| ==Phrack Inc.== |
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| Volume Two, Issue 18, Phile #4 of 11 |
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| - - |
| - - |
| - PRIMOS: - |
| - NETWORK COMMUNICATIONS - |
| - - |
| - PRIMENET, RJE, DPTX - |
| - - |
| - - |
| - Presented by Magic Hasan June 1988 - |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| PRIME's uniform operating system, PRIMOS, supports a wide range of |
| communications products to suit any distributed processing need. The PRIMENET |
| distributed networking facility provides complete local and remote network |
| communication services for all PRIME systems. PRIME's Remote Job Entry (RJE) |
| products enable multi-user PRIME systems to emulate IBM, CDC, Univac, |
| Honeywell and ICL remote job entry terminals over synchronous communication |
| lines. PRIME's Distributed Processing Terminal Executive (DPTX) allows users |
| to construct communication networks with PRIME and IBM-compatible equipment. |
|
|
| PRIMENET |
| -------- |
|
|
| PRIMENET provides complete local and remote network communication services |
| for all PRIME systems. PRIMENET networking software lets a user or process on |
| one PRIME system communicate with any other PRIME system in the network |
| without concern for any protocol details. A user can log in to any computer |
| in the network from any terminal in the network. With PRIMENET, networking |
| software processes running concurrently on different systems can communicate |
| interactively. PRIMENET allows transparent access to any system in the |
| network without burdening the user with extra commands. |
|
|
| PRIMENET has been designed and implemented so that user interface is simple |
| and transparent. Running on a remote system from a local node of the network |
| or accessing remote files requires no reprogramming of user applications or |
| extensive user training. All the intricacies and communication protocols of |
| the network are handled by the PRIMENET software. For both the local and |
| remote networks, PRIMENET will allow users to share documents, files, and |
| programs and use any disk or printer configured in the network. |
|
|
| For a local network between physically adjacent systems, PRIME offers the |
| high-performance microprocessor, the PRIMENET Node Controller (PNC). The |
| controller users direct memory access for low overhead and allows loosely |
| coupled nodes to share resources in an efficient manner. The PNCs for each |
| system are connected to each other with a coaxial cable to form a high-speed |
| ring network, with up to 750 feet (230 meters) between any two systems. |
|
|
| Any system in the PNC ring can establish virtual circuits with any other |
| system, making PNC-based networks "fully connected" with a direct path between |
| each pair of systems. The ring has sufficient bandwidth (1 MB per second) and |
| addressing capability to accommodate over 200 systems in a ring structure; |
| however, PRIMENET currently supports up to sixteen systems on a ring to |
| operate as a single local network. |
|
|
| The PRIMENET Node Controller is designed to assure continuity of operation |
| in the event that one of the systems fails. One system can be removed from |
| the network or restored to on-line status without disturbing the operations of |
| the other system. An active node is unaware of messages destined for other |
| nodes in the network, and the CPU is notified only when a message for that |
| node has been correctly received. |
|
|
| Synchronous communications over dedicated leased lines or dial-up lines is |
| provided through the Multiple Data Link Controller (MDLC). This controller |
| handles certain protocol formatting and data transfer functions normally |
| performed by the operating system in other computers. The controller's |
| microprogrammed architecture increases throughput by eliminating many tasks |
| from central processor overhead. |
|
|
| The communications controller also supports multiple protocols for |
| packet-switched communications with Public Data Networks such as the United |
| States' TELENET and TYMNET, the Canadian DATAPAC, Great Britain's |
| International Packet Switching Service (IPSS), France's TRANSPAC, and the |
| European Packet Switching Network, EURONET. Most Public Data Networks require |
| computers to use the CCITT X.25 protocol to deal with the management of |
| virtual circuits between a system and others in the network. The synchronous |
| communications controller supports this protocol. PRIME can provide the X.25 |
| protocol for use with the PRIMENET networking software without modification to |
| the existing hardware configuration. |
|
|
| PRIMENET software offers three distinct sets of services. The |
| Inter-Program Communication Facility (IPCF) lets programs running under the |
