter if you Dare"
- 302036700021 - "User Number--"
- 302036700024 Gateway - "International, Datapac,Memotec,Telenet"
- 302036700026 VAX/VMS -
- 302036700027 VAX/VMS 8530 V4.5 - COMVAX
- 302036700029 Gateway - "International, Datapac,Memotec,Telenet"
- 302036700030 - "User Number--"
- 302036700042 VAX/VMS -
- 302036700045 IBM VM/370 -
- 302036700047 Port Select - "enter class"
- 302036700049 VAX/VMS -
- 302036700050 -
- 302036700052 VAX/VMS -
- 302036700053 -
- 302036700075 -
- 302036700087 -
- 302036700095 Port Select - Network Control
- VAX 11/780 VAX - Bryker
- 302036700118 Unix - gnt-1
- 302036700122 - University Library GEAC System
- 302036700129 - TTSCANDAR
- 302036700162 -
- 302036700169 IBM - Ultramar
- 302036700170 IBM - Ultramar
- 302036700172 - "TACL1> "
- 302036700178 VAX/VMS 85300 V4.6 - Magna's VAX
- 302036700183 - "Password> "
- 302036700184 - "Password> "
- 302036700185 - "PORT BUSY"
- 302036700900 Outdial Port - 300 Baud
- 302036700901 Outdial Port - 1200 Baud
-
-
- D A T A P A C 302038500xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From The depths of - THE REALM - Last Updated: 21/02/1988
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302038500055 -
- 302038500122 HP-3000 - CC INFOLINE
- 302038500198 - 'HM"
- 302038500216 VAX/VMS -
- 302038500226 - "CHANNELS BUSY"
- 302038500245 -
- 302038500251 -
- 302038500274 -
- 302038500287 -
- 302038500288 -
- 302038500312 VAX/VMS V4.5 - Ault Fodds Hamilton
- 302038500333 - "CLS BUSY"
- 302038500355 -
- 302038500356 HP-3000 - CC INFOLINE
- 302038500375 -
- 302038500399 Port Select - "SERVICE ID= "
- 302038500412 Port Select - "SERVICE ID= "
- 302038500445 -
- 302038500444 -
- 302038500559 -
- 302038500561 Outdial -
- 302038500562 Outdial -
- 302038500563 Outdial -
- 302038500564 Outdial -
- 302038500565 Outdial -
- 302038500566 Outdial -
- 302038500586 VAX/VMS V4.3 - MicroVms
- 302038500640 Port Select - "SERVICE ID= "
- 302038500641 -
- 302038500643 -
- 302038500645 -
- 302038500652 -
- 302038500654 -
- 302038500655 -
- 302038500669 -
- 302038500723 -
- 302038500725 -
- 302038500726 -
- 302038500738 IBM - System: Hamilton, Subsystem: Quinte
- 302038500739 IBM - System: Hamilton, Subsystem: Quinte
- 302038500740 IBM - System: Hamilton, Subsystem: Quinte
- 302038500741 IBM - System: Hamilton, Subsystem: Quinte
- 302038500746 IBM - System: Hamilton, Subsystem: Quinte
- 302038500771 Port Select - Gandalf PACXS "Password> "
- 302038500783 -
- 302038500787 -
- 302038500900 Outdial - 300 Baud
- 302038500901 Outdial - 1200 Baud
- 302038500902 IBM - System: Hamilton, Subsystem: Quinte
-
-
- D A T A P A C 302048400xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From the depths of - THE REALM - 28/12/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302048400040 -
- 302048400153 -
- 302048400177 -
- 302048400209 Port Select - "CODE DE SERVICE="
- 302048400224 -
- 302048400234 -
- 302048400279 Port Select - "CODE DE SERVICE="
- 302048400322 - "V21>"
- 302048400348 Port Select - "SERVICE ID="
- 302048400398 Outdial Port -
- 302048400399 Outdial Port -
- 302048400410 Outdial Port -
- 302048400411 Outdial Port -
- 302048400412 Outdial Port -
- 302048400413 Outdial Port -
- 302048400430 -
- 302048400431 VAX/VMS V4.3 - Micro VMS
- 302048400492 -
- 302048400493 -
- 302048400494 -
- 302048400495 -
- 302048400496 -
- 302048400497 -
- 302048400498 -
- 302048400499 -
- 302048400527 -
- 302048400529 DG AOS/VS - CANFOR Quebec
- 302048400547 - "Channels Busy"
- 302048400553 HP-3000 -
- 302048400900 Outdial Port - 300 Baud Quebec
- 302048400901 Outdial Port - 1200 Baud Quebec
-
-
- D A T A P A C 302056300xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From The depths of - THE REALM - Date: 09/02/1988
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302056300012 Port Select - "Enter Select Character"
- 302056300014 Port Select - "Enter Select Character"
