~ February 1995 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 Cooper (IMR@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 February 1995 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTERNET ARCHITECTURE BOARD INTERNET RESEARCH REPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 3 RESOURCE DISCOVERY AND DIRECTORY SERVICE . . .. . . . page 3 INTERNET ENGINEERING REPORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 4 Internet Projects ANSNET/NSFNET BACKBONE ENGINEERING . . . . . . . . . . . page 9 DANTE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 9 INTERNIC. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 11 ISI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 13 MERIT/NSFNET ENGINEERING. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 24 MIDNET. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 27 UCL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 28 CALENDAR OF EVENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 29 Rare List of Meetings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . page 33 Cooper [Page 2] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 INTERNET RESEARCH REPORTS ------------------------- RESOURCE DISCOVERY AND DIRECTORY SERVICE ---------------------------------------- The Internet Research Task Force research group on Resource Discovery has been developing and experimenting with the Harvest system for the past 1.5 years. Harvest provides an integrated set of tools to gather, extract, organize, search, cache, and replicate relevant information across the Internet. With modest effort users can tailor Harvest to digest information in many different formats, and offer custom search services on the Internet. Moreover, Harvest makes very efficient use of network traffic, remote servers, and disk space. In the past few months we have made significant improvements to the system, allowing well-controlled specifications of the information gathering workload, much better gathering and indexing performance, support for more data formats, more sophisticated caching and replication, ports to popular platforms, and much more easily installed and used binary distributions of the basic system. At present we are working on extending the system to support taxonomies and query routing, more complex data models, interfaces with other popular systems and products (such as Verity's and WAIS Inc.'s search engines, SGML, and SQL search engines), more customizable searching schemes, non-textual index/search engines, and a number of experiments concerning system scalability. We are actively pursuing collaborative efforts with other projects in all sectors - commercial, government, academic, and others. Readers can get information about Harvest (including demos, papers, software, and documentation) from http://harvest.cs.colorado.edu/ - Mike Schwartz (schwartz@cs.colorado.edu) University of Colorado, Boulder IRTF-RD Chair and Harvest Project Principal Investigator Mike Schwartz@latour.cs.colorado.edu. Cooper [Page 3] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 INTERNET ENGINEERING REPORTS ---------------------------- 1. Let me remind everyone that the next IETF meeting will be in Danvers, Massachusetts (a suburb of Boston) from April 3-7, 1995. Logistic information has already been posted to the IETF Announcement list. The summer IETF meeting will be held in Stockholm, Sweden the week of July 17-21, 1995. Due to the meeting costs, the IETF attendance fee for the Stockholm meeting will be US$300. Hotel information has been sent to the Announcement list, and attendees are encouraged to make their plane and hotel reservations. The IETF Secretariat is NOT accepting registrations for the Stockholm meeting at this time. Following Stockholm, the IETF will be meeting in Dallas, Texas on December 4-8, 1995. Our local host for this meeting is MCI. Once all the arrangements have been made, notifications will be sent to the IETF Announcement list. Remember that information on future IETF meetings can be always be found in the file 0mtg- sites.txt which is located on the IETF shadow directories. This information can also be viewed from the IETF Home Page on the Web. The URL is: http://www.ietf.cnri.reston.va.us 2. The minutes of the IESG teleconferences have been publicly available on the IETF Shadow directories since 1991. These files are placed in the /ftp/iesg directory. The following IESG minutes have been added: January 26, 1995 (iesg.95-01-26) February 9, 1995 (iesg.95-02-09) 3. The IESG approved or recommended the following 10 Protocol Actions during the month of February, 1995: o A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4) be published as a Draft Standard. o Application of the Border Gateway Protocol in the Internet be published as a Draft Standard. o Experience with the BGP-4 protocol be published as an Cooper [Page 4] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Informational RFC. o BGP-4 Protocol Analysis be published as an Informational RFC. o The PPP DECnet Phase IV Control Protocol (DNCP) be published as a Draft Standard. o The PPP Banyan Vines Control Protocol (BVCP) be published as a Proposed Standard. o The PPP XNS IDP Control Protocol (XNSCP) be published as a Proposed Standard. o Tags for the identification of languages be published as a Proposed Standard. o MIME Encapsulation of EDI Objects be published as a Proposed Standard. o OSPF Database Overflow be published as an Experimental Protocol. 4. The IESG issued five Last Calls to the IETF during the month of February, 1995: o A Border Gateway Protocol 3 (BGP-3) to be reclassified as Historic. o Application of the Border Gateway Protocol in the Internet to be reclassified as Historic. o Source Demand Routing: Packet Format and Forwarding Specification (Version 1) for consideration as a Proposed Standard. o Tags for the identification of languages for consideration as a Proposed Standard. o Extending OSPF to support demand circuits for consideration as a Proposed Standard. Cooper [Page 5] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 5. Four Working Groups were created or reactiviated during this period: ATM MIB (atommib) Guidelines & Recommendations for Security Incident (grip) Data Link Switching MIB (dlswmib) Routing Information Protocol (rip) Additionally, two Working Groups were concluded: Inter-Domain Policy Routing (idpr) RIP Version II (ripv2) Note that the RIP Version II Working Group was rechartered to become RIP. 6. A total of 44 Internet-Draft actions were taken during the month of February, 1995: (Revised draft (o), New Draft (+) ) (none) o Definitions of Managed Objects for the Node in Fibre Channel Standard using SMIv2 (mailext) o Tags for the identification of languages (ipatm) o IP over ATM: A Framework Document (none) o IPv6 Security Architecture (none) o IPv6 Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) (none) o IPv6 Authentication Header (cat) o The Kerberos Version 5 GSS-API Mechanism (ospf) o Extending OSPF to support demand circuits (sdr) o SDRP Route Construction (nimrod) + The Nimrod Routing Architecture (idmr) o IP Multicast Routing MIB (idmr) o Internet Group Management Protocol MIB (idmr) o Protocol Independent Multicast MIB Cooper [Page 6] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 (snanau) o Definitions of Managed Objects for APPC (ipngwg) o An Architecture for IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation (idr) o Guidelines for creation, selection, and registration of an Autonomous System (AS) (ipatm) o Support for Multicast over UNI 3.1 based ATM Networks. (none) o IPv6 Neighbor Discovery -- Processing (st2) o Internet Stream Protocol Version 2 (ST2) Protocol Specification - Version ST2+ (pppext) o The PPP Encryption Control Protocol (ECP) (ipngwg) o An IPv6 Global Unicast Address Format (html) o HyperText Markup Language Specification - 2.0 (ipngwg) o ICMP for the Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) (uri) o Mailserver URL Specification (mimesgml) + The MIME Multipart/Related Content-type (dhc) + Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (none) + TCP MD5 Signature Option (addrconf) + IPv6 Address Autoconfiguration (pppext) + The PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol (IPCP) (dnsind) + Extending the Domain Name System (DNS) to Perform Dynamic Updates (imap) + IMAP4 Internationalized Mailboxes (nimrod) o Mobility Support for Nimrod : Requirements and Solution Approaches (nimrod) o Multicast Support for Nimrod : Requirements and Solution Approaches (none) + The Photuris Key Management Protocol (none) + The Wide-Reply-To: header Cooper [Page 7] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 (uri) o finger URL Specification (idr) + Extensions for Selective Updates in Inter Domain Routing (none) + Inter-Domain Routing over ATM networks (none) + How to be a Bad EMail Citizen (none) + Global Information Locator Service Profile (none) + ICMP Domain Name Messages (none) + Conware ISDN MIB Extensions (opstat) + A Model for Common Operational Statistics (none) + Mechanisms for OSI NSAPs, CLNP and TP over IPv6 7. There were six RFC's published during the month of February, 1995: RFC St WG Title ------- -- -------- ------------------------------------- RFC1736 I (uri) Functional Requirements for Internet Resource Locators RFC1755 PS (ipatm) ATM Signaling Support for IP over ATM RFC1757 DS (rmonmib) Remote Network Monitoring Management Information Base RFC1758 I (none) NADF Standing Documents: A Brief Overview RFC1760 I (none) The S/KEY One-Time Password System RFC1761 I (none) Snoop Version 2 Packet Capture File Format St(atus): ( S) Internet Standard (PS) Proposed Standard (DS) Draft Standard ( E) Experimental ( I) Informational Steve Coya (s INTERNIC REGISTRATION SERVICES I. Significant Events InterNIC Registration Services assigned over 10,056 network addresses and registered over 4,190 domains. Three top level domains were registered this month for Anguilla (AI), Cote d'Ivoire (CI), and Guam (GU). Knowledgenet, Inc. has filed suit against Network Solutions and David L. Boone over the name knowledgenet.com. Network Solutions has engaged outside counsel to represent us in this suit. Due to a continuance, the next court filing has been pushed back to early March. This case could establish precedence that refutes InterNIC Registration Service's current policy of first-come first served by binding trademarked names with a domain name. During the month of February, increased volume of requests has increased the backlog from 10 days processing time to 15 days processing time. There are approximately 5,000 new domain requests in the queue to be processed. Adjustments in processes/staff are being made, as well as ordering additional equipment to continue to accommodate the tremendous growth currently being experienced by Registration Services. Cooper [Page 12] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Mark Kosters attended the two (2) day NANOG meeting in Denver, Colorado the week of February 6, 1995. Mark gave a presentation on the status of InterNIC Registration Services (RS) demonstrating its' current load. He also, participated in IP allocation and assignment strategies. II. Current Status During the month of February 1995, InterNIC Registration Services received communications as shown below. The majority of the correspondence concerned the assignment and re-assignment of network numbers and the registration or change of domain names. E-mail 13,054 (hostmaster@internic.net) Postal/Fax 256 (primarily IP number requests) Phone 2,810 The Registrations Services host computer supported a large volume of information retrieval requests during the month of February. Connections Retrievals Gopher 64,844 54,807 WAIS 78,629 72,226 FTP 15,047 67,129 Mailserv 5,104 Telnet 72,631 In addition, for WHOIS the number of queries were: Client Server 313,646 1,247,224 Debbie Fuller ISI --- NETSTATION ========== Recent work on the Netstation Project has focused on end-to-end protocols which facilitate efficient implementation. Specifically, we have been working on the design and implementation of a transport protocol, DTP, that is optimized for fast intra-LAN round trip times, and the design of internet protocol mechanisms which would facilitate high performance wide-area transport protocols. Cooper [Page 13] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 A draft document describing the transport protocol, DTP, will be complete as results of the protcol implementation become available to support, or refute, the protocol design choices. A document describing mechanisms to support a zero-copy internet checksum is also in preparation. DTP: A HIGH-PERFROMANCE TRANSPORT PROTOCOL The properties of data transfer fidelity, order preservation and execute once-only semantics are provided through the physical design of a system bus and are taken for granted by software developers. Those properties are not provided by general-purpose networks. To successfully control a device across a network, those properties must be explicitly provided via protocols. A reliable transport protocol can ensure data fidelity, preserve ordering and provide at-most-once delivery of RPC messages. The rate at which RPC messages can be issued by a source host to a destination host is bound from above by the rate at which the source transport layer can send a message and receive its acknowledgement from the destination transport layer. Since commands to devices are often serially dependent, where the result of one command must be known before the next can be issued, effective substitution of a network for a system bus requires achieving very short RTTs in the transport layer. OVERVIEW OF A DEVICE TRANSPORT PROTOCOL A transport-layer protocol that is designed specificly for the control of devices over a network differs from a general-purpose transport-layer protocol such as TCP. The principal objectives are to satisfy required semantic communications properties for a Netstation device (NVD) operation while minimizing protocol-induced delays, both in the transport and application layers. Other transport-layer protocols have been defined that address somewhat similar application requirements. Perhaps chief among these are VMTP and the Reliable Data Protocol (RDP). The reasons for not using TCP for the control of NVDs echo the reasons that RDP was developed. Quoting from the RDP document RFC 908: "TCP is best suited to an environment where there is no obvious demarcation of data in a communications exchange. Much of the difficulty in developing a TCP implementation stems from the complexity of supporting this general byte-stream transfer, and thus a significant amount of complexity can be avoided by using another protocol. This is not just an implementation consideration, but also one of efficiency." Cooper [Page 14] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 The architecture of DTP builds on concepts found in VMTP, RDP and TCP, but is designed to take maximal advantage of the expected Netstation environment. In particular, emerging gigabit LANs provide an environment that is friendly to operation of a reliable transport protocol in several ways: (a) the delay*bandwidth product is generally shorter than a packet, (b) maximum packet lifetime is of little concern, (c) the cost of routing a packet is small and bandwidth is plentiful, and (d) packets are protected by a hardware checksum. A judgement