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June 1992


INTERNET MONTHLY REPORTS
------------------------

The purpose of these reports is to communicate to the Internet Research
Group the accomplishments, milestones reached, or problems discovered by
the participating organizations.

This report is for Internet information purposes only, and is not
to be quoted in other publications without permission from the
submitter.

Each organization is expected to submit a 1/2 page report on the first
business day of the month describing the previous month's activities.

These reports should be submitted via network mail to:

Ann Westine Cooper (Cooper@ISI.EDU)
NSF Regional reports - Corinne Carroll (ccarroll@NNSC.NSF.NET)
Directory Services reports - Tom Tignor (TPT2@ISI.EDU)

Requests to be added or deleted from the Internet Monthly report list
should be sent to "imr-request@isi.edu".

Details on obtaining the current IMR, or back issues, via FTP or
EMAIL may be obtained by sending an EMAIL message to "rfc-
info@ISI.EDU" with the message body "help: ways_to_get_imrs". For
example:

To: rfc-info@ISI.EDU
Subject: getting imrs

help: ways_to_get_imrs






Cooper [Page 1]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


TABLE OF CONTENTS

INTERNET ACTIVITIES BOARD

IAB MESSAGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 3
INTERNET RESEARCH REPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 7
AUTONOMOUS NETWORKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 7
END-TO-END SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 7
RESOURCE DISCOVERY AND DIRECTORY SERVICE . . .. . . . page 7
INTERNET ENGINEERING REPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 8

Internet Projects

BOLT BERANEK AND NEWMAN, INC., . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 13
CIX (COMMERCIAL INTERNET EXCHANGE). . . . . . . . . . . . page 14
CONCERT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 14
ISI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 15
JVNCNET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 17
LOS NETTOS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 20
NEARNET (NEW ENGLAND ACADEMIC AND RESEARCH NETWORK) . . . page 20
NNSC, UCAR/BOLT BERANEK and NEWMAN, INC., . . . . . . . . page 21
NORTHWESTNET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 22
NSFNET/ANSNET BACKBONE ENGINEERING. . . . . . . . . . . . page 23
NSFNET/INFORMATION SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 27
SAIC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 28
UCL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 29
UDEL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 29
UUNET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 30

DIRECTORY SERVICES ACTIVITIES

DIRECTORY SERVICES MESSAGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 35
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY. . . . . . page 35

CALENDAR OF EVENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 37
















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Internet Monthly Report June 1992



IAB MESSAGE

A. IAB/IETF NOW PART OF ISOC

Meeting in Kobe, Japan, on June 15, 1992, the Board of Trustees of
the Internet Society voted to accept a recommendation from the
Internet Activities Board to bring the IAB and all of its
activities into the Internet Society, with the IAB serving as a
technical advisory group of the ISOC. The IETF will continue to
pursue standards-setting and other engineering activities under
this new umbrella, and the IRTF will continue to pursue research
questions of importance to the Internet.

The IAB was renamed the Internet Architecture Board.

B. NEW POLICY ON POSTSCRIPT FOR STANDARDS DOCUMENTS

Since 1989, the Internet policy set by the IAB has allowed
Postscript RFC's but required that parallel ASCII versions exist as
well. The ASCII versions of Postscript have been allowed to be
substandard, e.g., missing diagrams and not meeting the customary
standards on format.

Experience has shown that that the results have been less than
satisfactory, and the IAB is now amending the policy in the
following manner: RFCs that document standards-track specifications
MUST have their reference text in ASCII. That is, the ASCII
version of standards-track specifications must be complete and
properly formatted. A secondary version in Postscript is still
allowed, but its Status of Memo will note that it is not primary.

No policy can be universal. If the drafters of a standards
specification RFC feel they have a legitimate need for using
Postscript for the reference version of a specification, they
should discuss this with the IESG, preferably early in the process.
Exceptions will not be granted lightly, but nothing is impossible.

This policy change affects only standards-track specifications;
other RFC's will continue to follow the former rules.

HISTORY AND BACKGROUND

In 1989, there was a raging discussion on the question of
Postscript RFCs, both on public mailing lists and within the IAB.
Based upon the public discussion, the IAB at its July 1989 meeting
agreed upon a dual-version policy. This was reflected in the
Instructions for RFC Authors and announced in the IAB REPORT



Cooper [Page 3]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


[Internet Monthly Report, October 1989]:

"The IAB has noted the intense concern in the community about
Postscript-only RFC's; unfortunately, there is no ideal
solution for this problem. Until ODA or its equivalent is
widely available, some combination of ASCII and Postscript is
the best we can do. The IAB has instructed the RFC Editor to
obtain an ASCII version from the author of any Postscript-only
document whenever possible, and both versions are to be made
publically available. Although the dual versions may cause
significant extra work for both authors and editor, this
appears to be the only feasible compromise."

In the succeeding three years, the situation has not improved. ODA
has not saved us, and the drawbacks of Postscript noted in July
1989:

1) printing capability is not universal
2) difficult to cut and paste
3) difficult to search
4) file sizes are too large
5) unable to view from a terminal

are unchanged. Typically, we have found that the ASCII versions of
Postscript specifications have been derived mechanically, with
minimal or no editorial effort. The result has been unreadability
at best and at worst typographic errors in specifications where
precision is required and expected.

What has changed in three years is the economic significance of the
Internet standards process. As a result, the Internet community in
general and the IAB in particular have lavished a great deal of
time and effort to improve the quality of our standards process
while attempting to preserve its manifest virtues.

There is no question in anyone's mind that Postscript documents are
prettier and perhaps easier to read than corresponding ASCII
documents. However, we believe that other issues are paramount for
the formal specification of protocols and procedures. In
particular, a reference specification must be universally
printable, and it must be possible to cut-and-paste machine-
processable program fragments from the text. It should be possible
to easily search for desired text.

When fancy explanatory diagrams are desired, it may be appropriate
to create two documents, an introductory document in Postscript and
the formal specification in ASCII. We have a great deal of
experience with using ASCII to effectively document Internet



Cooper [Page 4]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


protocols and procedures, and we believe that a carefully written
ASCII document can convey the desired information clearly and
precisely. It may be hoped that the restriction to a single font
will encourage authors to make every word count.

This policy was proposed to the IETF on May 28, 1992, and was very
extensively discussed on the IETF mailing list. The great majority
of comments received by the IAB were strongly in favor of this
change. Therefore, it was formally adopted by the IAB at its Kobe
meeting.

C. STANDARDS ACTIONS

The following list shows the protocol standards actions
approved by the IAB during the month of June, 1992.

o SNMP Administrative Model

Proposed Standard
RFC-1351, "SNMP Administrative Model", July 1992

o SNMP Security Protocols

Proposed Standard
RFC-1352, "SNMP Security Protocols", July 1992

o SNMP Security MIB

Proposed Standard
RFC-1353, "Definitions of Managed Objects for
Administration of SNMP Parties", July 1992

o TFTP -- Trivial File Transfer Protocol

Standard
RFC in preparation.

o PCMAIL

Informational
RFC-1056, "PCMAIL - A Distributed Mail System for
Personal Computers", June 1988

o SUPDUP

Historic: June 1992
RFC-734 "SUPDUP Protocol", October 1977




Cooper [Page 5]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


o SFTP -- Simple File Transfer Protocol

Historic: June 1992
RFC 913 "Simple File Transfer Protocol",
September 1984

o Hostname Server

Historic: June 1992
RFC-953 "Hostname Server", October 1985

o NFILE

Historic: June 1992
RFC 1037 "NFILE - a File Access Protocol",
December 1987

D. RFC'S PUBLISHED IN JUNE FOR PREVIOUSLY-ANNOUNCED ACTIONS

o IP Forwarding Table MIB

Proposed Standard (: February 1992 *)
RFC-1354, "IP Forwarding Table MIB", July 1992

o IP Type of Service

Proposed Standard (: February 1992 *)
RFC-1349, " Type of Service in the Internet
Protocol Suite", July 1992.

*Note: For determination of minimum time-in-grade, the
date of RFC publication should be used.

E. STANDARDS ACTIONS PENDING ON JULY 1, 1992

'Multiprotocol Interconnect on X.25 and ISDN in Packet
Mode' to Proposed Standard

Architectural issue under review.