- 302056300015 Port Select - "Enter Select Character"
- 302056300019 Port Select - "Enter Select Character"
- 302056300020 Gateway - "Internatinl, Datapac, Telenet, Memotec"
- 302056300040 - "enter appropriate code for access"
- 302056300041 Port Select - "Enter Select Character"
- 302056300042 Port Select - "Enter Select Character"
- 302056300045 Port Select - Gandalf PACXS "Password> "
- 302056300046 Port Select - "Enter Select Character"
- 302056300047 Port Select - "SYSTEM ID="
- 302056300049 IBM - "Line #24"
- 302056300215 - Levitt Security Montreal
- 302056300216 -
- 302056300235 IBM VM/370 - TSASLC Information System
- 302056300900 Port Select - "enter appropriate code for access"
- 302056300901 Port Select - "enter appropriate code for access"
-
-
- D A T A P A C 302058700xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From the depths of - THE REALM - 10/01/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302058700010 HP-3000 -
- 302058700015 - Outdial PortL
- 302058700016 - Outdial Port
- 302058700017 - Outdial Port
- 302058700018 - Outdial Port
- 302058700900 - Outdial Port 300 Baud
- 302058700901 - Outdial Port 1200 BAUD
-
- D A T A P A C 302063300xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From the depths of - THE REALM - 102/01/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302063300131 host
- 302063300141
- 302063300142
- 302063300200
- 302063300260
- 302063300261 PRIMENET 19.4.3 PRECL7
- 302063300298 PRIMENET 19.4.9 PEPPER
- 302063300313
- 302063300314
- 302063300319
- 302063300334
- 302063300339
- 302063300344 host
- 302063300352
- 302063300359
- 302063300371
- 302063300374
- 302063300431 OUTDIAL
- 302063300432 OUTDIAL
- 302063300433 OUTDIAL
- 302063300434 OUTDIAL
- 302063300439
- 302063300453
- 302063300457
- 302063300466
- 302063300483 THE UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY EDUVAX
- 302063300900 OUTDIAL 300 BAUD
- 302063300901 OUTDIAL 1200 BAUD
-
-
- D A T A P A C 302067100xxx Sprint, By: ---===} THE FORCE {===---
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- From the depths of - THE REALM - 09/01/1987
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- 302067100056 -
- 302067100057 -
- 302067100086 - SEARS CANADA INC.BCSC
- 302067100118 Primos 20.1.1 - PRIMENET 20.1.1 UMAVAN
- 302067100143 -
- 302067100250 Primos 20.0.2 - PRIMENET 20.0.2 MD.VAN
- 302067100253 -
- 302067100330 -
- 302067100361 -
- 302067100423 -
- 302067100440 -
- 302067100482 Gateway -
- 302067100489 -
- 302067100519 - J. WALTER THOMPSON VANCOUVER
- 302067100538 -
- 302067100571 -
- 302067100610 VAX/VMS - Vancouver VAX
- 302067100629 VAX/VMS V4.2 - Microvax
- 302067100630 -
- 302067100632 - MCKIM ADVERTISING VANCOUVER
- 302067100641 fax -
- 302067100642 Gateway - COMINCO TRAIL DATAPAC ACCESS
- 302067100669 -
- 302067100673 -
- 302067100692 Outdial Port -
- 302067100693 Outdial Port -
- 302067100695 Outdial Port -
- 302067100752 -
- 302067100794 VAX/VMS -
- 302067100900 Outdial Port - 300 Baud
- 302067100901 Outdial Port - 1200 Baud
- 302067100766 -
-
- - G L O B E T R O T T E R -
- +=+=+=||===============================================================||=+=+=+
- + Volume #3, File #2 Date: 29/03/1988 +
- + +
- + +
- + Written By: ----====} THE FORCE {====---- From The depths of THE REALM +
- +=+=+=||:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::||=+=+=+
- (C) - Copyright 1988, The Realm
-
- `=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`
- `=`=`=` X.XX Series Communications Protocols Information `=`=`=`
- `=`=`=` `=`=`=`
- `=`=`=` Written By: N O M Date: 01/03/1988 `=`=`=`
- `=`=`=` `=`=`=`
- `=`=`=` - From The Depths Of The realm - `=`=`=`
- `=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`=`
-
-
- In light of the recent excellent articles emerging from the REALM, I feel a
- contribution on a more specific topic may be needed.