was made that the majority of connections between devices and their owners are likely to be intra-LAN. If one accepts this premise, special attention should be paid in the transport layer to minimizing RTT for this class of traffic. DTP identifies messages sent across intra-LAN connections, which allows different flow-control and processing algorithms to be used for intra-LAN traffic. The design of DTP focuses on minimizing the end-to-end delay when a source application sends a message to a destination application. This is distinct from attempting to maximize bandwidth utilization or to minimize long-term transport-layer overhead. In determining DTP's features and formats, uppermost was the consideration of how to define the protocol to minimize the RTT between transmission of a reliable message and its acknowledgement. ZERO-COPY PROTOCOL STACKS AND CHECKSUMMING A primary source of overhead in protocol processing can be attributed to operations that read and/or write all, or most, of the bytes in a packet. Examples of these operations are (1) digest or encryption security functions, (2) buffering and copying between different protocol layers (network -vs- transport) or implementation layers (application -vs- operating system), or (3) data fidelity checksum algorithms. A protocol implementation that eliminates those per-byte costs is referred to as a zero-copy protocol stack; the ability to perform a particular operation without the per-byte overhead is a zero-copy operation. We are concerned about checksum functionality, and mechanism to support zero-copy checksuming in the next-generation TCP/IP protocol stack (IPv6, TCPv6 and UDPv6). The principal advantage of a zero-copy stack is increased performance. A 20MHz Myricom LANai interface processor can scan application buffers for a packet to send, prepare that packet, transmit it with CRC and service a send-done event in 51 machine instructions. As a result, a source application running on a Cooper [Page 15] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 SPARCstation-10 can send IP/UDP RPCs individually, at a rate of 70K/second across the network into a destination application. This performance is a result of (1) a shared-memory interface between application and network interface, and more importantly (2) the use of the zero-copy link-layer checksum provided by hardware interface. Only in cases where both the source and destination nodes are on the same LAN can end-to-end data protection can be provided by a link-layer checksum, rather than a combination of network and transport checksums. A high level of performance is possible because packets are not copied and neither the network layer nor the transport-layer need to scan them to calculate checksums. However, this zero-copy technique does not easily extend to cover situations where source and destination nodes are on different LANs. This sharply restricts the domain within which the better performance is available. Greg Finn , Vivek Goyal ATOMIC-2 ======== This month the ATOMIC-2 project completed Web pages, available at: Everything in this and coming reports will be available on-line in these web pages. Work continues on the following topics: LAN Installation Applications Demonstration File Server Applications Bandwidth Next month we will have additional information on ATOMIC-ATM Gateway ATOMIC Interface Design ATOMIC-2 LAN INSTALLATION This month the ATOMIC LAN replaced the Ethernet connection on three office workstations (Sun SPARC 10/41, 10/51, and 20/50) at ISI. The Ethernet to these hosts is completely disconnected, and they have been running continuously for three weeks. They are currently gatewayed through a Sun SPARC-2 to the division Ethernet, including the MBONE. This will be replaced with the ATM gateway under Cooper [Page 16] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 development. We expect that over the next two months a total of 65 workstations will be on the ATOMIC LAN, and the Ethernet will exist to support only those hosts for which Myricom interfaces have not yet been implemented. ATOMIC-2 APPLICATIONS DEMONSTRATION PVM (Parallel Virtual Machine) [1] supports distributed and parallel computing applications. PVM 3.3 has been installed on the ATOMIC LAN. We measured the communication bandwidth and latency between two PVM tasks on this LAN, between two Sun SPARC 20/50 hosts. The task-task latency has a 1.15 ms overhead (of which 0.7 ms is ATOMIC LAN overhead), the remainder determined by the packet length and bandwidth. The bandwidth is 25-30 Mbps for 2 Kbyte packets, and drops to 10 Mbps for 0.5 Kbyte packets. TCP can reach peak bandwidth 50 Mbps in the ATOMIC LAN, the PVM's peak bandwidth is lower due to the extra memory copy between the PVM buffer and user data buffer. In order to explore the high ATOMIC link-layer bandwidth and avoid the kernel protocol stack overhead, our next step is to improve PVM performance by implementing PVM message passing routines using the Myrinet API, instead of TCP. [1] Geist A. at al. "PVM 3 User's Guide and Reference Manual", Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Sep., 1994. ATOMIC-2 FILE SERVER We are continuing our investigation of NFS performance, in order to determine the ATOMIC-2 File Server design. Our measurements indicate that NFS write bandwidth is bounded by both the Sun RPC protocol that commonly implements it, and internal interactions with the BSD file system. RPC limits the bandwidth because only a single request/response can be outstanding to any given process. Sun's implementation of NFS uses multiple processes to effectively overcome this limitation on an Ethernet. On the higher bandwidth ATOMIC network, the overhead of context switching and demultiplexing packets to these processes limits the bandwidth to less than observed TCP or UDP user-user bandwidth. Essentially, the low bandwidth solution is bottlenecked in comparison to the high bandwidth network. We believe it would be more efficient to have a single process fill a sliding window than use multiple processes doing RPC. The BSD file system also interacts with NFS, particularly when writing disk blocks. When a file is read, then a request for the Cooper [Page 17] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 block the user is interested in is issued immediately, potentially along with several read-ahead blocks. This pattern is fairly predictable, and maps closely with the read calls that the user makes. When a disk block is written, it is written to the BSD file cache, and flushed out to the server when the paging system needs one of the disk cache pages, or notices that the page has been dirty for some time. A block written by a user can sit in the file cache for some time before the page daemon flushes it to the server. Furthermore, the paging daemon and the user writes are entirely disconnected; the pattern of writes the user issues and the order and timing of the blocks that are flushed to the server by the page daemon are basically independent. The combination implies that it is harder to pipeline write requests than read requests. (There are good reasons to cache file writes, notably not bothering the server with writing short-lived temporary files, but it impacts NFS performance as well.) We are investigating strategies to both implement NFS using a higher bandwidth transport protocol and to pipeline writes more effectively. ATOMIC-2 APPLICATION BANDWIDTH ACCESS EXPERIMENTS Previously most of the performance measurement tools in use on the Atomic-2 project have made use of the standard SunOS API, the socket interface, which provides user programs access to TCP/IP and UDP/IP. To develop an understanding of how bottlenecks might be avoided, some