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RFC810 - DoD Internet host table specification

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Elizabeth Feinler RFC810

Ken Harrenstien 1 March 1982

Zaw-Sing Su References: RFC811, 796

Vic White Obsoletes: RFC608

Network Information Center

SRI International

DoD INTERNET HOST TABLE SPECIFICATION

INTRODUCTION

The ARPANET Official Network Host Table, as outlined in RFC608, no

longer suits the needs of the DoD community, nor does it follow a

format suitable for internetting. This paper specifies a new host

table format applicable to both ARPANET and Internet needs.

In addition to host name to host address translation and selected

protocol information, we have also included network and gateway name

to address correspondence, and host operating system information.

This Host Table is utilized by the DoD Host Name Server maintained by

the ARPANET Network Information Center (NIC) on behalf of the Defense

Communications Agency (DCA) (RFC811). It obsoletes the host table

described in RFC608.

LOCATION OF THE STANDARD DoD ONLINE HOST TABLE

A machine-translatable ASCII text version of the new DoD Host Table

is online in the file <NETINFO>HOSTS.TXT on the SRI-NIC host. It can

be oBTained by connecting to host SRI-NIC (10.0.0.73) from your local

FTP server, logging in as user=ANONYMOUS, passWord=GUEST, and doing a

'get' on <NETINFO>HOSTS.TXT. The same table may also be obtained via

the NIC Host Name Server.

NOTE: See Appendix A. for timeframe for cutover.

ASSUMPTIONS

1. A "name" (Net, Host, Gateway, or Domain name) is a text string up

to 24 characters drawn from the alphabet (A-Z), digits (0-9), and the

minus sign (-) and period (.). No blank or space characters are

permitted as part of a name. No distinction is made between upper

and lower case. The first character must be a letter. The last

character must not be a minus sign or period. A host which serves as

a GATEWAY should have "-GATEWAY" or "-GW" as part of its name. A

host which is a TIP or a TAC should have "-TIP" or "-TAC" as part of

its host name, if it is an ARPANET or DoD host.

2. Internet Addresses are 32-bit addresses (RFC796). In the host

table described herein each address is represented by four decimal

numbers separated by a period. Each decimal number represents 1

octet.

[Page 1]

RFC810 1 March 1982

Host Table Specification

3. If the first bit of the first octet of the address is 0 (zero),

then the next 7 bits of the first octet indicate the network number

(Class A Address). If the first two bits are 1,0 (one,zero), then

the next 14 bits define the net number (Class B Address). If the

first 3 bits are 1,1,0 (one,one,zero), then the next 21 bits define

the net number (Class C Address) (RFC796).

This is depicted in the following diagram:

+--------------+-----------------------------------------------+

0 NET <-7-> LOCAL ADDRESS <-24->

+--------------+-----------------------------------------------+

+---+--------------------------+-------------------------------+

1 0 NET <-14-> LOCAL ADDRESS <-16->

+---+--------------------------+-------------------------------+

+-----+----------------------------------------+---------------+

1 1 0 NET <-21-> LOCAL ADDRESS

+-----+----------------------------------------+---------------+

4. The LOCAL ADDRESS portion of the internet address identifies a

host within the network specified by the NET portion of the address.

5. For the ARPANET (a Class A network), the NET address is 10

(decimal) and the LOCAL ADDRESS maps as follows: the second octet

defines the physical host, the third octet defines the logical host,

and the fourth defines the IMP.

+-+-------------+---------------+--------------+---------------+

0 10 HOST LOGICAL HOST IMP

+-+-------------+---------------+--------------+---------------+

(NOTE: RFC796 describes the local address mappings for several

other networks.)

6. It is the responsibility of the user using this host table to

translate it into whatever format is needed for his or her purposes.

