| ==Phrack Inc.== |
|
|
| Volume Three, Issue 28, File #4 of 12 |
|
|
| Network Miscellany |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| by Taran King |
|
|
| June 1, 1989 |
|
|
|
|
| ACSNET |
| ~~~~~~ |
| Australian Computer Science Network (ACSNET), also known as Oz, |
| has its gateway through the CSNET node munnari.oz.au and if you |
| cannot directly mail to the .oz.au domain, try either |
| username%munnari.oz.au@UUNET.UU.NET or |
| munnari!username@UUNET.UU.NET. |
|
|
| AT&T MAIL |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| AT&T Mail is a mailing service of AT&T, probably what you might |
| call it's MCI-Mail equivalent. It is available on the UUCP |
| network as node name attmail but I've had problems having mail |
| get through. Apparently, it does cost money to mail to this |
| service and the surrounding nodes are not willing to pick up the |
| tab for the ingoing mail, or at least, this has seemingly been |
| the case thus far. I believe, though, that perhaps routing to |
| att!attmail!user would work. |
|
|
| AT&T recently announced six new X.400 interconnections between |
| AT&T Mail and electronic mail services in the U.S., Korea, |
| Sweden, Australia, and Finland. In the U.S., AT&T Mail is now |
| interconnected with Telenet Communications Corporation's service, |
| Telemail, allowing users of both services to exchange messages |
| easily. With the addition of these interconnections, the AT&T |
| Mail Gateway 400 Service allows AT&T Mail subscribers to exchange |
| messages with users of the following electronic messaging |
| systems: |
|
|
| Company E-Mail Name* Country |
| ------- ------------ ------- |
| TeleDelta TeDe 400 Sweden |
| OTC MPS400 Australia |
| Telecom-Canada Envoy100 Canada |
| DACOM DACOM MHS Korea |
| P&T-Tele MailNet 400 Finland |
| Helsinki Telephone Co. ELISA Finland |
| Dialcom Dialcom USA |
| Telenet Telemail USA |
| KDD Messavia Japan |
| Transpac ATLAS400 France |
|
|
| The interconnections are based on the X.400 standard, a set of |
| guidelines for the format, delivery and receipt of electronic |
| messages recommended by an international standards committee the |
| CCITT. International X.400 messages incur a surcharge. They |
| are: |
|
|
| To Canada: |
| Per note: $.05 |
| Per message unit: $.10 |
|
|
| To other international locations: |
| Per note: $.20 |
| Per message unit: $.50 |
|
|
| There is no surcharge for X.400 messages within the U.S. The |
| following are contacts to speak with about mailing through these |
| mentioned networks. Other questions can be directed through AT&T |
| Mail's toll-free number, 1-800-624-5672. |
|
|
| MHS Gateway: mhs!atlas MHS Gateway: mhs!dacom |
| Administrator: Bernard Tardieu Administrator: Bob Nicholson |
| Transpac AT&T |
| Phone: 3399283203 Morristown, NJ 07960 |
| Phone: +1 201 644 1838 |
|
|
| MHS Gateway: mhs!dialcom MHS Gateway: mhs!elisa |
| Administrator: Mr. Laraman Administrator: Ulla Karajalainen |
| Dialcom Nokia Data |
| South Plainfield, NJ 07080 Phone: 01135804371 |
| Phone: +1 441 493 3843 |
|
|
| MHS Gateway: mhs!envoy MHS Gateway: mhs!kdd |
| Administrator: Kin C. Ma Administrator: Shigeo Lwase |
| Telecom Canada Kokusai Denshin Denwa CO. |
| Phone: +1 613 567 7584 Phone: 8133477419 |
|
|
| MHS Gateway: mhs!mailnet MHS Gateway: mhs!otc |
| Administrator: Kari Aakala Administrator: Gary W. Krumbine |
| Gen Directorate Of Post & AT&T Information Systems |
| Phone: 35806921730 Lincroft, NJ 07738 |
| Phone: +1 201 576 2658 |
|
|
| MHS Gateway: mhs!telemail MHS Gateway: mhs |
| Administrator: Jim Kelsay Administrator: AT&T Mail MHS |
| GTE Telenet Comm Corp Gateway |
| Reston, VA 22096 AT&T |
| Phone: +1 703 689 6034 Lincroft, NJ 08838 |
| Phone: +1 800 624 5672 |
|
|
| CMR |
| ~~~ |
| Previously known as Intermail, the Commercial Mail Relay (CMR) |
| Service is a mail relay service between the Internet and three |
| commercial electronic mail systems: US Sprint/Telenet, MCI-Mail, |
| and DIALCOM systems (i.e. Compmail, NSFMAIL, and USDA-MAIL). |
|
|
| An important note: The only requirement for using this mail |
| gateway is that the work conducted must be DARPA sponsored |
| research and other approved government business. Basically, this |
| means that unless you've got some government-related business, |
| you're not supposed to be using this gateway. Regardless, it |
| would be very difficult for them to screen everything that goes |
| through their gateway. Before I understood the requirements of |
| this gateway, I was sending to a user of MCI-Mail and was not |