of these applications are being augmented to optionally use the Myrinet API, which will allow the user program to send raw Myrinet packets and bypass the kernel. Using a pre-release version of Myricom's dual-path driver, the IP traffic and Myrinet API traffic have been able to run simultaneously on the ATOMIC LAN. The performance of running simultaneous IP and API traffic is critical in assisting our high- performance protocol research. In our experiments, the IP traffic and API traffic were running in the same direction between two Sun SPARC 20/50s connected through one 8-port switch. We found that the performance dropped by 10-30%, even though we were running only one type of traffic at a time through the dual-path driver. single-mode dual-mode driver driver ----------------------------------------------------- Native API packets 220 Mbps 150 Mbps UDP/IP 60 Mbps 54 Mbps TCP/IP 50 Mbps 44 Mbps Cooper [Page 18] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Two possible reasons for the decrease in throughput are additional overhead due to interface demultiplexing and lack of sufficient buffer space (because the space is fragmented into two packet queues). ATOMIC-2 SECURITY Last month the performance analysis of MD5 was completed. This month we began analysis and selection of alternatives that can support ATOMIC LAN bandwidth. This analysis is proceeding with MD2. Initial analytical results indicate that MD2 should run 20 times slower than MD5, which is too slow for the ATOMIC LAN (38 Mbps on a SPARC 20/50, where UDP is 50 Mbps). Measurements indicate that the current optimization of MD2 runs 30 times slower than MD5; because a speedup of only 50% is possible, this work is not being pursued. We are instead evaluating other authentication algorithms more suitable to high-speed implementation in software and/or hardware. Joe Touch , Annette DeSchon , Hong Xu , Ted Faber , Avneesh Sachdev, Sachdev@isi.edu, fisher@isi.edu RSVP ==== After the January release of RSVP version 1, a number of useful comments came in which we have incorporated. Most of these suggestions dealt with the portability of the code. The most extensive of these came from MIT which ported RSVP to DEC alpha machines and Intel based PC's. These changes allow RSVP to run on 64 bit architectures such as the alpha and "little-endian" machines such as the PC and the alpha. We are testing the interoperability of these versions. Other input came from Bill Nowicki at Silicon Graphics who was porting RSVP to SGI machines. Another remaining issue for the complete version 1 RSVP is the support of tunnels. Such a tunnel exists between the Xerox PARC DARTnet router and most of the PARC hosts. We are using UDP encapsulation on a well-known multicast IP address to communicate between hosts and routers. This is now working and we are able to make reservations both into and out of Xerox PARC hosts. We are preparing an RSVP Web page. The page is ready and the appropriate links will be installed shortly on the ISI home page. Jim Berson , Bob Braden , Steve Casner Cooper [Page 19] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 THE US DOMAIN ============= EMAIL/FAX 809 PHONE 230 ---------------------------- Total Contacts 1039 DELEGATIONS 61 DIRECT REGISTRATIONS: 15 OTHER US DOMAIN MSGS: 963 --------------------------- Total 1039 OTHER US DOMAIN MESSAGES INCLUDE: referrals to other subdomains or to/from the InterNic, phone calls, modifications, application requests, discussion and clarification of the requests, questions about names, resolving technical problems with zone files and name servers, and whois listings. The list of delegations below does not reflect the entire number of registrations and delegations in the whole US Domain. Many subdomains have been delegated and administrators of those subdomains register applicants in their domains. Below are direct registrations in the US Domain. To obtain a copy of the list of other delegated localities and subdomains you can ftp the file in-notes/us-domain-delegated.txt from ftp.isi.edu, via anonymous ftp. Third Level US Domain Delegations this month -------------------------------------------- STATE.AL.US Alabama State Gov't DST.IL.US Districts, Illinois GEN.IL.US General Independent Entities, Illinois MUS.IL.US Museums, Illinois MUS.VA.US Museums, Virginia GEN.VA.US General Independent Entities, Virginia SF.CA.US San Francisco, CA, locality SJ.CA.US San Jose, CA, locality LOS-GATOS.CA.US Los Gatos, CA, locality MONTEREY.CA.US Monterey, CA, locality MTVIEW.CA.US Mountain View, CA, locality SANTA-CLARA.CA.US Santa Clara, CA, locality Cooper [Page 20] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 SANMATEO.CA.US San Mateo, CA, locality TAHOE.CA.US Tahoe, CA, locality ESTESPARK.CO.US Estes Park, CO, locality LARKSPUR.CO.US Larkspur, CO, localty SANFORD.CO.US Sanford, CO, locality STERLING.CO.US Sterling, CO, locality MSP.MN.US Minneapolis-St.Paul, MN, locality WILMINGTON.NC.US Wilmington, NC, locality SILVER-SPRINGS.NV.US Silver-Springs, NV, locality TAHOE.NV.US Tahoe, NV, locality ASHLAND.OR.US Ashland, OR, locality COOS-BAY.OR.US Coos-Bay OR, locality GRANTS-PASS.OR.US Grants-Pass, OR, locality KLAMATH-FALLS.OR.US Klamath-Falls, OR, locality MEDFORD.OR.US Medford, OR, locality ROSEBURG.OR.US Roseburg, OR, locality Other US Domain Delegations this month -------------------------------------- MARINET.LIB.CA.US Marin County Library Consortium BEACHNET.GEN.GA.US Redondo Beach Network, CA, locality ADDIM.LA.CA.US AD Dimension II CO.BRADENTON.FL.US Bradenton County, FL, gov't agencies CO.ORANGE.NC.US Orange County Gov't, NC LACROSS-PL.LIB.WI.US LaCrosse Public Library DEED.STATE.MD.US Dept. of Economic & Employment Development CO.SAN-BERNARDINO.CA.US San Bernadino County, CA, Gov't agencies STORMY.SALEM.MA.US Private Individual CO.ALACHUA.FL.US Alachua County, gov't agencies NMJC.CC.NM.US New Mexico Junior College GATS.HAMPTON.VA.US GATS Scientific Software Dev. Co. RATSNEST.VABEACH.VA.US SJS & Associates Consulting Engineers MSP.K12.OK.US Moore Public School District, OK VI.BRISTOL.VA.US Virginia Intermont College KDMC.LA.CA.US King-Drew Mecical Center HOME.FAIRFAX.VA.US. Private Individual MVSU.ITTA-BENA.MS.US Mississippi Valley State University SCC.CC.WA.US South Central Community College MMH.MORRISTON.NJ.US Morristown Memorial Hospital MTNMAMA.BLUEJAY.CA.US Private Individual CI.NEWTON.MA.US City of Newton, Massachusetts SDPIC.COG.CA.US San Diego Private Industry Council MCD.GEN.DE.US Medical Center of Delarware FGA.FAIRFAX.VA.US Griedman, Greene & Associates Inc. BRIDGE.BLOOMINGTON.IN.US FreeBSD Enthusiasts ABARNETT.ARLINGTON.VA.US Private Individual BERKSHIRE.SHEFFIELD.MA.US Berkshire School Cooper [Page 21] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 MARINELAB.SARASOTA.FL.US Mote Marine Laboratories DOLMEN.BLOOMINGTON.IN.US The Portal Dolmen System DISCOVERY.KEW-WEST.FL.US Global Audience Providers, Inc. JOURNEYMAN.SOUTH-AMBOY.NJ.US Private Individual GROTON.K12.CT.US Groton Public School District, CT SUBDOMAINS DELEGATED K12 CC TEC STATE LIB MUS GEN DST COG =================================================================== 47 31 30 45 31 20 21 5 6 =================================================================== K12 K12 schools CC Community Colleges TEC Technical/Vocational Schools STATE State Government Agencies LIB Libraries MUS Museums GEN General Independent Entities DST Districts COG Councils of Government #*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#**#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#* FROM TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: #*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#**#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#*#* Check