-
-
- After a time the superficial aspects of hacking tend to erode and while the
- important aspects still remain IE. An outdial is an outdial, an NUI is an
- NUI etc bits and pieces tend to be forgotten or not passed from one
- "generation" of hacker to the next, or are just plain not bothered with.
- If asked what is the difference between X.25 and X.29 or Async and Sync I
- assume that a good percentage of hackers would be able to tell me, BUT only
- after looking in something like the Hackers Handbook. Now what I hope to
- do is explain a LOT deeper what various terminologies mean, this will not
- of course help people hack but I think it will help people to undeyyrstand
- just what sort of technology and complexity the equipment that Austpac,
- Midas etc use.
-
-
- Lets start with the X series of protocols. As there are approx. 199
- different X categories, and as only 4 are really relevant to us, we'll
- concentrate on the 2 most well known but misunderstood they being of course
- X.25 & X.28 and 2 others, X.3. and X.29.
- Put simply X.25 deals specifically with the interface between a
- Dedicated Terminal and the PAD they may be using, while X.29 deals with the
- transmission of data between two or more PADS. Now to connect directly up
- to an X.25 with a non (Start/Stop terminal, what we all use) would be very
- nice, but unfortunately this can not be accomplished without the
- intervention of the X.3. As an aid follow the picture
-
- 3 Separate Examples of Communication
-
- [ME X.28]------------------|=PAD==X.29==PAD==|-------------------[YOU X.28]
- | | |
- [DPTE\ | | | /DPTE]
- [DPTE+[X.25]---------------|-Packet Network--|-----------------[X.25]+DPTE]
- [DPTE/ | | | \DPTE]
- | | |
- [ME X.28]------------------|=PAD==X.29=======|-----------------[X.25]+DPTE]
-
- Confused?? Well let's clarify things according to the above diagram. On
- the top line we see that we are assigned as needing an X.28 (simply the
- asynch character transmission mode that we mainly use because we have no
- built in packet switching capabilities IE. we are not connected to an X.25
- DPTE (my own definition of Dedicated Packet-switching Terminal Equipment
- There must be two X.3's (PADS) when connecting non DPTE's. What the X.25
- Protocol really does is allow many terminals to be accessed individually
- from a PAD. And what is the PADS' purpose? Simply to allow us to
- communicate to X.25 equipment.
-
- On the second line we have a DPTE (X.25 the physical link/protocol
- connected straight through without the need for either X.28, X.29 or X.3
- protocols) this is the most straightforward connection as both DTE's have
- inbuilt packetising information.
-
- The third line shows the connection of a standard terminal through the PAD
- as you can see only one side needs packetising and protocol conversion
- straight through. This example is mostly what we are concerned with for we
- are the X.28 we reach the PAD (Austpac for example) and depending on our
- NUA connect to the X.25 gateway, then the host terminal or destination. An
- example of this would be the DNIC 3106 this would establish which gateway
- you want to access in this case Tymnet. The rest of the NUA (actually when
- calling international X.25 another X category is used X.121 or simply Data
- Network Identification Code) lets say NUA 03106+[000636]<-- would select
- which computer on the X.25 gateway you want to connect with.
-
- At this point you may have noticed that your whole concept of a PAD has
- changed, a PAD merely Disassembles Data, shoots it into the Packet Network
- and then Assembles the data back so that it can be received depending on
- what the X.25 has to say. The whole point of the X.29 is so that two PADS'
- can communicate. X.25 serve to generally control packet flow as well as
- doing protocol conversions and speed conversions, allowing you at 300 baud
- to connect to virtually any system. Part of this packet flow concerns
- where the information is being sent... This introduces the next part
-
- ESTABLISHING THE CALL
- ---------------------
-
- There are two ways of establishing calls on a packetised network. These
- are VC (Virtual Calls) and PVC (Permanent Virtual Circuits).