| contacted about any problems with that communication. |
| Unfortunately, I mistyped the MCI-Mail address on one of the |
| letters and that letter ended up getting read by system |
| administrators who then informed me that I was not to be using |
| that system, as well as the fact that they would like to bill me |
| for using it. That was an interesting thought on their part |
| anyway, but do note that using this service does incur charges. |
|
|
| The CMR mailbox address in each system corresponds to the label: |
|
|
| Telemail: [Intermail/USCISI]TELEMAIL/USA |
| MCI-Mail: Intermail or 107-8239 |
| CompMail: Intermail or CMP0817 |
| NSF-Mail: Intermail or NSF153 |
| USDA-Mail: Intermail or AGS9999 |
|
|
| Addressing examples for each e-mail system are as follows: |
|
|
| MCIMAIL: |
| 123-4567 seven digit address |
| Everett T. Bowens person's name (must be unique!) |
|
|
| COMPMAIL: |
| CMP0123 three letters followed by three or four digits |
| S.Cooper initial, then "." and then last name |
| 134:CMP0123 domain, then ":" and then combination system and |
| account number |
|
|
| NSFMAIL: |
| NSF0123 three letters followed by three or four digits |
| A.Phillips initial, then "." and then last name |
| 157:NSF0123 domain, then ":" and then combination system and |
| account number |
|
|
| USDAMAIL: |
| AGS0123 three letters followed by three or four digits |
| P.Shifter initial, then "." and then last name |
| 157:AGS0123 domain, then ":" and then combination system and |
| account number |
|
|
| TELEMAIL: |
| BARNOC user (directly on Telemail) |
| BARNOC/LODH user/organization (directly on Telemail) |
| [BARNOC/LODH]TELEMAIL/USA |
| [user/organization]system branch/country |
|
|
| The following are other Telenet system branches/countries that |
| can be mailed to: |
|
|
| TELEMAIL/USA NASAMAIL/USA MAIL/USA TELEMEMO/AUSTRALIA |
| TELECOM/CANADA TOMMAIL/CHILE TMAILUK/GB ITALMAIL/ITALY |
| ATI/JAPAN PIPMAIL/ROC DGC/USA FAAMAIL/USA |
| GSFC/USA GTEMAIL/USA TM11/USA TNET.TELEMAIL/USA |
| USDA/USA |
|
|
| Note: OMNET's ScienceNet is on the Telenet system MAIL/USA and to mail to |
| it, the format would be [A.MAILBOX/OMNET]MAIL/USA. The following are available |
| subdivisions of OMNET: |
|
|
| AIR Atmospheric Sciences |
| EARTH Solid Earth Sciences |
| LIFE Life Sciences |
| OCEAN Ocean Sciences |
| POLAR Interdisciplinary Polar Studies |
| SPACE Space Science and Remote Sensing |
|
|
| The following is a list of DIALCOM systems available in the |
| listed countries with their domain and system numbers: |
|
|
| Service Name Country Domain Number System Number |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Keylink-Dialcom Australia 60 07, 08, 09 |
| Dialcom Canada 20 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 |
| DPT Databoks Denmark 124 71 |
| Telebox Finland 127 62 |
| Telebox West Germany 30 15, 16 |
| Dialcom Hong Kong 80 88, 89 |
| Eirmail Ireland 100 74 |
| Goldnet Israel 50 05, 06 |
| Mastermail Italy 130 65, 67 |
| Mastermail Italy 1 66, 68 |
| Dialcom Japan 70 13, 14 |
| Dialcom Korea 1 52 |
| Telecom Gold Malta 100 75 |
| Dialcom Mexico 1 52 |
| Memocom Netherlands 124 27, 28, 29 |
| Memocom Netherlands 1 55 |
| Starnet New Zealand 64 01, 02 |
| Dialcom Puerto Rico 58 25 |
| Telebox Singapore 88 10, 11, 12 |
| Dialcom Taiwan 1 52 |
| Telecom Gold United Kingdom 100 01, 04, 17, |
| 80-89 |
| DIALCOM USA 1 29, 30, 31, 32, |
| 33, 34, 37, 38, |
| 41-59, 61, 62, 63, |
| 90-99 |
|
|
| NOTE: You can also mail to username@NASAMAIL.NASA.GOV or |
| username@GSFCMAIL.NASA.GOV instead of going through the CMR gateway to |
| mail to NASAMAIL or GSFCMAIL. |
|
|
| For more information and instructions on how to use CMR, send a |
| message to the user support group at |
| intermail-request@intermail.isi.edu (you'll get basically what |
| I've listed plus maybe a bit more). Please read Chapter 3 of The |
| Future Transcendent Saga (Limbo to Infinity) for specifics on |
| mailing to these destination mailing systems. |
|
|
| COMPUSERVE |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
| CompuServe is well known for its games and conferences. It does, though, have |
| mailing capability. Now, they have developed their own Internet domain, called |
| COMPUSERVE.COM. It is relatively new and mail can be routed through either |
| TUT.CIS.OHIO-STATE.EDU or NORTHWESTERN.ARPA. |
|
|
| Example: user%COMPUSERVE.COM@TUT.CIS.OHIO-STATE.EDU or replace |
| TUT.CIS.OHIO-STATE.EDU with NORTHWESTERN.ARPA). |
|
|
| The CompuServe link appears to be a polled UUCP connection at the |