out the three *thousand* percent (!) increase in sites in the with increases of several hundred percent. Note that in the attached, they give the figure as 4.85 million sites as of a few months ago; dare we say five million at this point? *** PRESS RELEASE FROM INTERNET SOCIETY LATEST INTERNET HOST SURVEY AVAILABLE: The Internet Is Growing Faster Than Ever Reston VA, USA. 6 Feb 1995. The Internet's most important measurement data indicating its size and growth was released yesterday by Mark Lottor of Network Wizards. The following extracts of Lottor's data were prepared by the Internet Society. Cooper [Page 22] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Top 31 Country and Global Domains by Size in Jan 1995 ---------Growth--------- Jan.95 Hosts 4Q94 1994 3yr growth com ** 1,316,966 25% 132% 628% edu ** 1,133,502 15% 60% 366% UK 241,191 24% 112% 1,171% gov ** 209,345 8% 62% 351% Germany 207,717 23% 77% 569% Canada 186,722 22% 96% 590% mil ** 175,961 21% 70% 541% Australia 161,166 20% 50% 409% org ** 154,578 114% 206% 705% net ** 150,299 192% 616% 1,796% Japan 96,632 17% 86% 1,029% France 93,041 28% 68% 615% Netherlands 89,227 20% 98% 599% Sweden 77,594 22% 83% 318% Finland 71,372 24% 103% 493% Switzerland 51,512 -4% 40% 306% Norway 49,725 15% 57% 387% USA ** 37,615 51% 475% 31,155% New Zealand 31,215 52% 441% 2,698% Italy 30,697 14% 80% 1,029% Austria 29,705 25% 92% 793% Spain 28,446 19% 141% 1,613% South Africa 27,040 29% 147% 2,805% Denmark 25,935 75% 181% 1,344% Belgium 18,699 31% 125% 5,220% Korea 18,049 24% 101% 1,103% Taiwan 14,618 25% 83% 1,710% Israel 13,251 34% 96% 552% Hong Kong 12,437 18% 52% 2,725% Czech 11,580 58% 153% Poland 11,477 35% 121% ** Most global domains are attributed to the USA. Cooper [Page 23] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 For more information about the US Domain please request an application via the RFC-INFO service. Send a message to RFC- INFO@ISI.EDU with the contents "Help: us_domain_application". For example: To: RFC-INFO@ISI.EDU Subject: US Domain Application help: us_domain_application The URL below may be used in MOSAIC or other WWW browsers to access US Domain information. URL: ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/us-domain-delegated.txt URL: ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/us-domain-questionnaire.txt URL: ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/us-domain-blurb.txt Ann Cooper (Cooper@ISI.EDU) MERIT/NSFNET ENGINEERING ------------------------ This report summarizes recent activities of Merit's Internet Engineering and Network Management groups on behalf of the Routing Arbiter (RA) Project and the NSFNET Backbone Service Project. Merit has sent a 60-day termination notice for the NSFNET Backbone Service to ANS. The backbone ENSS's will be turned off at midnight on April 30 in each respective time zone. Merit and the regionals have enjoyed a successful collaboration for many years, and we look forward to continued joint successes in the brave new world of post-NSFNET! Many regionals are obtaining interregional Internet service from Network Service Providers, and have moved off the T3 NSFNET backbone. Merit will now gradually discontinue the T1 "safety net" that has backed up regional connections to the T3 NSFNET for several years. The Routing Arbiter Project's Route Server at MAE-East has begun to pass actual routes to its peers. Among the AS's receiving routes are MCI, PIPEX, and Net 99. Many thanks to these AS's for helping move the new technology along! Merit has ported PGP version 2.6 into the RIPE routing registry software. The new privacy feature makes it possible to use PGP's popular cryptographic algorithm to authenticate data submitted through e-mail to the Routing Arbiter Database (RADB) and other Cooper [Page 24] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 RIPE-181-style registries. To implement PGP, simply enter 'PGP- FROM my.email.address' in the RADB Maintainer object's 'auth:' field. You then use a public domain PGP client to sign your e-mail with your secret key. The RADB software uses your public key to verify your signature. The PGP encryption schema is known to be very difficult to break. PGP can also provide confidentiality by encrypting any data in such a way that only the recipient can read the message. For more information, contact Laurent Joncheray at Merit (lpj@merit.edu.) As part of the process of replacing the NSFNET Policy Routing Database (PRDB) with the RADB, the RADB has been populated with RIPE-181-style Maintainer and AS Objects for all Autonomous Systems known to the PRDB. NACRs are now being checked against this information rather than the PRDB. In addition, the list of contacts who are authorized to submit NACRs has been moved to the RADB. The NACR contact data has long been queryable using the old command: whois -h prdb.merit.edu 'contact ' Now when you issue that command, you receive as output the RADB Maintainer object that includes your contact information, along with a message explaining how to update the Maintainer object. The following new command is equivalent and produces the same output: whois -h whois.ra.net 'MAINT-AS' For AS690, you would type: whois -h whois.ra.net MAINT-AS690 Similarly, network data has long been queryable using the old command: whois -h prdb.merit.edu '' Now when you issue that command, you receive as output the RADB Route object that describes that network. The new, equivalent command is: whois -h whois.ra.net During the next phase of the PRDB --> RADB transition, the two databases will run in parallel, and NACRs will be used as input to both the PRDB and RADB. In the final phase, users will be able to submit RIPE-style Route objects instead of NACRs. For further information about the PRDB --> RADB transition, see Cooper [Page 25] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 ftp://ftp.ra.net/pub/radb/OVERVIEW and ftp://ftp.ra.net/pub/radb/doc/updating_maintainers. Jessica Yu of Merit has been working with ISI's Cengiz Alaettinoglu to extend RIPE-181 to specify AS path expressions in routing policies. Merit's Andy Adams and Alaettinoglu are modifying RtConfig, a router configuration tool, to generate configuration files supporting these extensions. Merit has received a continuation of FAA funding for its joint government/industry IDRP project, which is managed by the MITRE Corporation. Merit's effort is led by Sue Hares, who co-chairs the IETF Inter-Domain Routing Working Group. The project's Gated-IDRP version 1.1, which supports advanced policy descriptions, is expected to be released in April. In the next phase of the project, Hares and other Merit staff will implement a mobile Boundary Information System in IDRP. Under a grant from NSF, Craig Labovitz continues development of the Multi-Threaded Routing Toolkit (MRT), which provides a simple, extensible platform for developing and debugging routing protocols and routing code. The Toolkit comprises a set of generic libraries that can be used to build small executables and scripts that perform complex routing tasks quickly and efficiently. The MRT architecture uses the multiple-thread technology available in the Sun operating system to take full advantage of the speed and power of multi-processor machines. For more information, contact Labovitz at labovit@merit.edu. Westnet and NCAR hosted the third North American Network Operators' Group (NANOG) meeting in Boulder, Colorado, on February 9-10. Stan Barber of Academ Consulting Services has kindly made available a complete set of notes and slides from the meeting. They are available at http://www.academ.com/nanog and at Merit's Web site, http://www.ra.net/rainfo.html. Elise Gerich of Merit moderated