'PPP Authentication Protocols' to Proposed Standard

Awaiting further information.

'Echo Function for ISO 8473' remain Proposed Standard

Clarification requested from IESG.




Cooper [Page 6]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


'RIP I' to Standard

Under consideration by the IAB.

'IDPR' to Proposed Standard

Under consideration by the IAB.

Bob Braden (braden@isi.edu)

INTERNET RESEARCH REPORTS
-------------------------

AUTONOMOUS NETWORKS
-------------------

We are planning a meeting sometime in the next few months to
discuss some of the follow-on issues to the ROAD activities,
e.g., PIP.

Deborah Estrin (Estrin@USC.EDU)

END-TO-END SERVICES
-------------------

No progress to report this month.

Bob Braden (Braden@ISI.EDU)

RESOURCE DISCOVERY AND DIRECTORY SERVICE
----------------------------------------

Several members of the research group have been discussing
conceptual and implementation relationships between Internet
resource discovery systems, towards the goal of supporting
seamless interoperation of resource discovery using multiple
underlying systems. To help analyze the problem, we are
developing a taxonomy with dimensions concerning resource
granularity, distribution, interconnection topology, and data
integration mechanism. This taxonomy provides inferences about
the ability of a system to support organizing, browsing, and
searching operations, and about what is needed to provide
gateways between individual systems.

Mike Schwartz schwartz@cs.colorado.edu






Cooper [Page 7]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


INTERNET ENGINEERING REPORTS
----------------------------

1. The Fall IETF is scheduled for November 16-20, 1992 in
Washington, DC. Our local host is U.S. Sprint. The Spring
1993 IETF will be held in Columbus, Ohio, March 28th -
April 2nd, hosted by OARnet and The Ohio State University.

2. The IESG received one request to consider the following
Internet Draft as a standards track item:

a. "BGP OSPF Interaction"
be published as a Proposed Standard.

Additionally, the IESG is considering RFC 1144 "Compressing
TCP/IP headers for low-speed serial links" for Draft Standard
status. RFC 1144 was published as a Proposed Standard in
December 1990.

Last Call notifications were sent to the IETF list on both
items.

3. The IESG made the following recommendations to the IAB during
the month of June 1992:

a. RFC0734 (SUPDUP), RFC0913 (Simple File Transfer Protocol),
RFC0953 (Hostname Server), and RFC1037 (NFILE - a file
access protocol) be moved to Historical Standard status.

b. RFC1139 (Echo function for ISO 8473) remain a Proposed
Standard

c. RFC783 (THE TFTP PROTOCOL-REVISION 2) as documented/updated
in , be published as an Internet
Standard.

d. RFC1056 (PCMAIL) be moved off the Standards Track and be
republished as an Informational Protocol.

e. RFC1058 (Routing Information Protocol) be elevated to
Standard Status. RIP was elevated to Draft Standard
in April 1990.

f. The Inter-Domain Policy Routing (IDPR) Protocol be
elevated to Proposed Standard Status. IDPR is defined
in the following Internet Drafts:





Cooper [Page 8]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


1. "An Architecture for Inter-Domain Policy Routing"
and

2. "Inter-Domain Policy Routing Protocol Specification:
Version 1"

An overview document, "IDPR as a Proposed Standard" is
available as an Internet Draft .

4. Three new Working Groups were formed during the month of
June 1992:

Mobile IP Working Group (mobileip)
Host Resources MIB (hostmib)
OSI IDRP for IP over IP (ipidrp)

5. Two Working Groups concluded during the month of June 1992:

OSI General (osigen)
DECnet Phase IV MIB (decnetiv)

6. Thirty-six (36) Internet Draft actions were taken during the
month of June 1992:

(Revised draft (o), New Draft (+) )

WG I-D Title
------ -----------------------------------------------------

(idpr) o An Architecture for Inter-Domain Policy Routing

(idpr) o Inter-Domain Policy Routing Protocol Specification:
Version 1


(pppext) o Point-to-Point Protocol Extensions for DECnet
Phase IV

(cat) o Generic Security Service Application Program
Interface

(netdata) o Network Database Protocol

(smtpext) o SMTP Extensions for Transport of Enhanced Text-
Based Messages

(hubmib) o Definitions of Managed Objects for IEEE 802.3
Repeater Devices



Cooper [Page 9]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992



(pppext) o The PPP OSI Network Layer Control Protocol
(OSINLCP)

(none) o Security Information Transfer Protocol (SITP)

(x25mib) o SNMP MIB extension for LAPB

(x25mib) o SNMP MIB extension for the X.25 Packet Layer

(x25mib) o SNMP MIB extension for MultiProtocol Interconnect
over X.25

(netdata) o Network Database Implementation Information
Internet Draft

(none) o IP and ARP on HIPPI

(telnet) o Telnet Remote Flow Control Option

(x400ops) o Operational Requirements for X.400 Management
Domains

(ident) o Ident MIB

(bgp) o A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)

(none) o Guidelines for IP Address Allocation

(ident) + Identification Server

(none) + TN3287 Printer Specification

(iplpdn) o Shortcut Routing: Discovery and Routing over Large
Public Data Networks

(none) o Pip Overview and Examples

(pppext) + IPX PPP Internetwork Packet Exchange Control
Protocol [IPXCP]

(atm) + Multiprotocol Interconnect over ATM

(none) + NET-UTF: International character set

(none) + Son of IPSO A Generic IP Sensitivity Labeling
Option




Cooper [Page 10]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


(x400ops) + X.400 use of extended character sets

(iplpdn) + Directed ARP

(none) + ISO Transport Protocol (ISO 8072 & ISO 8073)
Management Information Base

(pppext) + The Definitions of Managed Objects for the IP
Network Control Protocol of the Point-to-Point
Protocol

(pppext) + The Definitions of Managed Objects for the Security
Protocols of the Point-to-Point Protocol

(pppext) + The Definitions of Managed Objects for the Link
Control Protocol of the Point-to-Point Protocol

(pppext) + The Definitions of Managed Objects for the Bridge
Network Control Protocol of the Point-to-Point
Protocol

(mpsnmp) + SNMP over IPX

(none) + A Proposal for IP Address Encapsulation (IPAE):
A Compatible Version of IP with Large Addresses


7. Nine (9) RFC's were published during the month of June 1992.

RFC St WG Title
------- -- -------- -------------------------------------------
RFC1338 I (none) Supernetting: an Address Assignment and
Aggregation Strategy
RFC1339 E (none) Remote Mail Checking Protocol
RFC1341 PS (822ext) MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions): Mechanisms for Specifying and
Describing the Format of Internet Message
Bodies
RFC1342 PS (822ext) Representation of Non-ASCII Text in
Internet Message Headers
RFC1343 I (none) A User Agent Configuration Mechanism For
Multimedia Mail Format Information
RFC1344 I (none) Implications of MIME for Internet Mail
Gateways
RFC1345 I (none) Character Mnemonics & Character Sets
RFC1346 I (none) Resource Allocation, Control, and
Accounting for the Use of Network
Resources



Cooper [Page 11]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


RFC1347 I (none) TCP and UDP with Bigger Addresses (TUBA),
A Simple Proposal for Internet Addressing
and Routing

Status): ( S) Internet Standard
(PS) Proposed Standard
(DS) Draft Standard
( E) Experimental
( I) Informational

Steve Coya (scoya@nri.reston.va.us)
Phill Gross (pgross@nis.ans.net)







































Cooper [Page 12]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


INTERNET PROJECTS
-----------------

BOLT BERANEK AND NEWMAN INC.
----------------------------

ST Conferencing

During June, the TWB supported 8 point-to-point conferences, as
well as numerous test conferences. Test conferences were run
almost daily to bring up new sites, rehearse for demos, do
communications testing for exercises, and field test new software.

Floor control software has been deployed to 8 of the 18 video
gateway sites on the TWB. Deployments to the remaining sites are
continuing, although some sites have not yet provided Suns at their
locations, and so are unable to use floor control locally. The
first operational use of floor control was unsuccessful, due to an
incorrect hostname configured on a Sun at DARPA. DARPA
subsequently changed the hostname, and additional testing showed no
other problems.

