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Showing papers on "Internetwork protocol published in 1974"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A protocol that supports the sharing of resources that exist in different packet switching networks is presented and provides for variation in individual network packet sizes, transmission failures, sequencing, flow control, end-to-end error checking, and the creation and destruction of logical process- to-process connections.
Abstract: A protocol that supports the sharing of resources that exist in different packet switching networks is presented. The protocol provides for variation in individual network packet sizes, transmission failures, sequencing, flow control, end-to-end error checking, and the creation and destruction of logical process-to-process connections. Some implementation issues are considered, and problems such as internetwork routing, accounting, and timeouts are exposed.

802 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 1974
TL;DR: One approach Is a celleotlon of "speolalopurpose protocols . " Each application prograr, l would publish descr ip t ion of t i le protocol needed to drive the program and to v iew ti le output.
Abstract: One approach Is a celleotlon of "speolalopurpose protocols . " Each application prograr, l would publish descr ip t ion of t i le protocol needed to drive the program and to v iew ti le output (e.g, the UCSB system was 8o documented) . The prospect ive user would then write e program at his si te to Interpret the published protocol and to drive his display (probably making use of exist ing graphics programming faoll lt lee at Ills site). Thla might permit a convenient dlvlslon of labor between the computer execut ing the al)Pltcstlmt program and the computer driving the display (in pursuit of true resource sharing); It might be able to achieve very aw~,o,oth per formance despi te poor network reap.ease, etc. The d isadvantage of this approach Is that the user must write a new program to Inter face his dtsplay to each d i f ferent appl icat ion protocol. In addition, there Is no guarantee that the protocol required by the application prograr~ eae actua l ly be Implemented wlthln the user's o, perstklg sys tem and display hardware.

31 citations


01 Dec 1974
TL;DR: This notebook is a collection of documents that describe or specify the various protocols of the ARPA Computer Network as of December 1974, including the basic protocol described here is the IMP to Host Protocol.
Abstract: : This notebook is a collection of documents that describe or specify the various protocols of the ARPA Computer Network as of December 1974 Protocols are the rules of communication between processes The protocols defined here form a tree structure The basic protocol described here is the IMP to Host Protocol Built on that is the Host to Host Protocol Then spreading out somewhat but still closely related are the process level protocols: TELNET, File Transfer, Remote Job Entry, and Graphics Interspersed along the way are a few small protocols such as the Initial Connection Protocol, and the definition of the standard character set

2 citations