| PRIMOS operating system establish communications paths (Virtual circuits) to |
| programs in the same or another PRIME system, or in other vendors' systems |
| supporting the CCITT X.25 standard for packet switching networks. The |
| Interactive Terminal Support (ITS) facility permits terminals attached to a |
| packet switching network, or to another PRIME system, to log-in to a PRIME |
| system with the same capabilities they would have if they were directly |
| attached to the system. The File Access Manager (FAM) allows terminal users |
| or programs running under the PRIMOS operating system to utilize files |
| physically stored on other PRIME systems in a network. Remote file operations |
| are logically transparent to the application program. This means no new |
| applications and commands need to be learned for network operation. |
|
|
| The IPCF facility allows programs in a PRIME computer to exchange data with |
| programs in the same computer, another PRIME computer, or another vendor's |
| computer, assuming that that vendor supports X.25. This feature is the most |
| flexible and powerful one that any network software package can provide. It |
| basically allows an applications programmer to split up a program, so that |
| different pieces of the program execute on different machines a network. Each |
| program component can be located close to the resource (terminals, data, |
| special peripherals, etc.) it must handle, decode the various pieces and |
| exchange data as needed, using whatever message formats the application |
| designer deems appropriate. The programmer sees PRIMENET's IPCF as a series |
| of pipes through which data can flow. The mechanics of how the data flows are |
| invisible; it just "happens" when the appropriate services are requested. If |
| the two programs happen to end up on the same machine, the IPCF mechanism |
| still works. The IPCF offers the following advantages: |
|
|
| 1) The User does not need to understand the detailed |
| mechanisms of communications software in order to |
| communicate. |
| 2) Calls are device-independent. The same program will |
| work over physical links implemented by the local node |
| controller (local network), leased lines, or a packet |
| network. |
| 3) Programs on one system can concurrently communicate |
| with programs on other systems using a single |
| communications controller. PRIMENET handles all |
| multiplexing of communications facilities. |
| 4) A single program can establish multiple virtual |
| circuits to other programs in the network. |
|
|
| PRIMENET's ITS facility allows an interactive terminal to have access to |
| any machine in the network. This means that terminals can be connected into |
| an X.25 packet network along with PRIME computers. Terminal traffic between |
| two systems is multiplexed over the same physical facilities as inter-program |
| data, so no additional hardware is needed to share terminals between systems. |
|
|
| This feature is ordinarily invisible to user programs, which cannot |
| distinguish data entering via a packet network from data coming in over AMLC |
| lines. A variant of the IPCF facility allows users to include the terminal |
| handling protocol code in their own virtual space, thus enabling them to |
| control multiple terminals on the packet network within one program. |
| Terminals entering PRIMOS in this fashion do not pass through the usual log-in |
| facility, but are immediately connected to the application program they |
| request. (The application program provides whatever security checking is |
| required.) |
|
|
| The result is the most effective available means to provide multi-system |
| access to a single terminal, with much lower costs for data communications and |
| a network which is truly available to all users without the expense of |
| building a complicated private network of multiplexors and concentrators. |
|
|
| By utilizing PRIMENET's File Access Manager (FAM), programs running under |
| PRIMOS can access files on other PRIME systems using the same mechanisms used |
| to access local files. This feature allows users to move from a single-system |
| environment to a multiple-system one without difficulty. When a program and |
| the files it uses are separated into two (or more) systems the File Access |
| Management (FAM)is automatically called upon whenever the program attempts to |
| use the file. Remote file operations are logically transparent to the user |
| or program. |
|
|
| When a request to locate a file or directory cannot be satisfied locally, |
| the File Access Manager is invoked to find the data elsewhere in the network. |
| PRIMOS initiates a remote procedure call to the remote system and suspends the |
| user. This procedure call is received by an answering slave process on the |
| remote system, which performs the requested operation and returns data via |