-
- A VC is the non-physical link between the calling Date Terminal Equipment
- (us..DTE) to the called DTE (them..the computer we are calling). It is the
- exact equivalent to a telephone call except that no PHYSICAL link is
- established. Instead a logical channel number (LCN) is set up from then on
- data (packets) are sent to a channel rather than physically down a wire as
- in the telephone. Hence it is called virtual due to it not actually
- existing.
-
- PVC is the same except that a permanent number is assigned as being the
- logical channel. This is the equivalent to a direct line but all non
- physical. The actual "conversation" which takes place when a DTE wishes to
- call another is explained thus:
-
-
- DTE to DTE DCE to DTE
- ---------- ----------
- Call Request --------->Incoming Call
- Call Accepted<-------- Call Connected
- Data------------------>Data
- Data<----------------- Data
- Clear Request -------->Clear Indication
- DTE - initiated<------ Network Initiated
- Clear Confirmation---->Clear Confirmation
-
- What this table represents is the procedures that must occur during a
- connection. As you can see its all logical with a Calls being requested by
- us and Calls being notified by them. This is based on the Telephone system
- whereby we take over in some aspects IE I might say GOODBYE (Clear Request)
- then the person I'm talking to would as well (Clear Indication) and so on.
-
-
- The most up to date explanation to the inner workings of all things X is
- the OSI/RM (Open Systems Interconnection Reference Model). OSI/RM are a
- collection of different "layers" within the network which offer developers
- a generalized outline of what a data network must handle. It is not law
- that people must follow these procedures but it is a concerted effort to
- bring about a standard way to exchange information. The X.25 system follow
- this architecture very closely and though OS/RM contains 7 layers and X.25
- contains but three (packet, link and physical) the following explanation
- may serve to explain how a network operates.
-
-
- 7. Application Layer Concerns - Am I talking to the right person? Who is
- paying for this call? Is this the best time to talk, or should I call back.
-
- 6. Presentation Layer Concerns - Are we talking the same language and/or
- dialect.
-
- 5. Session Layer Concerns - Can this situation be handled in one call or
- several? Will other people need to be brought in at different times? Who
- will control the discussion in a multi party conversation? Who will
- re-establish the call if we are cut off?
-
- 4. Transport Layer Concerns - What is the most cost effective way to handle
- this call (or calls) consistent with priorities? What long distance
- carrier should be used?
-
- 3. Network Layer Concerns - Dial the number and listen for call progress
- signals. Redial if you get a busy signal or get cut off. Disconnect when
- the conversation is completed.
-
- 2. Link Layer Concerns - Talk when you are supposed to and listen when you
- are supposed to. Ask for a repeat if there is something you don't
- understand. Tell the other party to slow down if they are talking to fast.
-
- 1. Physical Layer Concerns - These are the actual sounds being made into
- the mouth piece from the receiver.
-
-
- Well that's as far as I'm prepared to go depth wise into packet systems.
- This hasn't even scratched the surface of what's to be known. If anyone
- would like to know more about a specific topic please E-MAIL me and I'll
- try to help.
-
-
-
- JANET Part #1
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
- =-=-= H O W T O U S E J A N E T Date: 23/02/88 =-=-=
- =-=-= =-=-=
- =-=-= Brought To You By: ----====} THE FORCE {====---- =-=-=
- =-=-= =-=-=
- =-=-= - From The Depths of The Realm - =-=-=
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- NOTE: This file has been supplied by Janet.