Three TWB sites have been converted to secure installations for
demonstrations of E3 simulation and conferencing. These sites
(IDA, Ft. Rucker, and BBN-DWS) are no longer available for regular
conferencing on an ad-hoc basis. We do have the ability to switch
these sites, with appropriate warning, when necessary for important
non-secure activities. During a demonstration in June, IDA and
BBN-DWS successfully conducted a secure simulation demonstration
for a group at IDA.

During June, Ft. Knox, Ft. Rucker, and RADC converted from
butterfly to T/20 gateways. These were the last
conferencing/simulation sites to make the switch. Only two
butterfly gateways remain on the TWB.

Jil Westcott














Cooper [Page 13]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


CIX (COMMERCIAL INTERNET EXCHANGE)
----------------------------------

CIX In Out
Member Octets Packets Errors Octets Packets Errors
-------- ------------------------------ --------------------------
AlterNet 25499614677 100078059 3223 12789151683 97456552 0
CERFnet 16728616653 101731632 3184 17578867982 78715212 0
PSINet 14613779788 95691175 1 26577838280 122381685 0
SprintNet 167091308 1289903 1123800 136007522 958666 0

Starting: May 31 1992 at 23:55
Ending: Jul 1 1992 at 00:06
SNMP Polling Intervals: 3796
SNMP Polling Frequency: 15 minutes

In - traffic entering the CIX from the CIX member network
Out - traffic exiting the CIX into the CIX member network
-----

At the present time, approximately 610 networks within the CIX
membership are using the CIX-WEST.

The full integration of SprintLink and EUNet networks continues to
take place.

A complete list of networks accessible via the CIX is available via
anonymous FTP from cix.org in the file cix.nets. The current
revision of this list is: 4-JUN-1992.

Send mail to info@cix.org for information regarding the CIX.

Mark Fedor (fedor@uu.psi.com)

CONCERT
-------

MCNC has developed a draft document for remote conferencing
architecture. It will be presented for review in the Remote
Conferencing BOF at the July IETF meeting at Boston. The document
can be accessed through anonymous ftp from ftp.concert.net. The
document is /doc/pv_arch.ps (in Postscript format).

CONCERT received an NSF grant providing funds for connecting nine
North Carolina Universities/Colleges to the network.

Tom Sandoski




Cooper [Page 14]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


ISI
---

GIGABIT NETWORKING

ATOMIC

The ATOMIC project took delivery of its first 3-by-3 interhost
router (Mosaic mesh) board. Functioning 8-by-8 mesh boards are
also now being tested at Caltech. This 3-by-3 router can directly
interconnect twelve hosts and should provide approximately 5 Gb/s
of routing capacity. AC, Mosiac and UNIX kernel work was done to
prepare for the use of N-by-N mesh routers in the ATOMIC network.

Router enclosure design and channel-cable adaptor board fabrication
were completed earlier this year. Assembly and initial testing of
the ATOMIC router prototype will begin in July. Testing will
determine mesh router capacity and will provide more interesting
topology for the ATOMIC discovery and routing database program, the
Address Consultant (AC).

Work on the AC in June centered on the automatic discovery and
display of network topology and detection/prevention of deadlocks.
The AC can now dynamically map the topology of ATOMIC networks and
create complete source-routing tables. Automatic interrogation of
the AC is implemented within the BSD UNIX kernel, to provide hosts
with source routes.

Multiple ACs can run simultaneously in different hosts. A
distributed election mechanism ensures that only one AC becomes the
"controlling" AC. The remainder remain dormant awaiting the
possible failure of the controlling AC, at which point a new
election occurs.

The issue of fault isolation for Mosaic channels in an office
environment was considered during June. A document that outlines
one approach toward isolation of channel faults was sent to
Caltech, where the Mosaic project is designing and prototyping a
many-meter Mosaic channel transmission chip. Fault isolation is
important since power failures, bugs, attacks and hardware failures
are a part of the real networking world.

Greg Finn (finn@isi.edu)








Cooper [Page 15]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


INFRASTRUCTURE

Nine RFCs were published this month.

RFC 1338: Fuller, V., (BARRNET), T. Li, (CISCO), J. Yu (MERIT),
K. Varadhan (OARNET), "Supernetting: an Address
Assignment and Aggregation Strategy", June 1992.

RFC 1339: Dorner, S., P. Resnick, "Remote Mail Checking Protocol"
U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, June 1992.

RFC 1341: Borenstein, N. (BELLCORE), and N. Freed (INNOSOFT)
"MIME (Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions):
Mechanisms for Specifying and Describing the Format
of Internet Message Bodies", June 1992.
RFC 1342: Moore, K., "Representation of Non-ASCII Text in
Internet Message Headers", University of Tennessee,
June 1992.

RFC 1343: Borenstein, N., "A User Agent Configuration Mechanism
for Multimedia Mail Format Information", Bellcore,
June 1992.

RFC 1344: Borenstein, N., "Implications of MIME for Internet
Mail Gateways", June 1992.

RFC 1345: Simonsen, K., "Character Mnemonics and Character Sets",
Rationel Almen Planlaegning, June 1992.

RFC 1346: Jones, P., "Resource Allocation, Control and
Accounting for the Use of Network Resources", Joint
Network Team, UK, June 1992.

RFC 1347: Callon, R., "TCP and UDP with Bigger Addresses (TUBA),
A Simple Proposal for Internet Addressing and Routing",
DEC, June 1992.

Ann Cooper (Cooper@ISI.EDU)

MULTIMEDIA CONFERENCING

The initial implementation of the Connection Control Protocol (CCP)
was completed this month and will now be tested over DARTnet. CCP
is an experimental application layer protocol designed to
facilitate multimedia teleconferencing over the Internet. It
orchestrates multiple-user, multiple-media sessions in a
distributed manner, providing among other functions a flexible
group transaction service, robustness mechanisms for WAN operation



Cooper [Page 16]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


and negotiation for heterogeneous end system configurations.

We are working with students from USC on software decoding of the
compressed video used in DARTnet experiments. Displaying video in
a workstation window rather than on a separate monitor facilitates
a "personal conferencing" mode. Software decoding will also enable
DARTnet experiments employing a larger number of receivers without
additional hardware cost. We have completed the decoding routines
which will be integrated with packet reception and X-window display
software by the students.

An article was submitted to Computer Communications Review on the
first IETF meeting "audiocast" from San Diego. Meanwhile,
preparations are underway for a second audiocast from the Boston
IETF in July, this time also including video and expected to reach
a much larger audience.

Eve Schooler, Steve Casner
(schooler@ISI.EDU, casner@ISI.EDU)

JVNCNET
-------

I. General information

A. How to reach us:
1-800-35-TIGER (from anywhere in the United States)
by e-mail
NOC: noc@jvnc.net
Service desk: service@jvnc.net
by mail: U.S. mail address:
Princeton University
B6 von Neumann Hall
Princeton, NJ 08544
(Director: Sergio Heker)

B. Hours
NOC: 24 hours/day, seven days a week
Service desk: 9:00 to 5:00 pm, M - F (except holidays)

C. Other info available on-line from NICOL
Telnet to nicol.jvnc.net.
Login ID is nicol and no password.








Cooper [Page 17]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


D. RFCs on-line
To obtain RFCs from the official JvNCnet repository (two
methods)
1) ftp jvnc.net; username: anonymous;
password:
2) RFC automailer
Send email to sendrfc@jvnc.net. Subject line is RFCxxxx.
xxxx represents the RFC number. RFCs with three digits
only need three digits in the request.

E. JvNCnet Symposium Series
For information about planned JvNCnet symposiums, please
send email to "symposium@jvnc.net" or call 1-800-35-TIGER.

F. JvNCnet K-12 Dial-up Connectivity Program
For information about the JvNCnet K-12 activities,
send email to K-12-request@jvnc.net or contact
Rochelle Hammer at 1-800-35-TIGER, option 0 (zero).

G. Spring 1992 MEGABYTES newsletter published
To subscribe to the electronic distribution of Megabytes,
send email to "megabytes-request@jvnc.net".