the meeting, which featured the following presentations: --Transition Updates from ANS (Guy Almes), internetMCI (Jack Waters), SprintLink (Sean Doran), BARRNET (Vince Fuller), UNIDATA's Internet Data Distribution Service (Mitch Baltuch), NorthWestNet (Steve Corbato), CERFnet (Pushpendra Mohta), MichNet (Bert Rossi), and CA*NET (Eric Carroll) --InterNIC Update (Mark Kosters, Network Solutions, Inc.) --Chicago NAP Update (Mark Knopper, AADS) --ATM Testbed Status Reports from Kentrox (Rolf Hahn and Cooper [Page 26] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 George Shenoda), AADS (Eric Bennett), PacBell (Kent England), ANS (Curtis Villamizar), and the vBNS project (Dennis Ferguson, MCI, and Matt Mathis, Pittsburgh Supercomputer Center) --Network Management Tools for ATM PVC Topologies (Taso Devetzis, Bellcore) --DANTE Overview (Michael Behringer) --CIDR/Aggregation/Allocation Policies (Sean Doran, SprintLink) --Route Flap Problem Overview (Sean Doran, SprintLink) --MAE-West Update (Milo Medin, NASA Ames Research Center) --Route Flap Damping Algorithm (Curtis Villamizer, ANS) --Route Server Status (Yakov Rekhter, IBM) --PRDB --> RADB Transition (John Scudder, Merit) --Route Security Issues (Sean Doran, SprintLink) Susan R. Harris (srh@merit.edu) MIDNET ------ MIDNET INTRODUCES "A PRACTICAL GUIDE TO THE INTERNET" SEMINAR MIDnet's first "Practical Guide to the Internet" seminar was held during February.The goal of the seminar was to introduce newcomers to the advantages of the Internet through real-world examples, and to remove the mystic of the Internet by providing information in layman's terms. The seminar was well attended, with an audience that consisted of representatives from both the business and educational communities. Plans are currently underway to offer this seminar in additional locations within the MIDnet region. MIDNET MEMBER MEETING During February, MIDnet representatives met with a state educators to determine their Internet needs and goals. The meeting was attended by representatives from K-12 as well as representatives from institutes of higher education. MIDnet provided information on the current state of its network in conjunction with the NSF transition, and distributed a document which described and provided pointers to Internet resources of particular interest to educators. MIDNET'S INTERFACE TO POPULAR INTERNET RESOURCES Activities are underway to expand the number of resources accessed via MIDnet's WWW server. Resources currently enjoying popularity include the Net-Happenings Mail List and Diane Kovac's Directory of Scholarly Electronic Conferences, for which MIDnet provides a WWW view with search and browse capabilities. MIDnet's NIC has Cooper [Page 27] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 identified two additional Internet resources which provide valuable information to the Internet community. Agreements are currently being drafted which will allow MIDnet to implement its interface to these resources. MIDnet NIC UCL ---- The major event of the last month was the setting up of a 4 nation demonstration of IP Mbone based multimedia conferencing ofver the PNO trial. The PNOs (Public Network Operators) of the EU (European Union) have provided a trial 34Mbps ATM network for the current year for research projects such as MICE. We configured a set of mbone suns and Ciscos to use this between INRIA in france, the G7 summit meeting in Brussels, RUS in Germany and UCL in London. The configuration has been reported elsewhere, and a detailed report on the setup and performance will be available fairly soon. A draft is available on request from J.Crowcroft@cs.ucl.ac.uk, however, the hypotheses we have formed about what worked and what didn't are not completely proven yet. Suffice it to say for now that it was a major success, using just about every piece of networking technology anyone could think of. The net ran uninterrupted (and unsupported) for 3 days, with only the partial failure of an ATM/SMDS interworking unit dropping one site off the demo about half way through. There are some interesting lessons for how IP and Internet based applications have to be configured to run this, and over the next 3 months, we shall be experimenting further to get a better scientific confirmation of our hypotheses noted above. Also, 2 papers were submitted to ACM SIGCOMM '95. John Crowcroft (j.crowcroft@CS.UCL.AC.UK) Cooper [Page 28] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 CALENDAR -------- Last update 3/3/95 The information below has been submitted to the IETF Secretariat as a means of notifying readers of future events. Readers are requested to send in dates of events that are appropriate for this calendar section. Please send submissions, corrections, etc., to: Please note: The Secretariat does not maintain on-line information for the events listed below. FYI - New Dates for U.S. APPC/APPN (AATC) Technical Conf. moved from July to May 1995. - New Dates for ULPAA in 1995, was Dec. 4-8, 1995 NOW Dec. 11-15, 1995 - The 6th MD Wkshp on Very High Speed Networks will be rescheduled for sometime in June (date TBD), original date had been: March 20-21, 1995 ************************************************************************ 1995 --------- Mar. 5-9 IEEE COMPCON '95 San Francisco, CA Mar. 6-10 IEEE 802 Plenary (Firm) West Palm Beach, FL Mar. 6-10 SNMP Test Summit III Mar. 13-15 Microcomputers in Education Tempe, AZ Mar. 13-17 OIW (Firm) Mar. 13-24 ISO/IEC JTC1/SC6 Tokyo, JP Mar. 14-19 Towards an Electronic Patient Mar. 16-19 3rd Intntl Telecom. Systems Modelling & Analysis Nashville, TN Mar. 26-29 7th IEEE Wkshp on Local and Metro Area Netwks Marathon, FL Mar. 27-31 NetWorld+Interop Las Vegas, NV Mar. 28-31 Seybold Seminars Boston, MA Apr. 2-6 IEEE Infocom '95 Boston, MA Apr. 3-7 ANSI X3T11 Monterey, CA Apr. 3-7 32nd IETF (Definite) Danvers, MA Apr. 4-5 Federal Networking Council Advisory Committee Arlington, VA Apr. 5-7 National Net '95 Washington, DC Apr. 9-14 ATM Forum Denver, CO Cooper [Page 29] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Apr. 17-21 Email World (Firm) Santa Clara, CA Apr. 19-21 5th Network & Operating System Support (NOSSADV) Workshop Boston, MA Apr. 24-25 IFIP TC6 Wkshp Personal Wireless Commun. Prague, Czech Republic May 1-5 Fourth IFIP/IEEE Intl Symp. on Integrated Ntwk Mgt ISINM95 Santa Barbara, CA May 8-10 IEEE Symp. on Sec. & Privacy Oakland, CA May 10-12 IEEE 802.10 Interim Meeting Oakland, CA May 15-19 Joint European Ntwkg Conf. Tel Aviv, Israel May 18-19 RARE Council of Admin. Tel Aviv, Israel May 22-25 APPC/APPN Tech. Conf. (AATC) Chicago, IL May 28-Jun. 2 NetWorld+Interop '95 Frankfurt, Germany JUNE 6th MD Wkshp on Very High Speed Networks Baltimore, MD Jun 4-9 ATM Forum Orlando, FL Jun. 5-7 Digital World Los Angeles, CA Jun. 5-9 ANSI X3T11 Rochester, MN Jun. 12-16 OIW (Firm) Jun. 13-16 IFIP WG6.1 PSTV-XV Warsaw Jun. 16-17 CCIRN Singapore Jun. 18-22 ICC '95 Seattle, WA Jun. 18-24 ISOC Developing Country Wkshp Hawaii Jun. 20-22 2nd Intntl Wkshp on Community Netwkg multimedia to the home Princeton, NJ Jun. 25-27 ISOC K-12 Workshop Hawaii Jun. 26-27 ISOC Trustees & Council Hawaii Jun. 28-30 INET '95 Hawaii Jul. 4 Independence Day Jul. 10-13 IEEE 802 Plenary (Firm) Maui, HI JULY 14 BASTILLE DAY Jul. 13-14 1st Intntl Wkshp on Intellig. & Multimodality in Multimedia Interface Edinburgh, Scotland Jul. 17-21 33rd IETF Stockholm, Sweden Jul. 17-21 NetWorld+Interop Tokyo, Japan Jul. 17-Aug. 3 ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 21 Ottawa, Ontario Aug. 1-4 4th IEEE Symp. on High Perform. Distributed Computing (HPDC-4) Pentagon City, VA Aug. 6-11 ATM Forum Toronto, CA Aug. 7-11 ANSI X3T11 (Tentative) Denver area Aug. 14-18 ANSI X3T11 (Tentative) Denver area Aug. 19-21 14th Intntl Conf. on AI (IJCAI-95) Montreal, CA Aug. 29-Sep. 1 Windows Solutions San Fran. San Francisco, CA Aug. 30-Sep. 1 ACM SIGCOMM '95 Cambridge, MA SEPTEMBER Windows Solutions Paris Paris, France Sep. 12-14 IEEE 802.10 Interim Meeting Atlanta, GA Cooper [Page 30] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Sep. 25-29 7th SDL Forum Oslo, Sweden FALL 1995 Seybold Europe Sep. 4-6 8th IFIP WG6.1 Intntl Wkshp on Protocol Test Systems Every, France Sep. 4-7 APPC/APPN Tech. Conf. (AATC) London, England Sep. 11-15 6th IFIP High Performance Networking, HPN'95 Palma de Mallorca, Spain Sep. 11-15 OIW (Firm) Sep. 18-22 7th Annual Comp. Security Incident Handling Workshop Karlsruhe, Germany Sep. 20-23 4th Intntl Conf. Computer Commun. & Networks (IC3N'95) Las Vegas, NV Sep. 25-29 NetWorld+Interop Atlanta, GA Sep. 26-29 Seybold San Francisco San Francisco, CA Oct. 1-6 ATM Forum Honolulu, HI Oct. 2-6 ANSI X3T11 Toronto, Ontario, Canada Oct. 3-11 Telecom '95 Geneva, Switzerland Oct. 10-11 ANSI X3T11 Oct. 15-18 20th Conf. on Local Computer Netwks (sponsored by IEEE) Minneapolis, MN Oct. 16-19 APPC/APPN Tech. Conf. (AATC) Sydney, Australia Oct. 17-20 IFIP WG6.1 FORTE '95 Montreal, Quebec Nov. 5-9 ACM Multimedia '95 San Francisco, CA Nov. 6-9 IEEE 802 Plenary (Firm) Montreal, Quebec Nov. 6-10 NetWorld+Interop Paris, France Nov. 7-10 ICNP '95 Tokyo, Japan Nov. 13-17 GLOBECOM '95 Singapore Nov. 27-Dec. 1 Email World (Definite) Boston, MA Nov. 27-Dec. 1 Windows Solutions Germany Frankfurt, Germany Dec. 3-6 ACM SIGOPS Dec. 4-8 OIW (Firm) Dec. 4-8 34th IETF (Firm) Dallas, TX Dec. 4-8 ANSI X3T11 (Possible) San Diego, CA Dec. 4-8 Supercomputing '95 (Firm) San Diego, CA Dec. 4-8 Windows Solutions Tokyo Tokyo, Japan Dec. 4-8 X/Open Security Dec. 10-15 ATM Forum London, UK Dec. 11-15 11th Comp. Sec. Applications New Orleans, LO Dec. 11-15 ULPAA (upper layers) Sydney, AU 1996 ----------- Jan. 23-15 IEEE 802.10 Interim Meeting Salt Lake City, UT Feb. 5-9 ANSI X3T11 Feb. 5-9 ATM Forum (Tentative) Feb. 27-Mar. 1 ICDP '96-IFIP/IEEE Intntl Conf. on Distributed Platforms Dresden, Germany Cooper [Page 31] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Mar. 11-14 UniForum San Francisco, CA Mar. 11-15 35th IETF (Under Consideration) Mar. 18-22 35th IETF (Under Consideration) Mar. 18-22 OIW (Firm) Apr. 8-13 ANSI X3T11 (Tentative) Irvine, CA Apr. 15-19 ANSI X3T11 (Tentative) Irvine, CA Apr. 15-19 ATM Forum (Tentative) May. 13-29 ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 21 WGs and Plenary (Firm) Kansas City, MO Jun. 10-14 OIW (Firm) Jun. 10-14 ANSI X3T11 Jun. 10-14 ATM Forum (Tentative) Jun. 24-27 ICC '96 Dallas, TX Jul. 8-12 36th IETF (Under Consideration) Jul. 22-26 36th IETF (Under Consideration) Jul. 29-Aug. 2 36th IETF (Under Consideration) Aug. 5-9 ANSI X3T11 Aug. 19-23 ATM Forum (Tentative) Sep. 2-6 14th IFIP Conf. Canberra, AU Sep. 9-13 OIW (Firm) Sep. 24-27 IFIP WG6.1 w/FORTE/PSTV (Under Consideration) Oct. 7-11 ANSI X3T11 St. Petersburg Bch, FL Oct. 7-11 ATM Forum (Tentative) Nov. 11-15 37th IETF (Under Consideration) Nov. 18-22 37th IETF (Under Consideration) Nov. 18-22 Supercomputing '96 (Firm) Pittsburgh, PA Dec. 2-6 ANSI X3T11 Dec. 2-6 ATM Forum (Tentative) Dec. 9-13 OIW (Firm) 1997 ----------- Mar. 10-13 UniForum San Francisco, CA Mar. 10-14 OIW (Firm) Jun. 8-12 ICC '97 Montreal Jun. 9-13 OIW (Firm) Sep. 8-12 OIW (Firm) Dec. 8-12 OIW (Firm) 1998 ----------- Aug. 23-29 15th IFIP World. Com. Conf. Vienna, Austria and Budapest, Hungary --------- Via ftp: /ietf/1events.calendar.imr.txt on ietf shadow directories Via gopher: "Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) / IETF Meetings / Cooper [Page 32] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 Scheduling Calendar" on ietf.cnri.reston.va.us ******************************************************************** From: secretariat@terena.nl (TERENA Secretariat) Subject: TERENA Calendar - March 1995 Ref. TSec(95)001 March 1995 This list of meetings is provided for information. Many of the meetings are closed or by invitation; if in doubt, please contact the chair of the meeting or the TERENA Secretariat. If you have additions/corrections/comments, please mail . ********************************************************************** MEETING/DATE LOCATION ============ ======== TERENA Executive Committee -------------------------- 3 April Amsterdam (Secretariat) TERENA General Assembly ----------------------- GA3 18/19 May Tel Aviv TERENA Working Groups --------------------- European MIME Week (TERENA/EEMA/DANTE) 6-9 March Amsterdam ATM Task Force 6 March Amsterdam (Secretariat) STAMPEDE 10 March Amsterdam (Secretariat) RIPE Cooper [Page 33] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 ---- 8-10 May Rome April/May 1996 Berlin VARIOUS ======= ECCO (Ebone Consortium of Contributing Organisations) 26 April Paris EMC (Ebone Management Committee) 08 March Amsterdam (Secretariat) EOT (Ebone Operations Team) 10 March Prague CCIRN ----- June TBD IETF ---- 3-7 April Danvers, Massachusetts 17-21 July Stockholm, Sweden 4-8 December Dallas Texas, USA EWOS ---- Technical Assembly 16/17 May Brussels 19/20 September Brussels 12/13 December Brussels Steering Committee 14 March Brussels 6 June Brussels 26 September Brussels 19 December Brussels ETSI ---- GA21 30-31 March Nice, France Cooper [Page 34] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 GA22 5-6 December " GA23 25-26 April, 1996 " GA24 10-11 December, 1996 " TA21 27-29 March Nice, France TA22 19-20 June " TA23 7-9 November " TA24 22-24 April, 1996 " TA25 23-25 October, 1996 " TCC20 30 May-01 June Nice, France TCC21 29-31 August " CECUA ----- ICT Round Table 2 22 March Brussels CONFERENCES ******************************************************************* JENC6 - 6th Joint European Networking Conference 15-18 May 1995 in Tel Aviv, Israel To be added to the conference email distribution list, send a message to . For information, email . To submit a paper, email NETWORK SERVICES CONFERENCE 95 Autumn 1995 (tbc) JENC7 - 7th Joint European Networking Conference 13-16 May 1996 in Budapest, Hungary ******************************************************************* Cooper [Page 35] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 OTHER CONFERENCES nb. For some of the following events, full text information is available from the TERENA Document Store under the directory calendar, in which case the file name is specified under the information presented below. The files may be retrieved via: anonymous FTP: ftp.terena.nl Email: server@terena.nl Gopher: gopher.terena.nl World Wide Web: http:/www.terena.nl/ JANET WORKSHOP 23 ----------------- from 28-30 March University of Leicester, England Deadline for proposals 13 January Deadline for abstracts + authors' biography 17 February. Email EUSIDIC Spring Meeting ---------------------- 5-7 April InterContinental Hotel, Luxembourg For information and registration: Eusidic, P.O. Box 1416, L-1014 Luxembourg THIRD INTERNATIONAL WORLD WIDE WEB CONFERENCE --------------------------------------------- 10-14 April Darmstadt, Germany For information and registration URL: http:/www.igd.fhg.de/www95.html tel: +49 6151 155 126. fax: +49 6151 155 440 FIRST AUSTRALIAN WWW CONFERENCE / AusWeb95 ------------------------------------------ 29 April - 2 May Ballina Beach Resort, Ballina, Far North Coast of New South Wales, Australia Registration http://www.scu.edu.au/ausweb95/ For information, email Cooper [Page 36] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 IDA "Electronic Directories for European Administrations" ----------------------------------------------------- - an initiative of the European Commission - DG III 3-4 May