-
-
- How to Use the U.K. Academic Network - Packet SwitchStream (PSS) Gateway
-
- Issued by
- S.A. Wood
- Issue 1 6 January 1987
- ____________________________________________________________________________
- _________________
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- 1. Warning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
-
- 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
- 2.1 Your contacts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
-
- 3. Summary of Facilities Available Across the Network . . . . . . . . 2
-
- 4. Permission to Use the Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
- 4.1 Authentication and Authorisation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
- 4.2 Charging and Accounting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
-
- 5. How to make Terminal Calls TO the Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
-
- 6. How to make Terminal Calls THROUGH the Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 6.1 The Transport Service Called Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- 6.2 Making Calls using TS29 Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 6.3 The full address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
- 6.4 Making Calls Using X29 Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
-
- 7. Facilities Provided by the Gateway Machine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 7.1 HELP Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
- 7.2 Account Facility and Changing Your Password . . . . . . . . . . 8
-
- 8. Facilities Available THROUGH the Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 8.1 Demonstration Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
- 8.2 Address Mnemonics of Remote Hosts on Networks Connected to
- the Gateway . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
-
- 9. Facilities Available on PSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 9.1 Fast Select . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 9.2 Reverse Charge Facility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 9.3 Access to IPSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
- 9.4 Calls to Other, Non-Transport Service Networks . . . . . . . 10
- 9.5 Adjusting Packet Sizes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
-
- 10. Protocols Available if Supported by Both Local and Remote
- Host Machines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
- 10.1 Network Independent File Transfer Protocol (FTP) . . . . . . 11
- 10.2 JNT MAIL Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 10.3 Job Transfer and Manipulation Protocol (JTMP) . . . . . . . . 12
-
- 11. Restrictions and Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 11.1 Restrictions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
- 11.2 Errors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
-
-
- 1. Warning
-
- BETWEEN 8.00 am and 9.00 am every Tuesday, network development and service
- work is carried out on JANET. This means that if you make a call during
- these hours there is an increased danger of the system going down which may
- result in loss of data.
-
- _________________
- 2. Introduction
-
- The Gateway is a two-way link between the U.K. Academic Network (JANET) and
- PSS. At present there are two Gateways between JANET and PSS, one at
- Rutherford and another at ULCC in London.
-
- The Gateway consists of a computer which holds a communications program and
- sits between two networks (JANET and PSS in this case). This allows the
- user to bridge the gap between the networks and access target computers on
- the other network. It is important to realise that there are two ways of
- communicating with the Gateway - you can make calls TO the Gateway computer
- to access its limited user facilities or you can make calls THROUGH it to a
- target computer on the other network.
-
- The Gateway operates as a Transport Level Gateway in accordance with the
- 'Yellow Book' Transport Service. However the present implementation does
- not have a full Transport Service and therefore, there are some limitations
- in the service provided. For X29 which is incompatible with the Yellow Book
- Transport Service, special facilities are provided for the input of user
- identification and addresses.
-
- The Gateway is a protocol transparent link. This means that the Gateway
- cannot be used for protocol conversion; to do this a third party machine
- must be used.
-
- __________________
- 2.1 Your Contacts
-
- If you have any problems, or if you want additional information contact the
- JANET Network Executive. You can reach them at the following address:-
-
- * By Post at . . . . . . . Network Executive,
- c/o Rutherford Appleton Laboratory,
- Chilton,
- Didcot,
- OXON.
- OX11 0QX
-
- * By Electronic MAIL to . . W.Jenkins@RL.GB
- The network address for RL.GB is 00000000210
-
-
- * By Telephone on . . . . . Abingdon (O235) 446748
-
-
- _______________________________________________________
- 3. Summary of Facilities Available across the Network
-
- The network offers a number of facilities. These are listed below for your
- information.
-
- * Facilities Provided by the Gateway Machine
-
- - Help Facility
-
- - Accounting Facility
-
- * Facilities Available on the Way Through the Gateway
-
- - Demonstration Facility
-
- - Addresses and Mnemonics
-
- * Facilities Available on PSS
-
- - Fast Select Facility
-
- - Reverse Charge Facility
-
- - Access to IPSS (International Packet Switch Stream)
-
- - Calls to Other, Non-Transport Service Networks
-
- * Protocols Available if Supported by Both Local and Remote Host Machines
-
- - Network Independent File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
-
- - JNT MAIL Protocol
-
- - Job Transfer and Manipulation Protocol (JTMP)
-
- __________________________________
- Permission to Use the Gateway
-
- _____________________________________
- 4.1 Authentication and Authorisation
-
- No unauthenticated use of the Gateway from JANET is allowed regardless of
- whether charges are incurred at the Gateway or not. Therefore to use the
- Gateway you have to obtain authentication (a userid and password) and
- authorisation (a call allocation) from the JANET Network Executive. This
- consists of:
-
- a. USERID
- b. PASSWORD
- c. USAGE ALLOCATION
-
- Note that the authorisation for PSS and IPSS is managed separately, although
- a single USERID may have authoristation for both.
