English

Whois.SmartWeb.CZ

RFC 208 - úplné znění

Plné znění RFC 208:






Network Working Group                                        A. McKenzie
Request for Comments: 208                        Bolt Beranek and Newman
NIC: 7181                                                  9 August 1971
Categories: B.l, C.2
Updates: none
Obsoletes: none


                             ADDRESS TABLES

   Attached is a copy of a revision to Appendix A of BBN Report No.
   1822; the revised version of the Appendix is our first attempt to
   make the list of sites attached to the ARPA Network prospective
   rather than retrospective.  We are adopting this approach because of
   the large number of sites scheduled for attachment in the near
   future, and because many Hosts apparently require a site's address to
   be in some local table before their NCPs will permit communication
   with the site.  Therefore, we urge such Hosts to add the new sites to
   their lists of addresses as soon as possible.  Also, please note the
   address change which will be made at BBN on exactly September first.

   Incidentally, it seems to us that it is irrational for an NCP to
   discard otherwise valid messages, simply because the sender's address
   doesn't appear in a local table.  Similarly, it seems almost as
   irrational for an NCP to prevent a local user from trying to
   communicate with a remote site, the address of which is known to the
   user but not stored in the NCP's tables.
























McKenzie                                                        [Page 1]

RFC 208 Address Tables 9 August 1971 Report No. 1822 Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc. APPENDIX A IMP AND HOST SITE IDENTIFICATION Bit 9-16 of the leader of most Host-to-IMP or IMP-to-Host messages define a network address related to the message (these bits are not meaningful for message types 1, 2, and 4). In a Host-to-IMP message the network address identifies a particular Host to which the message should be delivered. In an IMP-to-Host message the network address identifies the Host from which the message originated. A network address consists of six bits (bits 11-16 of the leader) which specify an IMP number, preceded by two bits (bits 9-10 of the leader) which specify the Host number of a particular Host connected to that IMP. The table below gives the decimal values of IMP number, Host number, and network address for each Host currently connected to the ARPA Network or scheduled for connection in the near future. Scheduled installation dates are also shown for Hosts not currently connected; these dates, however, are subject to change without notice. IMP SITE HOST NETWORK SCHEDULED NUMBER NAME NUMBER HOST ADDRESS INSTALLATION ------ ---- ------ ---- ------- ------------ 1 UCLA 0 SIGMA-7 1 1 IBM 360/91 65 2 SRI 0 PDP-10 (NIC) 2 1 PDP-10 (Al) 66 3 UCSB 0 IBM 360/75 3 4 UTAH 0 PDP-lO 4 5 BBN 0 DDP-516 5 ) See Note 1 1 PDP-10 (A) 69 ) 2 PDP-1O (B) 133 Note 1: Prior to September 1, 1971 the BBN PDP-1O (A) will be Host number 0 (network address 5) and the BBN DDP-516 will be Host number 1 (network address 69). The address change is to be made during the day on 9/1/71. McKenzie [Page 2]
RFC 208 Address Tables 9 August 1971 IMP SITE HOST NETWORK SCHEDULE NUMBER NAME NUMBER HOST ADDRESS INSTALLATION ------ ---- ------ ---- ------- ------------ 6 MIT 0 Honeywell 645 6 1 PDP-10 70 7 RAND O 360/65 7 1 PDP-1O 71 8 SDC O IBM 360/75 8 9 HARVARD O PDP-1O 9 1 PDP-1 73 2 PDP-11 137 10 LINCOLN O IBM 360/67 10 1 TX2 74 11 STANFORD O PDP-1O 11 12 ILLINOIS O PDP-11 12 13 CASE O PDP-1O 13 14 CARNEGIE O PDP-1O 14 15 PAOLI O B6500 15 16 NASA/AMES O IBM 360/67 16 8/3/71 2 TIP 144 17 MITRE 2 TIP 145 8/31/71 18 RADC O H 635/645 18 10/5/71 2 TIP 146 19 NBS O PDP-11 19 11/2/71 20 ETAC 2 TIP 148 11/30/71 21 TINKER O 418 III 21 1/4/71 22 McCLELLAN O 418 III 22 2/1/72 23 USC 0 IBM 360/44 23 2/29/72 2 TIP 151 24 GWC 2 TIP 152 3/14/72 25 NCAR O CDC 7600 25 3/28/72 2 TIP 153 30 BBN/TIP 2 TIP 158 McKenzie [Page 3]


English version: RFC 208