II. New Information

A. New on-line members (fully operational May and June 1992)
Princeton Theological Seminary, Princeton, NJ
Hekimian Laboratories, Rockville, MD
E. H. Hurwitz & Associates, Irvington, NY
Safari Business Systems, Inc., Bridgewater, NJ
Synergy Software, Reading, PA

B. ENHANCED Dialin'Tiger Service
JvNCnet announced at Spring92 Interop, four low cost,
enhanced Dialin'Tiger choices which are currently
available to anyone seeking Internet connectivity.

Among various changes users can find, a software
interface for the PC and Macintosh (automatic dial-up,
email, news, ftp, and telnet) and optional 800 number
makes Dialin'Tiger suitable to diverse network
access needs.

For complete description of Dialin'Tiger options,
please contact Allison Pihl at market@jvnc.net or
1-800-35-TIGER.





Cooper [Page 18]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


C. NETLOG, the JvNCnet Trouble Ticket System
"Netlog v2.0", a UNIX-based trouble-ticketing
system, is now in the public domain and available
from anonymous ftp:
(Username: your email address and no password).
ftp.jvnc.net under 'pub/netlog-tt.tar.Z'

All bug reports to "netlog-bugs@jvnc.net".
Send email to "netlog-users-request@jvnc.net" if you
use this software and want to receive software update
notification.

Running on Unix systems, Netlog, not based on any
database, stores all logs as ASCII text files and
its own index system processes the logs. Length of
log entry is unrestricted. Netlog uses an open, update,
close-ticketing, and informational mechanism. In use
at JvNCnet since 1990, the system is fast and efficient.

Netlog provides the following functions:
Create entry, edit log, read log, list open
tickets, search logs, process tickets

D. NOCOL, JvNCnet's Network Operation Center On-Line
NOCOL v2.0 is available in the public domain via
anonymous ftp from:
ftp.jvnc.net (128.121.50.7)
under ~ftp/pub/nocol.tar.Z.

For addition to the updates and bug fixes mailing list,
please send email to:
"nocol-users-request@jvnc.net".
Send comments to:
"nocol-info@jvnc.net"
Send bugs to:
"nocol-bugs@jvnc.net".

NOCOL, a collection of network monitoring programs, is
designed to run on Unix systems primarily for IP networks.
Monitoring agents poll various parameters from any system
and appropriately format the data for post-processing.
Post processors may be a display agent, automated
troubleshooting program, or event-logging program.
The display module (nocol) with the monitoring agents
is presently available.






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Internet Monthly Report June 1992


The monitoring agents can monitor any entity, protocol, or
variable. To date, the monitoring agents developed are:
IP ICMP monitor (ping or multiping)
OSI reachability monitor (OSI ping)
SNMP trap monitor
IP data throughput monitor
Nameserver (named) monitor
Monitor for number of terminal server lines in use
(for cisco terminal servers using xtacacs)

The software is flexible and permits enhancements and
development with minimal effort. It is easy to add
monitors for DECnet and/or other protocols. The program
was evaluated on SUNOS4.1.1, Ultrix, and NeXT.
Documentation is under "src/docs".

The JvNCnet display can be seen by logging into
"nocol.jvnc.net" as user 'nocol'. A "1 4" will give a
full display and 'h' will show a brief help screen.

Rochelle Hammer (hammer@jvnc.net)

LOS NETTOS
----------

We experienced an extended T1 outage on a redundant link because
GTE used type A Westel demarc's which would not respond to telco
loop up commands. GTE therefore wasted a lot of time trying to
repair the wrong end of the line.

GTE swapped out the type A Westels for a newer model that responds
to remote loop up commands.

Walt Prue (Prue@ISI.EDU)

NEARNET (NEW ENGLAND ACADEMIC AND RESEARCH NETWORK)
---------------------------------------------------

As of June 30, NEARnet has grown to 146 members.

NEARnet 1992 Mini-Seminar Series Update

On June 18, 1992, NEARnet held the second seminar of its 1992
Mini-Seminar Series. More than 60 participants attended the
NEARnet User Services Seminar, which was held at the Newman
Auditorium at Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc. (BBN) in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. Focusing on the needs and responsibilities of
NEARnet information liaisons, the seminar began with an overview of



Cooper [Page 20]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


the NEARnet User Services Program Plan presented by Jim Naro,
NEARnet's user services manager. John Rugo, the NEARnet Program
Manager, presented a talk on the Internet User Services Support
Structure. Gary Malkin, of Xylogics, Co-chair of the IETF User
Glossary Working Group and member of the User Services Advisory
Council, discussed the user services activities of the Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF). Shelli Meyers, Assistant Manager
for Distributed Computing at Boston University, gave a presentation
on introducing the Internet at Boston University.

The third seminar of the NEARnet Mini-Seminar Series is scheduled
for July 31, from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. at BBN's Newman
Auditorium. The upcoming seminar will focus on expanding the
users' knowledge about resources and information available over the
Internet.

Information on the seminar series is available via anonymous FTP
from nic.near.net in the directory seminars. For further
information regarding the seminars, please call the NEARnet Hotline
(617) 873-8730 or send electronic mail to the NEARnet User Services
Staff at .

NEARnet Announces New Dialup Service

NEARnet introduced a new service known as Dialup Plus which
provides turnkey Internet access for smaller organizations using
dial-on-demand SLIP connections. For more information, contact
nearnet-join@nic.near.net.

Corinne Carroll

NNSC, UCAR/BOLT BERANEK and NEWMAN, INC.
----------------------------------------

Cyndi Mills, Manager of the NNSC, participated in the INET '92
Conference in Kobe, Japan.

The NNSC (NSF Network Service Center) has begun a thorough-going
update of the Internet Resource Guide. In June, we distributed 18
new and updated entries. We are sending requests to our
contributors to revise and update their entries in the Guide,
beginning, with the oldest entries. The NNSC is actively seeking
new entries for the Resource Guide. If you know of a resource that
should be included, please send a message to "resource-
guide@nnsc.nsf.net" and we will be happy to send instructions and a
template to the address you suggest.





Cooper [Page 21]

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We plan to produce a short version of the Guide as a companion to
the present guide. We will also continue the present format with
the modifications noted below. For the Compact Internet Resource
Guide, we are asking each contributor to prepare a ONE-LINER -- a
summary containing only the most essential description of the
Resource, in 72 characters or less. The Introduction to the
Compact Guide will direct the user who wishes to learn more to the
Resource Guide itself, and, at the contributor's option, to longer
documents.

The Internet Resource Guide has been very well received in the
Internet community. The Compact Guide should make it easier for
users to get an idea of the Resources that are available, and
encourage other Resource providers to contribute entries to the
Guide.

The NNSC is collecting updates from the mid-level networks for the
NSFNET site list for the next issue of the NSF Network Newsletter.

On June 8th, the Washington Post published an article on the
Internet. The NNSC Staff has received more than fifty requests for
information as a result of that article and we are still receiving
requests from the article "Applying the Internet" that appeared in
Byte Magazine last February.

Charlotte Mooers

NORTHWESTNET
------------

Since January 1992, 15 new members have joined NorthWestNet. The
following organizations include K-12 school districts, colleges and
universities, libraries, and for-profit corporations:

Asymetrix/Starwave Corporation, Bellevue, WA
International Society for Optical Enginnering (SPIE), Bellingham, WA
Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, WA
University of Montana, Missoula, MT

The following members are partner recipients of an NSF grant,
"Enabling K-12 Education in the Pacific Northwest through
Internetworking":

Catlin Gabel School, Portland, OR
College Place Middle School, Edmonds, WA
Einstein Middle School (Shoreline School District)
Lakeside School, Seattle, WA
Meany Middle School (Seattle School District)



Cooper [Page 22]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


Odle School, (Bellevue School District)

The following colleges received NSF connection grants sponsored by
NorthWestNet:

Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA
Linfield College, McMinnville, OR
Pacific University, Portland, OR
The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA
Walla Walla College, Walla Walla, WA

NorthWestNet
15400 SE 30th Place, Suite 202 Phone: (206) 562-3000
Bellevue, WA 98007 Fax: (206) 562-4822

Dr. Eric S. Hood, Executive Director
Dan L. Jordt, Director of Technical Services
Anthony Naughtin, Director of Client Services
Schele Gislason, Administrative Assistant

NorthWestNet serves the six state region of Alaska, Idaho, Montana,
North Dakota, Oregon, and Washington.

by Schele Gislason

NSFNET/ANSNET BACKBONE ENGINEERING
----------------------------------

T3 Backbone Status
==================

The T3 Backbone continued to run very reliably during June. With
the completion of the RS/960 DS3 interface upgrade in May, the
cutover of additional traffic from the T1 to the T3 network resumed
in June and is proceeding as quickly as possible. The number of
networks configured and announced to the T3 network continues to
increase. Midlevel traffic cut over from the T1 to the T3 backbone
included NorthWestNet, Sprint/International Connections Manager,
and Alternet. The T3 backbone is now carrying nearly double the
packet load of that of the T1 backbone.