-
-
-
- ____________________________
- 4.2 Charging and Accounting
-
- There are 4 separate charging rates, which are:
-
- PSS full rate: PSS (FULL)
- PSS discount rate: PSS (DISC)
- TLXN: Telex access via Interstream 1.
- IPSS full rate: IPSS (FULL)
-
- Note that the TELEX access is expensive, as the cost includes the use of
- PSS, Interstream 1 and TELEX. Anyone who is interested in TELEX access
- should first discuss it with the Network Executive.
-
- To be able to make chargeable calls you must request a call allocation to
- cover the charging rates you want to use when you ask for your
- authentication. For calls that are free e.g. calls within JANET or normal
- charge calls from PSS you do not need an allocation.
-
- The PSS discount rate applies from 1800 to 0800 each night and all day on
- weekends, Christmas Day and New Year's Day. The PSS full rate applies at
- ALL OTHER times. The IPSS full rate applies at ALL times for international
- calls. For details of the international rates to various countries consult
- Network User Note 2.
-
- If your allocation runs out during an active call, then that call will be
- cleared and all further calls at that rate will be refused.
-
- ______________________________________________
- 5. How to Make Terminal Calls to the Gateway
-
- It is possible to make calls to the Gateway to access the HELP and ACCOUNT
- facilities.
-
- The HELP facility contains the whole of this user guide in its most uptodate
- form. The facility allows random scans of the document and searches for
- text within the document.
-
- The Account facility allows the user to inspect the state of his account and
- to change the password for that account.
-
- _____________________________________
- How to make contact with the Gateway.
-
- If you are calling the RAL Gateway from PSS use the DTE address
- 234223519191.
-
- If you are calling the RAL Gateway from JANET use the DTE address
- 000000000040.
-
- If you are calling the London Gateway from PSS use the DTE address
- 234219200148 or 234219200100.
-
- If you are calling the London Gateway from JANET use the DTE address
- 000040000040.
-
- Make a terminal call to the Gateway.
-
- A title message will appear on the terminal announcing the Gateway, followed
- by the lines:
-
- OS4000+Rlix V30 PSS Gateway
- Logging in
- user
-
- If nothing appears, keep pressing <CARRIAGE RETURN> until the above message
- appears.
-
- It is now possible to log in and use the Help or Account facilities. For
- details of these facilities see section 7 of this document.
- ___________________________________________________
- 6. How to Make Terminal Calls Through the Gateway
-
- The method used to make a call through the Gateway depends on the type of
- PAD being used. If your PAD supports TS29 the procedure is simplified as
- this protocol allows you to make calls that can cross several networks via
- several Gateways. If your PAD supports X29 then if you wish to cross
- several Gateways you normally have to stop at each one before you can pass
- through it. However a special facility is provided using the Call User Data
- Field to allow X29 calls non-stop through the JANET PSS Gateway.
-
- Whichever protocol your PAD supports, you must have some way of generating a
- Transport Service Called Address for onward routing by the Gateway.
-
- _________________________________________
- 6.1 The Transport Service Called Address
-
- To make a call through the Gateway you have to supply the following
- information in the form of a Transport Service Called Address to your local
- PAD.
-
- a. Netname: the name of the network you are calling.
- b. Authentication: consisting of Userid and Password in that order.
- This can be omitted for free calls.
- c. Host address: the network address of the remote host.
-
- The format of the Transport Service Called Address is as follows:
-
- <Netname>(<Authentication>).<Host Address>
-
- These are explained below.
-
- _______
- Netname
-
- This is one of the following:
-
- JANET to connect to JANET
- PSS to connect to PSS
- J an alias for JANET.
-
-
- ______________
- Authentication
-
- This consists of 3 fields which must be entered in the order shown.
-
- a. user id,
- b. password,
- c. A request for the call to be reverse charged.
-
- The last field is optional.
- Note that the whole authentication string must be enclosed in parentheses.
-
- _______
- Example
-
- (FRED,XYZ,R) Requests a reverse charge call
- (FRED,XYZ) Requests a chargeable call.
