10. Πληροφορίες για τα έγγραφα αναφορών RFC, IEΝ


rfc-index list of all RFC's


rfc1065/1066/1067
          Simple  Network  Management  Protocol  (SNMP).  A  protocol  to get
	  information  from  gateways  and  hosts, to monitor  failures,  and to
	  reconfigure  gateways and hosts  remotely.  This protocol  will be the
	  foundation for network  management  activities  involving TCP/IP.  RFC
	  1028 documents the Simple Gateway Monitoring Protocol (SGMP), which is
	  an interim  protocol on which SNMP is based.  SGMP will be replaced by
	  SNMP during 1988/89.

rfc1064,1056,937
	  protocols for reading mail on PC's

rfc1062Assigned  Numbers.  If you are working with TCP/IP, you will  probably
	  want a hardcopy  of this as a  reference.  It's not very  exciting  to
	  read, but is  essential.  It lists  all the  offically  defined  well-
	  known ports and lots of other things.

rfc1059Network Time Protocol.  A protocol for  synchronizing  the time on all
	  your  machines.  Also allows you to get time from one of the  national
	  time standards.

rfc1058Routing  Information  Protocol.  Details  of  the  most  commonly-used
	  routing protocol.

rfc1057RPC.  A protocol  for  remote  procedure  calls.  Sun's  Network  File
	  System is based on this.  The actual  NFS  protocol  specification  is
	  currently  available  only from  Sun.  Sun  supplies  a public  domain
	  implementation   of   RPC.  Aside   from   its   use  by  NFS   (whose
	  implementation is not public domain), RPC has been used by a number of
	  groups for  building  server/client  systems  such as remote  database
	  servers.  See also RFC 1014.

rfc1042IP  encapsulation  for IEEE 802  networks.  This  will be used for the
	  IEEE token  ring,  broadband,  etc.  In  principle  it seems that this
	  would cover  Ethernet,  since  Ethernet  is IEEE  802.3.  However  the
	  normal encapsulation used on Ethernet is defined by RFC 894.
rfc1032/1033/1034/1035
          domains  (the  database  used to go from host  names to  Internet
	  address  and  back -- also  used to  handle  UUCP  these  days).  This
	  includes protocol standards, as well as information directed at people
	  who are  going to have to set up a  domain  name  server.  Every  site
	  should have a copy of these documents.

rfc1014XDR:  External  Data  Representation  Standard.  This is  part  of the
	  specifications  for  Sun's  RPC  protocol  (RFC  1057),  which  is the
	  protocol underlying Sun's Network File System.

rfc1013X Window  System  Protocol,  Version 11.  Documents the most  commonly
	  used remote window system.

rfc1012list of all RFC's below  1000, with  somewhat  more  information  than
	  rfc-index.

rfc1011Official  Protocols.  It's  useful  to scan  this  to see  what  tasks
	  protocols  have been built for.  This  defines  which RFC's are actual
	  standards, as opposed to requests for comments.

rfc1009NSFnet  gateway  specifications.  A good  overview  of IP routing  and
	  gateway technology.
rfc1001/1002netBIOS:  networking for PC's

rfc959FTP (file transfer)

rfc950subnets

rfc894how IP is to be put on Ethernet, see also rfc825

rfc854/855telnet - protocol for remote logins

rfc826ARP - protocol for finding out Ethernet addresses

rfc821/822mail

rfc814names and ports - general concepts behind well-known ports

rfc793TCP

rfc792ICMP

rfc791IP

rfc768UDP.

ien-116old name server (still needed by several kinds of system)

ien-48the Catenet model, general description of the philosophy behind TCP/IP

rfc1055SLIP (IP for dialup lines)

rfc1054IP multicasting

rfc1048Bootp, a protocol often used to allow  diskless  systems to find their
	  IP address.

rfc813window and acknowledgement strategies in TCP

rfc815datagram reassembly techniques

rfc816fault isolation and resolution techniques

rfc817modularity and efficiency in implementation

rfc879the maximum segment size option in TCP

rfc896congestion control

rfc827,888,904,975,985EGP and related issues

To those of you who may be reading this document remotely instead of at Rutgers:
The most important  RFC's have been  collected into a three-volume  set, the DDN
Protocol Handbook.  It is available from the DDN Network Information Center, SRI
International,  333 Ravenswood  Avenue, Menlo Park, California 94025 (telephone:
800-  235-3155).  You  should be able to get them via  anonymous  FTP from  sri-
nic.arpa.  File names are:

RFC's:     
	rfc:rfc-index.txt     
	rfc:rfcxxx.txt     
IEN's:     
	ien:ien-index.txt
	ien:ien-xxx.txt

Sites with access to UUCP but not FTP may be able to retreive them via UUCP from
UUCP host rutgers.  The file names would be

RFC's:                                  
	/topaz/pub/pub/tcp-ip-docs/rfc-index.txt
	/topaz/pub/pub/tcp-ip-docs/rfcxxx.txt                                   
IEN's:
	/topaz/pub/pub/tcp-ip-docs/ien-index.txt
	/topaz/pub/pub/tcp-ip-docs/ien-xxx.txt

Note that  SRI-NIC has the entire set of RFC's and IEN's, but rutgers  and topaz
have only those specifically mentioned above.
.

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