With the upgrade complete and the T3 network stable, several
performance and functional enhancements have been administered
during June. Improvements to the routing daemon and SNMP daemon
were made. A remaining problem on the T3 network is the FDDI
adapter performance and stability. Due to the complexity of the T3
adapter upgrade, we chose to defer the FDDI upgrade until August to
ensure operational stability.



Cooper [Page 23]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


Statistics on network traffic and configured networks
=====================================================

The total inbound packet count for the T3 network was
10,736,059,912,up 29% from April. 220,593,003 of these packets
entered from the T1 network. The total inbound packet count for
the T1 network was 5,761,976,518, down 16.7% from May. 536,009,585
of these packets entered from the T3 network. The combined total
inbound packet count for the T1 and T3 networks (less cross network
traffic) was 15,741,433,842, up 0.9% from April.

Currently there are 5801 IP networks configured in the policy
routing database for the T1 network, and 3966 for the T3 network.
Actual announced networks to the backbone varies and is currently
2750 for T3 and 4425 for T1.

NOC Problem Reports
===================

The number of problem reports that result in NOC trouble tickets
(total all priority classes) for the T3 network remains constant at
10-20 per week, and for the T1 network it remains at the 15-20 rate
per week.

T1 Backbone Status
==================

The T1 backbone's reliability is not as good as T3, due largely to
increased route processing on the RCP nodes. The full load of
routes is still being carried by these machines, and they are
experiencing congestion and performance problems to some degree.
Improvements have been made to the routing software to accomodate
protocol upgrades (ie. BGP2).

T3 Routing Daemon Software Status
=================================

Activities related to the rcp_routed software in June emphasized
correcting software problems involving routing instability, and
monitoring & correcting routing table integrity problems. There
were many bug fixes applied to the routing daemon over the last
three months.

Monitoring of routing integrity consists of data collection of the
full netstat table to find route flapping problems within the
backbone and within peer networks, BGP disconnect problems, and
external network metric problems. Additional work is underway to
collect full routing tables from backbone nodes to be processed



Cooper [Page 24]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


using a relational database system. This system generates reports
on the statistical use of primary routes, reliability of network
announcements to the backbone, and long term statistics on inter-
domain routing announcements and growth.

A number of improvements and bug fixes have been made to the T3
routing software over the last two months. Highlights included: fix
to allow an ENSS that is isolated from the backbone to stop
announcing default to peers, better handling of router adapter
failures, preventing overruns of external BGP messages sent to
external peer routers, gracefully dropping bogus external routes to
backbone ENSS nodes, correct response to external metric selection
problem for nets announced at same metric from multiple peers,
problem with interaction between BGP and EGP for peers in the same
Autonomous System, hashing route table efficiency improvements, two
routes with same AS path are now both installed to allow backup,
BGP-2 PDU size increased from 1024 to 4096 bytes, route from BGP
and EGP with same metric now prefers BGP route, better handling of
next hop behind peer router and shared network, BGP update packet
format fix, fix to BGP 1-2 version negotiation, eliminated chance
of BGP disconnects during IGP transitions, eliminating BGP
disconnects if peer router is too busy, better response to route
instabilities upon failure of T1 interconnect or ENSS, and
autorestart of the routing daemon in the event of a crash.

As a result of the monitoring and analysis effort along with the
actual software changes, reliability and route integrity has
improved dramatically on the T3 network over the last month.

RS/960 DS3 On-Card Memory Problem
=================================

A batch of bad memory chips have been found to result in memory
parity errors on a few interfaces. Five of these cards have been
replaced as the problems have been identified. Diagnostic microcode
has been developed to detect the problems in advance, and nodes are
being scheduled for diagnostics to be run over the next few weeks
during routing configuration update scheduled windows.

DSU Synchronization and CRC/alignment Problem
=============================================

A problem that causes logical link failures has been traced to a
clock synchronization problem on the T3 Technologies DSU's during
clock master/slave transitions. This problem occurs very
infrequently and has been reproduced using a newly installed
circuit on the T3 research network. Enhanced instrumentation has
been added to detect this problem, and work is in progress to



Cooper [Page 25]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


correct it.

End-To-End Packet Loss Analysis
===============================

Researchers at University of Maryland recently conducted some
experiments and noticed periodic and random packet loss and packet
duplicates when using the T3 network. There were two problems
traced to a bridge device and an ethernet problem on the SURAnet
ethernet. Peer router problems causing some packet loss during
routing updates at NEARnet were identified and are being corrected.
Also some packet loss on the T3 ENSS FDDI interface at Stanford was
identified. This is due to an FDDI card output buffering problem
and might be addressed prior to the FDDI upgrade in August.

FDDI Adapter Upgrade
====================

Although the T3 adapters have been upgraded from older technology
to the new RS960 adapter technology, the FDDI adapters in the ENSS
nodes have not yet been upgraded. The older FDDI adapters continue
to suffer from performance on reliability problems.

The new RS960 FDDI adapter is scheduled to be installed as part of
a field trial on July 20th. Following this field trial, we expect
to upgrade the older FDDI interfaces with the new RS960 interface
adapters in early August. There are currently five T3 ENSS sites
that are using FDDI interfaces in production.

SNMP Daemon Changes
===================

A new version of the SNMP daemon for the T3 network was installed
on June 26. This version supports MIB-II variables for the T/960
ethernet cards (ifInUcastPkts, ifOutUcastPkts, and ifInErrors), and
also includes enhanced configuration support for monitoring T3
DSUs.

A new SNMP client for the NOC to control the T1 Cylink ACSUs which
are part of the T3 backbone has been implemented. This avoids use
of a separate dial-in connection to these CSUs.

New SNMP variables have been added to furthermonitor the DSU
synchronization problem mentioned above.

Mark Knopper (mak@merit.edu)
Jordan Becker (becker@ans.net)




Cooper [Page 26]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


NSFNET/INFORMATION SERVICES
---------------------------

NSFNET Project Information Services

At the close of June, 5739 networks are announced via the NSFNET
infrastructures. Of this total, 3920 nets are announced via the T3
backbone, and 2002 nets have foreign locations. Guests at the
Merit Network Operations Center (NOC) included Mr. Tadeusz
Wegrzynowski, Managing Director of the Warsaw University Computer
Center and Administrator of the PLEARN Node, and members of the
Department of Defense Security Administration.

The Information Infrastructure and Technology Act of 1992 was
introduced in the U.S. Senate by Al Gore (D-TN) on 1 July. This
act builds on the High-Performance Computing Act introduced by
Senator Gore in 1988 and signed into law last year. The new bill
would ensure that the technology developed by the High-Performance
Computing Program is applied widely in K-12 education, libraries,
health care, and industry, particularly manufacturing. The text of
this legislation is available for anonymous ftp from the host
nic.merit.edu in the directory /nren/iita.1992 as the file
gorebill.1992.txt. This bill is also available via electronic mail
by sending e-mail to nis-info@nic.merit.edu: ignore the subject
field, and specify send gorebill.1992.txt as the first line of
text.