-
- ____________
- Host Address
-
- This is the numeric address of the machine being called. However to make
- things easier the numeric address can be replaced with an alphanumeric
- mnemonic if one has been set up on the Gateway.
-
- _______
- Example
-
- use RLGB instead of 000000002105 to call the Rutherford GEC 'B' machine
- use SALF instead of 234261643210 to call Salford on PSS.
-
- For a list of these mnemonics see JANET User Notes 5 and 6.
-
- Host addresses can be complex and it is possible to specify several Gateways
- that you must pass through to reach a specific remote host and/or the
- service required. Note that a point (.) must be used to separate the
- numeric addresses or mnemonics from the service names.
-
- _______
- Example
-
- SVPA - this calls the Sussex SERC Prime on Janet.
- SVPA.FTP - this calls FTP on the Sussex SERC Prime on Janet.
-
- To connect to some machines, an X25 sub-address is required, which consists
- of a number of extra digits added on to the machine address. This can be
- easily entered on the Gateway by using the delimiter '-' at the end of the
- mnemonic address and then typing the sub-address. When the mnemonic is
- translated the delimiter is ignored and the whole address is converted into
- a continuous string.
-
- _______
- For a list of these mnemonics see JANET User Notes 5 and 6.
-
- Host addresses can be complex and it is possible to specify several Gateways
- that you must pass through to reach a specific remote host and/or the
- service required. Note that a point (.) must be used to separate the
- numeric addresses or mnemonics from the service names.
-
- _______
- Example
-
- SVPA - this calls the Sussex SERC Prime on Janet.
- SVPA.FTP - this calls FTP on the Sussex SERC Prime on Janet.
-
- To connect to some machines, an X25 sub-address is required, which consists
- of a number of extra digits added on to the machine address. This can be
- easily entered on the Gateway by using the delimiter '-' at the end of the
- mnemonic address and then typing the sub-address. When the mnemonic is
- translated the delimiter is ignored and the whole address is converted into
- a continuous string.
-
- _______
- Example
-
-
- Janet-69 is translated to 23422351919169
-
-
- How to Use the U.K. Academic Network - Packet SwitchStream (PSS) Gateway
-
-
- _____________________________________
- 6.2 Making Calls Using TS29 Protocol
-
- TS29 is the ideal protocol to use through the Gateway, since there should be
- no problem entering the Transport Service Called Address. However, first
- make sure that the machine you are calling will support TS29. When using
- this protocol for network terminal calls the service name of the TS29 server
- should be entered explicitly.
-
- _____________________
- 6.3 The Full Address
-
- Combining all these factors a full address might look like this.
-
- J(FRED,XYZ).RLGB.TS29
-
- ____________________________________
- 6.4 Making Calls Using X29 Protocol
-
- X29 is incompatible with the 'Yellow Book' Transport Service and some PADS
- are unable to generate the Transport Service Called Address. When making an
- X29 call, the onward Called Address may be entered into the Call User Data
- Field of the Call. Some PADs, e.g. the British Telecom PAD are unable to
- generate a Call User Data Field longer than 12 characters and so there may
- not be enough space to hold all the information required. In this case, a
- Call must be established only as far as the Gateway, and a dialogue held
- with the Gateway to establish the next part of the connection.
-
- If your PAD can generate a Call User Data Field, then the first character of
- the text is treated as a delimiter, and should be entered as the character
- '@' followed by the onward Called address.
-
- _______
- Example
-
- On a CAMTEC PAD one might enter:-
-
- CALL 00004000004096 D=@(FRED,XYZ).SOMEWHERE
-
- to make a call through the London Gateway to SOMEWHERE on PSS.
-
- ________________________________________
- Overcoming Call User Data Field Problems
-
- With X29 PADs the onward Called Address can be supplied interactively at the
- Gateway without having to set up a Call User Data field. To do this the
- Gateway must be called with the correct X25 sub-address. This involves
- adding an extra 2 digits onto the normal 12 digit address of the Gateway.
- The sub-address for JANET is 69 and 96 for PSS. The Gateway will then
- prompt for the onward Called Address.
-
- The procedure is as follows: Call the Gateway using the correct
- sub-address:
-
- 23422351919169 to call JANET from PSS via the RAL Gateway
- 00000000004096 (or the mnemonic RL.PSS) to call PSS from JANET
- via the RAL Gateway.