| subroutine parameters. The slave process on the remote system is dedicated to |
| its calling master process (user) on the local system until released. A |
| master process (user) can have a slave process on each of several remote |
| systems simultaneously. This means that each user has a dedicated connection |
| for the duration of the remote access activity so many requests can be |
| handled in parallel. |
|
|
| FAM operation is independent of the specific network hardware connecting |
| the nodes. There is no need to rewrite programs or learn new commands when |
| moving to the network environment. Furthermore, the user need only be |
| logged-in to one system in the network, regardless of the location of the |
| file. Files on the local system or remote systems can be accessed dynamically |
| by file name within a program, using the language-specific open and close |
| statements. No external job control language statements are needed for the |
| program to access files. Inter-host file transfers and editing can be |
| performed using the same PRIMOS utilities within the local system by |
| referencing the remote files with their actual file names. |
|
|
| REMOTE JOB ENTRY |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| PRIME's Remote Job Entry (RJE) software enables a PRIME system to emulate |
| IBM, CDC, Univac, Honeywell and ICL remote job entry terminals over |
| synchronous communication lines. PRIME's RJE provides the same communications |
| and peripheral support as the RJE terminals they emulate, appearing to the |
| host processor to be those terminals. All PRIME RJE products provide three |
| unique benefits: |
|
|
| * PRIME RJE is designed to communicate with multiple |
| remote sites simultaneously. |
|
|
| * PRIME RJE enables any terminal connected to a PRIME system to |
| submit jobs for transmission to remote processors, eliminating the |
| requirement for dedicated terminals or RJE stations at each |
| location. |
|
|
| * PRIME's mainframe capabilities permit concurrent running of RJE |
| emulators, program development and production work. |
|
|
| PRIME's RJE supports half-duplex, point-to-point, synchronous |
| communications and operates over dial-up and dedicated lines. It is fully |
| supported by the PRIMOS operating system. |
|
|
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| DISTRIBUTED PROCESSING TERMINAL EXECUTIVE (DPTX) |
| ------------------------------------------------ |
|
|
| PRIME's Distributed Processing Terminal Executive (DPTX) allows users to |
| construct communication networks with PRIME and IBM-compatible equipment. |
| DPTX conforms to IBM 3271/3277 Display System protocols, and can be integrated |
| into networks containing IBM mainframes, terminals and printers without |
| changing application code or access methods and operates under the PRIMOS |
| operating system. |
|
|
| DPTX is compatible with all IBM 370 systems and a variety of access methods |
| and teleprocessing monitors: BTAM, TCAM, VTAM, IMS/VS, CIC/VS, and TSO. They |
| provide transmission speeds up to 9600 bps using IBM's Binary Synchronous |
| Communications (BSC) protocol. |
|
|
| DPTX is comprised of three software modules that allow PRIME systems to |
| emulate and support IBM or IBM compatible 3271/3277 Display Systems. One |
| module, Data Stream Compatibility (DPTX/DSC), allows the PRIME system to |
| emulate the operation of a 3271 on the IBM system. This enables both terminal |
| user and application programs (interactive or batch) on the PRIME System to |
| reach application programs on an IBM mainframe. A second module, Terminal |
| Support Facility (DPTX/TSF), allows a PRIME system to control a network of IBM |
| 3271/3277 devices. This enables terminal users to reach application programs |
| on a PRIME computer. The third module, Transparent Connect Facility |
| (DPTX/TCF), combines the functions of modules one and two with additional |
| software allowing 3277 terminal users to to reach programs on a IBM mainframe, |
| even though the terminal subsystem is physically connected to a PRIME system, |
| which is connected to an IBM system. |
|
|
| PRIMOS offers a variety of different Communication applications. Being |
| able to utilize these applications to their fullest extent can make life easy |
| for a Primos "enthusiast." If you're a beginner with Primos, the best way to |
| learn more, as with any other system, is to get some "hands-on" experience. |
| Look forward to seeing some beginner PRIMOS files in the near future. -MH |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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|
| Special thanks to PRIME INC. for unwittingly providing the text for this |
| article. |
| =============================================================================== |
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