"Making Your NSFNET Connection Count," sponsored by Merit Network,
Inc. and hosted by NevadaNet on June 1 and 2 in Las Vegas, was
well received by 105 attendees. The keynote address,
"Supercomputer Visualization and Networking," was given by Donna
Cox, Director of Numerical Lab Programs at the National Center for
Supercomputer Applications. "Emerging National Network--How You
Fit In," were closing remarks by Laura Breeden of FARNET. George
Brett, MCNC; Art St. George, UNM; Tom Grundner, NPTN; Linda
Delzeit, NPTN; Ann Okerson, ARL; and Phill Gross, ANS, Inc. were
featured speakers. Ellen Hoffman, Manager of Merit/NSFNET
Information Services, discussed the "NSFNET--Your Highway to
National Networking." Laura Kelleher and Mark Davis-Craig,
Merit/NSFNET Information Services, "Navigated the Internet"
presenting information services resources and network tools for
document delivery. Merit K-12 Outreach Coordinator, Dana Sitzler,
participated in a break-out session on networking for K-12
education. Elise Gerich of Merit Internet Engineering introduced
"Internetworking with TCP/IP." Pat Smith, Steve Burdick, Susan R.
Harris, and Fred Swartz, all of the Information Services staff,
attended the proceedings and were instrumental in the organization
and success of the seminar. The next Merit Networking Seminar is



Cooper [Page 27]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


scheduled for October 19 and 20 in Ann Arbor, MI. Electronic mail
inquiries may be sent to seminar@merit.edu or phone 1-800-66-MERIT
for further information.

Laura Kelleher, Merit/NSFNET Information Services, and Rick
Schmalgemeier, Merit Technical Support Group, met in Bloomington,
Indiana with other members of the TopNode initiative from the
Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) and Indiana University.
TopNode is an Internet directory project, with current efforts
focused on defining the data elements for cataloguing directory and
application information about Internet resources.

Pat Smith, Merit/NSFNET Information Services, and Elise Gerich,
Merit Internet Engineering, participated in the Canadian National
Networking 1992 conference held in St. John's, Newfoundland.
Smith's presentation cruised the resources of the Internet, while
Gerich gave a technical overview of the NSFNET. As the NSFNET
representative to the CA*net meeting which convened in Montreal,
Quebec, Gerich gave the NSFNET update. Gerich and Jim Williams,
Merit Associate Director for National Networking, traveled to
Tokyo, Japan for the International Networking Conference, INET '92.
Gerich participated on the policy panel discussing international
connections. Gerich also represented Merit/NSFNET at the FEPG/EOWG
meeting in Washington, D.C. at the end of June. A fact finding
meeting to discuss NSFNET requirements for connectivity to Russia
was sponsored by the High Energy Physics group at SDSC. Mark
Knopper, Manager of Merit Internet Engineering, and Enke Chen of IE
attended.

Jo Ann Ward (jward@merit.edu)

SAIC
----
The GATED implementation of IDPR has been completed. An end
document describing the available functionality, differences from
the spec, and needed future development will be forthcoming. The
release will be made available pending coordination with Cornell.

Extensive testing with SRI shook loose several bugs, but also
raised some architectural questions. These will be discussed at
the upcoming IETF.

Planned Activities:

Completion of end documents and release of the software to Cornell.

Robert "Woody" Woodburn,




Cooper [Page 28]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


UCL
----

Ian Wakeman and Mark Handley attended INET 92 in Kobe, Japan, and
gave papers on "Analysis of UK-US Transatlantic Traffic" and
"Multimedia Conferencing: From Prototype to National Pilot". These
can be ftp'd from cs.ucl.ac.uk:docs/rntraffic.ps.Z and
cs.ucl.ac.uk:car/car-inet92.ps.Z both (Unix) compressed
(Adobe)postscript

Peter Kirstein, Paul Tsuchiya and Steve Hardcastle-Kille also
attended.

Work is in hand on a new multicast routing algorithm, called Core
Based Trees (crowcroft, ballardie, tsuchiya).

John Crowcroft (j.crowcroft@CS.UCL.AC.UK)

UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE
----------------------

1. The end2end research group meeting was held at the University
of Delaware on 9-10 June.

2. Measurements continue with the NTP version-3 daemon for Unix
as modified to support a one-pulse-per-second signal generated
by some timecode receivers and precision oscillators.
Preliminary results were presented at the end2end research
meeting. While incidental jitter has been reduced to a few
tens of microseconds, the frequency stability, typically a few
parts in 10**7, is limited by the oscillator wander and
crystal aging found in typical computer clocks.

3. A comprehensive technical report on precision computer
timekeeping can be found on louie.udel.edu in the compressed
tar archive pub/ntp/doc/timex.tar.Z. The files included are in
PostScript format and are rich in diagrams and equations.

4. Our burgeoning antenna farm at two sites now feeds two WWVB
timecode receivers, three WWV receivers, two GPS receivers,
two LORAN-C receivers and a CHU receiver. Aging fuzzball
primary time server dcn1.udel.edu has been replaced by a
dedicated Sun IPC at the same address and synchronized to
WWVB. Senile fuzzball primary time server dcn5.udel.edu has
been replaced by a dedicated Bancomm bc700LAN integrated NTP
time server at the same address and synchronized to GPS.

Dave Mills (Mills@UDEL.EDU)



Cooper [Page 29]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


UUNET
-----

USENET READERSHIP SUMMARY REPORT for Jun 92 This is the first
article in a monthly posting series from the Network Measurement
Project at the DEC Western Research Laboratory in Palo Alto,
California.

This survey is based on a sample of data taken from various USENET
sites. At the end of this message there is a short explanation of
the measurement techniques and the meaning of the various
statistics. The messages that follow this one show survey data
sorted by various criteria.

The newsgroup volume and article counts that I post are often
significantly different from the ones posted by Rick Adams, because
he includes the size of a crossposted article in every group to
which it is posted, whereas I charge that size only to the first-
named group.

The complete set of readership data (of which this is a summary) is
posted in news.lists. The software that will let your site
participate in the survey is in comp.sources.d and news.admin

Brian Reid

OVERALL SUMMARY:
This Estimated
Sample for entire net
Sites: 836 54000
Fraction reporting: 1.55% 100%
Users with accounts: 179942 11623000
Netreaders: 40129 2592000

Average readers per site: 48
Percent of users who are netreaders: 22.30%
Average traffic per day (megabytes): 35.829
Average traffic per day (messages): 14990
Traffic measurement interval: last 28 days
Readership measurement interval: last 75 days
Sites used to measure propagation: 835

Newsgroups: news.lists
Path: uunet!usenet
From: newsstats@uunet.UU.NET
Subject: Total traffic through uunet for the last 2 weeks
Message-ID: <1992Jun23.033035.3653@uunet.uu.net>
Sender: usenet@uunet.uu.net (News Statistics)



Cooper [Page 30]

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Organization: UUNET Technologies, Inc
Date: Tue, 23 Jun 1992 03:30:35 GMT
Approved: rick@uunet.UU.NET
Lines: 181

212029 articles, totaling 398.428419 Mbytes (496.206735 including
headers), were submitted from 19438 different Usenet sites by 50655
different users to 3262 different newsgroups for an average of
28.459173 Mbytes (35.443338 including headers) per day.

Only categories receiving an average of 1 article per day are listed.

Article Total
Category Count Mbytes Percent Mbytes
alt 34908 118.115806 29.6% 135.572185
comp 43899 82.331654 20.7% 102.534768
rec 52604 78.456313 19.7% 102.366968
soc 21232 38.608429 9.7% 49.453556
talk 10470 20.123017 5.1% 25.751884
sci 9151 16.836333 4.2% 21.386455
bit 10796 15.535942 3.9% 21.307927
fj 6837 15.010388 3.8% 18.662948
clari 10229 14.695643 3.7% 19.699456
misc 8968 13.646535 3.4% 17.887848
bionet 3111 9.555191 2.4% 10.863906
ncar 7716 7.253869 1.8% 10.639755
news 1702 6.906763 1.7% 7.800633
de 3024 5.646117 1.4% 7.212807
vmsnet 896 4.091063 1.0% 4.522983
gnu 1243 2.928898 0.7% 3.471055
ba 2242 2.758500 0.7% 3.777687
aus 1278 2.039019 0.5% 2.625067
k12 2401 1.788299 0.4% 2.763822
can 397 1.383329 0.3% 1.576498
ca 635 1.316793 0.3% 1.653421
info 689 1.284662 0.3% 1.588201
tor 494 1.230391 0.3% 1.400920
tx 546 1.193348 0.3% 1.480855
mn 279 1.170335 0.3% 1.283024
sfnet 763 0.850059 0.2% 1.227162
biz 370 0.783028 0.2% 0.956120
su 532 0.726683 0.2% 0.987004
cu 468 0.694964 0.2% 0.865384
ne 743 0.628402 0.2% 0.968418
uiuc 493 0.602039 0.2% 0.817024
inet 206 0.518883 0.1% 0.610436
houston 130 0.450788 0.1% 0.516701
seattle 246 0.401297 0.1% 0.516080