7. Names and Addresses for DoD networks, gateways, and hosts will be

negotiated and registered with the Network Information Center

(NIC@SRI-NIC or (415) 859-4775) before being used and before traffic

is passed by a DoD host. For an interim period the NIC will attempt

to keep similar information for non-DoD networks and hosts if this

information is provided, and as long as it is needed, i.e., until

intercommunicating network name servers are in place.

EXAMPLE OF NEW HOST TABLE FORMAT

NET : 10.0.0.0 : ARPANET :

[Page 2]

1 March 1982 RFC810

Host Table Specification

NET : 18.0.0.0 : LCSNET :

GATEWAY : 10.0.0.77, 18.8.0.4 : MIT-GW :: MOS : IP/GW :

HOST : 10.0.0.73 : SRI-NIC,NIC : FOONLY-F3 : TENEX :

NCP/TELNET,NCP/FTP, TCP/TELNET, TCP/FTP :

HOST: 10.2.0.11 : SU-TIP,FELT-TIP :::

SYNTAX AND CONVENTIONS

; (semicolon) is used to denote the beginning of a comment.

Any text on a given line following a ';' is

comment, and not part of the host table.

NET keyword introducing a network name/address entry

GATEWAY keyword introducing a gateway name/address entry

HOST keyword introducing a host name/address entry

: (colon) is used as a field delimiter

:: (2 colons) indicates a null field

, (comma) is used as a data element delimiter

XXX/YYY indicates protocol information of the type

TRANSPORT/SERVICE.

where TRANSPORT/SERVICE options are specified as

"FOO/BAR" - both transport and service known

"FOO" - transport known; services not known or not

running, OR

"BAR" - name is known, what it does is not

NOTE: See Appendices B and C for specific options and

acronyms.

Each host table entry is an ASCII text string comprised of 6 fields,

where

Field 1 = KEYWORD indicating whether this entry pertains

to a NET, GATEWAY, or HOST. NET entries cannot have

alternate addresses or nicknames.

Field 2 = Internet Address of Network, Gateway, or Host

followed by alternate addresses

Field 3 = Official Name of Network, Gateway, or Host

(with optional nicknames)

Field 4 = Machine Type

Field 5 = Operating System

Field 6 = Protocol List

[Page 3]

RFC810 1 March 1982

Host Table Specification

Fields 4, 5 and 6 are optional.

Fields 3-6, if available, pertain to the first address in Field 2.

'Blanks' (spaces and tabs) are ignored between data elements or

fields, but are disallowed within a data element.

Each entry ends with a colon.

The host table will be sorted by internet address.

GRAMMATICAL HOST TABLE SPECIFICATION

A. Parsing grammar

<entry> ::= <keyword> ":" <addresses> ":" <names> [":" [<cputype>]

[":" [<opsys>] [":" [<protocol list>] ]]] ":"

<addresses> ::= <address> *["," <address>]

<address> ::= <octet> "." <octet> "." <octet> "." <octet>

<octet> ::= <0 to 255 decimal>

<names> ::= <netname> <gatename>

<official hostname> *["," <nicknames>]

<netname> ::= <name>

<gatename> ::= <name>

<official hostname> ::= <name>

<nickname> ::= <name>

<protocol list> ::= <protocol spec> *["," <protocol spec>]

<protocol spec> ::= <transport name> "/" <service name>

<raw protocol name>

B. Lexical grammar

<entry-field> ::= <entry-text> [<cr><lf> <blank> <entry-field>]

<blank> ::= <space or tab>

<keyword> ::= NET GATEWAY HOST

<name> ::= <letter>[*[<letter-or-digit-or-hyphen>]<letter-or-digit>]

<cputype> ::= PDP-11/70 DEC-1080 C/30 CDC-6400...etc.

<opsys> ::= ITS MULTICS TOPS20 UNIX...etc.

<transport name> ::= TCP NCP UDP IP...etc.

<service name> ::= TELNET FTP SMTP MTP...etc.