-
- 23421920014869 to call JANET from PSS via the London Gateway
- 00004000004096 (or the mnemonic LON.PSS) to call PSS from
- JANET via the London Gateway.
-
-
- The response from the Gateway will be the following message:
-
- Please enter your authorisation and address required in form:
- (user,password).address
- >
-
- Reply with the appropriate response.
-
- _______
- Example
-
- (FRED,XYZ).SOMEWHERE
-
- As the X29 protocol is being used there is no need to include the service
- name X29.
-
- Authentication is not required when calls are free, e.g. for incoming calls
- to JANET. In this case the string (FRED,XYZ) can be omitted, note however
- that the address should still be preceded with a point.
-
- _______
- Example
- .RLGB
-
- There is a timeout of between 3 and 4 minutes for this response after which
- the call will be cleared, however there is no limit to the number of
- attempts which can made within this time limit. If the authorisation or
- adress entered is invalid the Gateway will request it again. To abandon the
- attempt clear the call from the PAD. For further details of how to do this
- see Network User Note 11.
-
- You will find that on some PADs a 'call connected' message will appear on
- the terminal as soon as the call has been connected to the Gateway. This
- does not mean that you have made contact with your ultimate destination.
- When you have contacted the remote host the Gateway will show a 'Call
- connected to remote address' message.
-
- _______________________________________________
- 7. Facilities Provided by the Gateway Machine
-
- __________________
- 7.1 HELP Facility
-
- A HELP Facility is available which contains the whole of this guide in its
- most uptodate form. The utility which is used to view the guide allows the
- text to be searched for strings as well as allowing random movement about
- the document.
-
- There is also additional up-to-the-minute information and details of
- forthcoming changes. Use the HELP system from time to time to find out
- about changes which may affect your access to the machine.
-
-
- To connect to the HELP system, simply make a terminal call to the Gateway as
- described in section 5 above. When the Logging in / User prompt appears
- type HELP. The following message will then be displayed.
-
- OS4000+Rlix V30 PSS Gateway
- Logging in
- user HELP
- ID last used Wednesday, 10 December 1986 06:11
- Started - Wed 10 Dec 1986 11:15:55
- Please enter your name and establishment.
-
- Enter your name and establishment. You will be then be presented with the
- following message.
-
- The following options are available:
-
- NOTES GUIDE TITILES ERRORS TARRIF HELP QUIT
-
- Which option do you require?
- The following list describes each command briefly.
-
- NOTES replies to user queries and any other useful information.
- GUIDE the complete Gateway user guide.
- TITLES list of JANET and PSS addresses and mnemonics
- ERRORS list of error codes that you may receive.
- TARRIF list of the PSS and IPSS charges.
- HELP is the HELP option.
- QUIT exits from the session.
-
- When you exit from the HELP facility by typing QUIT, the following message
- will appear.
-
- If you have any comments, please type them now, terminate with E
- on a line on its own. Otherwise just type <cr>
-
- CPU used: 1 ieu, Elapsed: 2 mins, IO: 1583 units, Breaks: 14
- Budgets: this period = 10.00 AUs, used = 0.010 AUs, left = 9.51 AUs
- User HELP terminal 2 logged out
- W10 Dec 1986 09:20:12
-
- The above prompt gives the user an opportunity to type in any queries or
- Comments that he has about the Gateway. These comments are vieely by
- the support staff at RAL.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- That's it, The end of another GLOBE TROTTER. I'll be off and do some TROTTING
- myself. Time to start on the next volume.
-
- In the next issue, there will be the second part of the NUA scans on DATAPAC.
- Hopefully it will all fit and we can get DATAPAC over and done with.
- In the months to come, you will see some of the following:
-
- - JANET User Docs Part #2
-
- - Dialcom Systems Directory, A comprehensive guide to Dialcoms
-
- - Merit systems and Node Names
-
- - Scans of networks, in EUROPE, JAPAN, USA, ISRAEL, BRAZIL and lot more.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Till Next time
-
- Catch Ya Later
- ----====} THE FORCE {====----
-
- ENDlows the password to be changed. The new password
- should be typed in twice on the following two
- lines when prompted. It is not echoed
- END Terminates the session.
-
- Note that each command may be abbreviated to a minimum of 2 characters.
-
-
-
-