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Internet Monthly Report June 1992


austin 300 0.382534 0.1% 0.525992
co 364 0.301785 0.1% 0.414392
pnw 248 0.298050 0.1% 0.412621
sdnet 105 0.280569 0.1% 0.326039
umn 28 0.259735 0.1% 0.273765
kw 144 0.249874 0.1% 0.314975
nj 313 0.216847 0.1% 0.369123
ucb 144 0.196793 0.0% 0.255925
chi 289 0.195194 0.0% 0.309497
fidonet 249 0.190270 0.0% 0.267026
eunet 114 0.186935 0.0% 0.241003
ont 175 0.184347 0.0% 0.269154
hsv 149 0.176094 0.0% 0.234330
fnet 31 0.175378 0.0% 0.189467
la 63 0.171480 0.0% 0.197413
dc 263 0.166349 0.0% 0.273837
slo 130 0.165193 0.0% 0.215304
um 69 0.147887 0.0% 0.174910
pdx 170 0.132813 0.0% 0.206670
swnet 86 0.129794 0.0% 0.171211
uk 43 0.124067 0.0% 0.144705
nlnet 89 0.118330 0.0% 0.159133
nz 67 0.118201 0.0% 0.147246
csu 35 0.101998 0.0% 0.113262
uw 108 0.095029 0.0% 0.152390
utcs 61 0.080505 0.0% 0.108546
ny 126 0.077244 0.0% 0.138754
or 99 0.073393 0.0% 0.119006
nil 23 0.065539 0.0% 0.076132
dfw 79 0.063722 0.0% 0.102924
mit 115 0.063010 0.0% 0.116813
mi 26 0.061920 0.0% 0.073861
r-node 14 0.058307 0.0% 0.062940
triangle 67 0.056431 0.0% 0.085257
ut 74 0.054969 0.0% 0.090919
rpi 60 0.052493 0.0% 0.075349
sanet 28 0.050144 0.0% 0.064510
pa 57 0.047801 0.0% 0.074739
phl 52 0.046252 0.0% 0.070924
ga 60 0.044955 0.0% 0.069958
bnr 34 0.039524 0.0% 0.062604
csd 27 0.039281 0.0% 0.052617
sura 85 0.038888 0.0% 0.072646
athena 71 0.037267 0.0% 0.073373
princeton 38 0.035890 0.0% 0.059665
ctdl 100 0.035562 0.0% 0.071786
tamu 52 0.033134 0.0% 0.056610
fl 35 0.029541 0.0% 0.043609



Cooper [Page 32]

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atl 37 0.029470 0.0% 0.043464
boulder 41 0.028489 0.0% 0.046807
cmu 17 0.027779 0.0% 0.035764
uu 32 0.027492 0.0% 0.053024
connect 14 0.025045 0.0% 0.033087
oar 24 0.024401 0.0% 0.034021
us 42 0.022787 0.0% 0.041324
pgh 21 0.021806 0.0% 0.030773
ingr 25 0.021449 0.0% 0.031712
capdist 23 0.019538 0.0% 0.031107
sun 38 0.019301 0.0% 0.037393
ott 27 0.019189 0.0% 0.031276
tek 31 0.017296 0.0% 0.031605
uwisc 15 0.016409 0.0% 0.023950
wi 18 0.016348 0.0% 0.025704
utah 17 0.016187 0.0% 0.029435
21 0.014330 0.0% 0.022096
fido 15 0.013987 0.0% 0.021628
oh 17 0.013170 0.0% 0.020971
general 15 0.013018 0.0% 0.024241
sqnt-public 15 0.011999 0.0% 0.019363
zer 16 0.011241 0.0% 0.019727
unh 15 0.010253 0.0% 0.023251
tn 17 0.009823 0.0% 0.016987
bu 19 0.009044 0.0% 0.017903
trial 19 0.008179 0.0% 0.016820

Propagation Delay to uunet

No. of Cumulative Hourly Breakdown of First Day
Days Articles Percent Hours Articles Percent
<0 6727 3% (Time Warp) -1 5503 2%
0 2 3% 0 2 2%
1 194450 95% 1 73024 37%
2 5621 97% 2 34244 53%
3 2003 98% 3 20118 62%
4 824 99% 4 15588 70%
5 510 99% 5 12537 76%
6 339 99% 6 9182 80%
7 257 99% 7 5849 83%
8 163 99% 8 3939 85%
9 93 99% 9 2942 86%
10 92 99% 10 2208 87%
11 44 99% 11 1907 88%
12 31 99% 12 1627 89%
13 50 99% 13 1500 90%
14 27 99% 14 1363 90%
15 1 100% 15 1246 91%



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Internet Monthly Report June 1992


16 0 100% 16 1159 91%
17 0 100% 17 985 92%
18 0 100% 18 901 92%
19 0 100% 19 862 93%
20 0 100% 20 792 93%
21 0 100% 21 775 93%
22 0 100% 22 607 94%
23 0 100% 23 611 94%

Average delay per article is 6.0 hours

Article Size Distribution:
% of % of % of % of
Kbytes Count Articles Bytes Kbytes Count Articles Bytes
1 60264 28.4% 9.0% 9 606 0.3% 1.1%
2 97198 45.8% 28.4% 10 408 0.2% 0.8%
3 30020 14.2% 14.9% 11 292 0.1% 0.6%
4 10130 4.8% 7.2% 12 256 0.1% 0.6%
5 4629 2.2% 4.3% 13 189 0.1% 0.5%
6 2446 1.2% 2.7% 14 153 0.1% 0.4%
7 1450 0.7% 1.9% 15 127 0.1% 0.4%
8 903 0.4% 1.4% >= 16 2958 1.4% 25.8%


Historical Traffic Data

14 days Mbytes Posting Active
ending Articles per day Sites Users Groups
911209 145496 22.131 14997 39474 1851
920109 107114 16.686 12452 29869 1725
920211 195672 27.709 18092 49442 2045
920224 186934 26.287 17859 48591 2070
920312 185487 25.844 18259 48937 2081
920325 208256 29.337 18337 52109 2160
920408 218658 29.496 19576 55370 3881
920422 246948 33.470 19934 57135 3348
920509 238268 31.839 20068 56616 4506
920525 223073 31.069 19724 53783 3409
920609 226540 31.376 19846 53094 3339
920622 212029 28.459 19438 50655 3262











Cooper [Page 34]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


DIRECTORY SERVICES
------------------

This section of the Internet Monthly is devoted to efforts working to
develop directory services that are for, or effect, the Internet. We
would like to encourage any organization with news about directory
service activities to use this forum for publishing brief monthly news
items. The current reporters list includes:

o IETF OSIDS Working Group [no]
o IETF DISI Working Group [no]
o Field Operational X.500 Project [no]
- ISI
- Merit
- PSI
- SRI
o National Institute of Standards and Technology [included]
o North American Directory Forum [no]
o OSI Implementor's Workshop [no]
o PARADISE Project [no]
o PSI DARPA/NNT X.500 Project [no]
o PSI WHITE PAGES PILOT [no]
o Registration Authority Committee (ANSI USA RAC) [no]
o U.S. Department of State, Study Group D, [no]
MHS Management Domain subcommittee (SG-D MHS-MD)

Tom Tignor (tpt2@isi.edu)
DS Report Coordinator

NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY
----------------------------------------------

During June the Pilot DSA was up and running almost continuously.
Starting in July, we will collect statistics on Pilot usage. These
will be reported beginning in August.

Work has progressed on extending the scope and accessibility of the
Pilot. An account has been set up to enable dialup DUA access for
other agency staff. On login, the Widget DUA user interface is
automatically brought up, providing access to the Pilot DSA. Some
details remain to be worked out, but dial-up access is expected to
begin by the end of July.

We are continuing to pursue TP4/CLNP accessibility to the Pilot DSA
over FTS A and B. The impediments have to do with establishing an
OSI routing path from the NIST FTS access machine to the machine
running the Pilot DSA.