Sheraton Hotel, Brussels, Belgium. Registrations and information to: EEMA Executive Office in the U.K. tel: +44 1386 793 028. fax: +44 1386 793 268 THIRD ANNUAL RURAL DATAFICATION CONFERENCE ------------------------------------------ 22-24 May Indianapolis, Indiana, USA (supported by a grant from the National Science Foundation) Deadline for submission of papers is 15 January. Submit to EEMA 8th ANNUAL CONFERENCE -------------------------- 6-9 June RAI, Amsterdam, The Netherlands For registration and information: INET 95 ------- 28-30 June in Honolulu, Hawaii Extended abstracts for papers to be submitted by 13 January to Programme Committee Internet Society Secretariat THIRD INTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL ON Cooper [Page 37] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 ADVANCED BROADBAND COMMUNICATIONS ------------------------------------ 26-30 June Madrid, Spain. Aveiro, Portugal. Naples, Italy. For information contact JOINT WORKING CONFERENCE IFIP TC-6 TC-11 and AUSTRIAN COMPUTER SOCIETY -------------------------------------------- 20-21 September in Graz, Austria on professional communication and multimedia application in relation to security aspects. Deadline paper submission 28 February to For further information contact Dr. Peter Lipp at: tel: +43 316 82 65 88 13. fax:+43 316 85 0144 IC3N'95 - FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS AND NETWORKS ----------------------------------------- 20-23 September Las Vegas, Nevada, USA Call for Papers information: or URL: http://www.nscee.edu/~eugene/ic3n/. Paper submission deadline is 17 March. For conference information: or WWW home page. URL is http://www.nscee.edu/~eugene/ic3n/. 1995 IFIP International Working Conference Cooper [Page 38] Internet Monthly Report February 1995 on User Layer Protocols, Architectures and Applications (ULPAA) --------------------------------------------------------------- 11-15 December in Sydney, Australia Deadline for submission of papers by 15 May For further info-> http:/www.ee.uts.edu.au/ifip/ULPAA95.html INTERNATIONAL ZURICH SEMINAR ON DIGITAL COMMUNICATIONS 1996 ----------------------------------------------------------- Broadband Communiations: Networks, Services, Applications, Future Directions 19-23 February 1996 Swiss Institute of Technology (ETH), Zurich, Switzerland Deadline for submission of papers is 15 May 1995 For further information, email Prof. Dr. Bernhard Plattner , fax.+41 1 632 1035 Call for Papers on TERENA Document Server under rare/information/calendar. The file is called izs96-cfp.txt. ================== updated 01.03.1995 ================== ========================== Madeleine Oberholzer TERENA Secretary Trans-European Research and Education Networking Association TERENA - Established by merger of RARE and EARN TERENA Secretariat Singel 466 - 468 NL - 1017 AW AMSTERDAM Voice : + 31 20 639 11 31 Fax : + 31 20 639 32 89 Email : secretariat@terena.nl - for general matters bookkeeping@terena.nl - for financial matters Cooper [Page 39] Presently we were in a very dark road, and at a point where it dropped suddenly between steep sides we halted in black shadow. A gleam of pale sand, a whisper of deep flowing waters, and a farther glimmer of more sands beyond them challenged our advance. We had come to a "grapevine ferry." The scow was on the other side, the water too shoal for the horses to swim, and the bottom, most likely, quicksand. Out of the blackness of the opposite shore came a soft, high-pitched, quavering, long-drawn, smothered moan of woe, the call of that snivelling little sinner the screech-owl. Ferry murmured to me to answer it and I sent the same faint horror-stricken tremolo back. Again it came to us, from not farther than one might toss his cap, and I followed Ferry down to the water's edge. The grapevine guy swayed at our side, we heard the scow slide from the sands, and in a few moments, moved by two videttes, it touched our shore. Soon we were across, the two videttes riding with us, and beyond a sharp rise, in an old opening made by the swoop of a hurricane, we entered the silent unlighted bivouac of Ferry's scouts. Ferry got down and sat on the earth talking with Quinn, while the sergeants quietly roused the sleepers to horse. Plotinus is driven by this perplexity to reconsider the whole theory of Matter.477 He takes Aristotle¡¯s doctrine as the groundwork of his investigation. According to this, all existence is divided into Matter and Form. What we know of things¡ªin other words, the sum of their differential characteristics¡ªis their Form. Take away this, and the unknowable residuum is their Matter. Again, Matter is the vague indeterminate something out of which particular Forms are developed. The two are related as Possibility to Actuality, as the more generic to the more specific substance through every grade of classification and composition. Thus there are two Matters, the one sensible and the other intelligible. The former constitutes the common substratum of bodies, the other the common element of ideas.478 The general distinction between Matter and Form was originally suggested to Aristotle by Plato¡¯s remarks on the same subject; but he differs325 from his master in two important particulars. Plato, in his Timaeus, seems to identify Matter with space.479 So far, it is a much more positive conception than the ?λη of the Metaphysics. On the other hand, he constantly opposes it to reality as something non-existent; and he at least implies that it is opposed to absolute good as a principle of absolute evil.480 Thus while the Aristotelian world is formed by the development of Power into Actuality, the Platonic world is composed by the union of Being and not-Being, of the Same and the Different, of the One and the Many, of the Limit and the Unlimited, of Good and Evil, in varying proportions with each other. The Lawton woman had heard of an officer's family at Grant, which was in need of a cook, and had gone there. [See larger version] On the 8th of July an extraordinary Privy Council was summoned. All the members, of whatever party, were desired to attend, and many were the speculations as to the object of their meeting. The general notion was that it involved the continuing or the ending of the war. It turned out to be for the announcement of the king's intended marriage. The lady selected was Charlotte, the second sister of the Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Apart from the narrowness of her education, the young princess had a considerable amount of amiability, good sense, and domestic taste. These she shared with her intended husband, and whilst they made the royal couple always retiring, at the same time they caused them to give, during their lives, a moral air to their court. On the 8th of September Charlotte arrived at St. James's, and that afternoon the marriage took place, the ceremony being performed by the Archbishop of Canterbury. On the 22nd the coronation took place with the greatest splendour. Mother and girls were inconsolable, for each had something that they were sure "Si would like," and would "do him good," but they knew Josiah Klegg, Sr., well enough to understand what was the condition when he had once made up his mind. CHAPTER V. THE YOUNG RECRUITS Si proceeded to deftly construct a litter out of the two guns, with some sticks that he cut with a knife, and bound with pawpaw strips. His voice had sunk very low, almost to sweetness. A soft flurry of pink went over her face, and her eyelids drooped. Then suddenly she braced herself, pulled herself taut, grew combative again, though her voice shook. HoME²Ô¾®Ïè̫ʲôÐÇ×ù ENTER NUMBET 0016jdzrctc.org.cn
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