<raw protocol name> ::= <name>

<comment> ::= ";" <arbitrary text><cr><lf>

Notes:

1. Zero or more 'blanks' between separators " , : " are allowed.

'Blanks' are spaces and tabs.

2. Continuation lines are lines that begin with at least one

blank. They may be used anywhere 'blanks' are legal to split an

entry across lines.

[Page 4]

1 March 1982 RFC810

Host Table Specification

BIBLIOGRAPHY

1. Feinler, E. and Kudlick, M. Host Names Online, RFC608,

Network Information Center, SRI International, Jan. 1973.

2. Postel, J. Assigned Numbers, RFC790, Information Sciences

Inst., Univ. of Southern Calif., Marina Del Rey, Sept. 1981.

3. Postel, J. Internet Protocol, RFC791, Information Sciences

Inst., Univ. of Southern Calif., Marina Del Rey, Sept. 1981.

4. Postel, J. Address Mappings, RFC796, Information Sciences

Inst., Univ. of Southern Calif., Marina Del Rey, Sept. 1981.

5. Feinler, E., Harrenstien, K., Su, Z. and White, V. Official

DoD Internet Host Table Specification, RFC810, Network

Information Center, SRI International, March 1, 1982.

[Page 5]

RFC810 1 March 1982

Host Table Specification

APPENDIX A. CUTOVER DETAILS

The cutover date for use of the new host table is 1 May 1982. The

table below indicates which files will contain the old or the new

versions of the host table for what period of time. After 1 August

1982, the old format for <NETINFO>HOSTS.TXT (specified in RFC-608)

will no longer be supported.

--------------------------------------------------------------------

May 1982 June-July 1982 August 1982 on

--------------------------------------------------------------------

<NETINFO>HOSTS.TXT <NETINFO>HOSTS.TXT <NETINFO>HOSTS.TXT

old version new version new version

<NETINFO>NHOSTS.TXT <NETINFO>NHOSTS.TXT old version

new version (test) new version discontinued

<NETINFO>OHOSTS.TXT <NETINFO>OHOSTS.TXT

old version old version

--------------------------------------------------------------------

These periods of overlap should give implementors time to make the

necessary changes to programs Accessing this file.

[Page 6]

1 March 1982 RFC810

Host Table Specification

APPENDIX B. TRANSPORT/SERVICE OPTIONS AND ACRONYMS

Current TRANSPORT/SERVICE options are:

IP TCP/FTP

IP/GW TCP/MTP

NCP TCP/NNS

NCP/FTP TCP/RJE

NCP/RJE TCP/SMTP

NCP/SMTP TCP/TELNET

NCP/TELNET TCP/TFTP

NCP/NNS UDP

NVP

TCP

Note: "TCP" implies IP is also implemented

Acronym definitions for the above protocol options are:

FTP - File Transfer Protocol

GW - Gateway Protocol

IP - Internet Protocol

MTP - Mail Transfer Protocol

NCP - Network Control Protocol

NNP - NIC Internet Name Server Protocol

NVP - Network Voice Protocol

RJE - Remote Job Entry Protocol

SMTP - Simple Mail Transfer Protocol

TELNET - TELNET Protocol

TCP - Transmission Control Protocol

TFTP - Trivial File Transfer Protocol

UDP - User Datagram Protocol

[Page 7]

RFC810 1 March 1982

Host Table Specification

APPENDIX C. OPERATING SYSTEM ACRONYMS

Current operating system acronyms are:

ASP KRONOS RSX11M VMS

AUGUST MCP RT11 WAITS

BKY MOS SCOPE

CCP MPX-RT SIGNAL

DOS/360 MULTICS SINTRAN

ELF MVT TENEX

EPOS NOS TOPS10

EXEC-8 NOS/BE TOPS20

GCOS OS/MVS TSS

GPOS OS/MVT UNIX

ITS RIG VM/370

INTERCOM RSX11 VM/CMS

 
 
 
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