Cooper [Page 35]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


NIST X.500 Implementation
-------------------------
Improvements were caried out in two areas of the Custos code during
June. A problem with the result of the List operation, in which the
origin of the information carried in the result was incorrectly
flagged, was corrected, and the code for the Search operation was
enhanced to enable Search to operate on all naming contexts,
regardless of whether the naming context has been loaded into
memory at startup.

Future Plans
------------
We have continued our work with NASA, DHHS, and other agencies to
establish Internet and FTS2000 connectivity to the pilot DSA. We
have begun a dialog with Dallas Day of Wright-Patterson AFB on the
integration of his base's OSIWare DSA into the Pilot, and have had
similar discussions with Doug Harsha from the Department of
Agriculture in Ft. Collins, CO. We have also initiated discussions
with NIST's Computing and Applied Mathematics Laboratory on a
collaborative venture to provide a NIST-wide white pages directory
service. The plan is to provide telephone/email/addressing
information on NIST staff to the desktop, via PC and Macintosh
based DUA packages. We expect that this can serve as a model for
other agencies interested in deploying the OSI Directory.

John Tebbutt (tebbutt@rhino.ncsl.nist.gov)

























Cooper [Page 36]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


CALENDAR
--------

Readers are requested to send in dates of events that are appropriate
for this calendar section. Please send your submissions to
(cooper@isi.edu).

1992 CALENDAR

Jul 13-17 ANSI X3T5
Jul 13-17 IETF, Cambridge, MA
Jul 13-24 ISO/IEC JTC1/SC6, San Diego, CA
Jul 26 T1P1
Aug 2 T1S1, Call Control and Signaling (ISDN,
Frame Relay, Broadband ATM)
Aug 3-7 T1S1, Eatontown, NJ
Aug 4-6 4th Workshop on Computer Sec. Incident Handling
Denver, CO
Aug 16 T1S1, Call Control and Signaling (ISDN,
Frame Relay, Broadband ATM)
Aug 17-21 ACM SIGCOMM '92, UMBC, Baltimore, Maryland

Aug 23 T1X1, Seattle, WA
Aug 25 RARE Executive Committee, Amsterdam
Aug 24-27 CONCUR '92 -- Third Int'l Conference on
Concurrency Theory (Paper deadline March 1, 1992)
Rance Cleaveland (rance@csc.ncsu.edu)
Scott Smolka (sas@sunysb.edu)
Stony Brook
Sep 1-2 EWOS Tech. Assembly, Brussels
Sep 1-2 T1AG, San Francisco, CA
Sep 7-11 12th IFIP World Computer Congress
Madrid, Spain; Contact: IFIP92@dit.upm.es
Sep 8-10 ANSI X3S3.3, Minneapolis, MN
Sep 8-11 AUUG, Melbourne, AU
Sep 9-10 European Electronic Mail Assoc., (EEMA), Prague
Sep 14-18 ANSI X3T5
Sep 21-25 OIW, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD
Sep 22-24 ANSI X3S3.3, Boston, MA
Sep 24-25 RARE Council of Administration, Bratislava
Sep 28-30 5th IFIP International Workshop on Protocol
Test Systems (IWPTS), Montreal, Canada
iwpts@iro.umontreal.ca
Sep 28-Oct 2 Int'l. Conf. on Computer Comm., Genova, Italy
Oct 5-9 EWOS Workshops, Brussels
Oct 6 WG15
Oct 6-9 CCITT WP/SG V




Cooper [Page 37]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


Oct 7-9 ETSF Technical Assembly, Nice, France
Oct 12-16 FORTE'92, Lannion, France
Roland Groz (groz@lannion.cnet.fr)
Michel Diaz (diaz@droopy.laas.fr)
Oct 12-16 CCITT WP/SG1
Oct 18 T1AG, T1
Oct 20-23 CCITT WP/SG VI
Oct 25 T1P1
Oct 26-30 CCITT WP/SG VII
Oct 26-30 INTEROP92, San Francisco
Dan Lynch (dlynch@interop.com)
Oct 28-29 NETWORKS '92, Trivandrum, India
S.V. Raghavan (raghavan@shiva.ernet.in)
Nov 2-6 T1S1
Nov 3-5 The Network Services Conference 1992
Organized by EARN, in cooperation with EUNET/
EurOpen, Nordunet, RIPE and RARE, Pisa, Italy
Nov 4-5 European Electronic Mail Assoc. (EEMA), London
Nov 5-6 EARN, TBC
Nov 9-11 COSINE Policy Group, Rome
Nov 9-13 ANSI X3T5
Nov 10-11 EWOS Technical Assembly, Brussels
Nov 10-12 ANSI X3S3.3, Mountain View, CA
Nov 16-20 IETF, Wash. D.C.
Nov 25-26 ETSI General Assembly, Nice, France
Nov 25-29 EurOpen/Uniform, Amsterdam
Nov 29 T1E1, Anaheim, CA
Dec 1-3 ANSI X3S3.3, Boulder, CO
Dec 6-9 GLOBECOM '92, Orlando, Florida (See IEEE
Publications)
Dec 7-11 DECUS '92, Las Vegas, NV
Dec 13 T1AG
Dec 14-18 OIW, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD
Dec 18 ECTUA General Assembly,


1993 CALENDAR

Jan RARE Council of Administration, TBC
Jan 4-7 Intl Workshop on Intelligent,
User Interfaces, Orlando, FL
Jan 11-15 TCOS WG, New Orleans
Jan 25-27 RIPE, Prague
Jan 25-29 USENIX, San Diego
Feb 11-12 PSRG Workshop on network and Distributed System
Security, San Diego, Ca
Feb 28-Mar 3 Modeling & Analysis of Telecommunication
Systems, Nashville, TN



Cooper [Page 38]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


Mar 8-12 INTEROP93, Wasington, D.C.
Dan Lynch (dlynch@interop.com)
Mar 8-12 OIW, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD
Mar 15-18 Uniform, San Francisco
Mar 24-31 CEBIT 93, Hannover, Germany
Apr 5-19 TCOS WG, Boston (tentative)
Apr 18-23 IFIP WG 6.6 Third International Symposium
on Integrated Network Management, Sheraton
Palace Hotel, San Francisco, CA (kzm@hls.com)
May 10-13 4th Joint European Networking COnf., JENC93
Trondheim, Norway
May 13-14 RARE Council of Administration, Trondheim
May 23-26 ICC'93, Geneva, Switzerland
May-Jun PSTV-XIII, University of Liege.
Contact: Andre Danthine,
Jun 7-11 OIW, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD
Jun 21-25 USENIX, Cincinnati
Jun 30 RARE Technical Committee, Amsterdam
Jul 12-16 TCOS WG, Hawaii (tentative)
Aug 18-21 INET93, San Francisco Bay Area
Aug 23-27 INTEROP93, San Francisco
Dan Lynch (dlynch@interop.com)
Aug SIGCOMM 93, San Francisco
Sep ?? 6th SDL Forum, Darmstadt
Ove Faergemand (ove@tfl.dk)
Sep 13-17 OIW, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD
Sep 20-31 ISO/IEC JTC1/SC6, Seoul, Korea.
Sep 28-29 September RIPE Technical Days, TBC
Sep 30-Oct 2 Paris
Oct INTEROP93, Paris, France
Oct 12-14 Conference on Network Information Processing,
Sofia, Bulgaria; Contact: IFIP-TC6
Oct 18-22 TCOS WG, Atlanta, GA (tentative)
Nov 9-13 IEEE802 Plenary, LaJolla, CA
Nov 15-19 Supercomputing 93, Portland, OR
Dec 6-10 OIW, NIST, Gaithersburg, MD















Cooper [Page 39]

Internet Monthly Report June 1992


1994 CALENDAR

Apr 18-22 INTEROP94, Washington, D.C.
Dan Lynch (dlynch@interop.com)
Aug 29-Sep 2 IFIP World Congress
Hamburg, Germany; Contact: IFIP
Sep 12-16 INTEROP94, San Francisco
Dan Lynch (dlynch@interop.com)

1995 CALENDAR

Sep 18-22 INTEROP95, San Francisco, CA
Dan Lynch (dlynch@interop.com)

========================================================================




































Cooper [Page 40]