| gateway machine. It is actually managed via a set of shell |
| scripts and a comm utility called xcomm, which operates via |
| command scripts built on the fly by the shell scripts during |
| analysis of what jobs exist to go into and out of CompuServe. |
|
|
| CompuServe subscriber accounts of the form 7xxxx,yyyy can be |
| addressed as 7xxxx.yyyy@compuserve.com. CompuServe employees can |
| be addressed by their usernames in the csi.compuserve.com |
| subdomain. CIS subscribers write mail to |
| ">inet:user@host.domain" to mail to users on the Wide-Area |
| Networks, where ">gateway:" is CompuServe's internal gateway |
| access syntax. The gateway generates fully-RFC-compliant |
| headers. |
|
|
| To fully extrapolate -- from the CompuServe side, you would use |
| their EasyPlex mail system to send mail to someone in BITNET or |
| the Internet. For example, to send me mail at my Bitnet id, you |
| would address it to: |
|
|
| INET:C488869%UMCVMB.BITNET@CUNYVM.CUNY.EDU |
|
|
| Or to my Internet id: |
|
|
| INET:C488869@UMCVMB.MISSOURI.EDU |
|
|
| Now, if you have a BITNET to Internet userid, this is a silly |
| thing to do, since your connect time to CompuServe costs you |
| money. However, you can use this information to let people on |
| CompuServe contact YOU. CompuServe Customer Service says that |
| there is no charge to either receive or send a message to the |
| Internet or BITNET. |
|
|
| DASNET |
| ~~~~~~ |
| DASnet is a smaller network that connects to the Wide-Area |
| Networks but charges for their service. DASnet subscribers get |
| charged for both mail to users on other networks AND mail for |
| them from users of other networks. The following is a brief |
| description of DASnet, some of which was taken from their |
| promotional text letter. |
|
|
| DASnet allows you to exchange electronic mail with people on more |
| than 20 systems and networks that are interconnected with DASnet. |
| One of the drawbacks, though, is that, after being subscribed to |
| these services, you must then subscribe to DASnet, which is a |
| separate cost. Members of Wide-Area networks can subscribe to |
| DASnet too. Some of the networks and systems reachable through |
| DASnet include the following: |
|
|
| ABA/net, ATT Mail, BIX (Byte Information eXchange), DASnet Network, |
| Dialcom, EIES, EasyLink, Envoy 100, FAX, GeoMail, INET, MCI Mail, NWI, |
| PeaceNet/EcoNet, Portal Communications, The Meta Network, The Source, |
| Telemail, ATI's Telemail (Japan), Telex, TWICS (Japan), UNISON, UUCP, The |
| WELL, and Domains (i.e. ".COM" and ".EDU" etc.). New systems are added |
| all of the time. As of the writing of this file, Connect, GoverNET, |
| MacNET, and The American Institute of Physics PI-MAIL are soon to be |
| connected. |
|
|
| You can get various accounts on DASnet including: |
|
|
| o Corporate Accounts -- If your organization wants more than one individual |
| subscription. |
| o Site Subscriptions -- If you want DASnet to link directly to your |
| organization's electronic mail system. |
|
|
| To send e-mail through DASnet, you send the message to the DASnet |
| account on your home system. You receive e-mail at your mailbox, |
| as you do now. On the Wide-Area Networks, you send mail to |
| XB.DAS@STANFORD.BITNET. On the Subject: line, you type the |
| DASnet address in brackets and then the username just outside of |
| them. The real subject can be expressed after the username |
| separated by a "!" (Example: Subject: [0756TK]randy!How's |
| Phrack?). |
|
|
| The only disadvantage of using DASnet as opposed to Wide-Area |
| networks is the cost. Subscription costs as of 3/3/89 cost $4.75 |
| per month or $5.75 per month for hosts that are outside of the |
| U.S.A. |
|
|
| You are also charged for each message that you send. If you are |
| corresponding with someone who is not a DASnet subscriber, THEIR |
| MAIL TO YOU is billed to your account. |
|
|
| The following is an abbreviated cost list for mailing to the |
| different services of DASnet: |
|
|
| PARTIAL List DASnet Cost DASnet Cost |
| of Services 1st 1000 Each Add'l 1000 |
| Linked by DASnet (e-mail) Characters Characters: |
|
|
| INET, MacNET, PeaceNet, NOTE: 20 lines |
| Unison, UUCP*, Domains, .21 .11 of text is app. |
| e.g. .COM, .EDU* 1000 characters. |
|
|
| Dialcom--Any "host" in U.S. .36 .25 |
|
|
| Dialcom--Hosts outside U.S. .93 .83 |
|
|
| EasyLink (From EasyLink) .21 .11 |
| (To EasyLink) .55 .23 |
|
|
| U.S. FAX (internat'l avail.) .79 .37 |
|
|
| GeoMail--Any "host" in U.S. .21 .11 |
| GeoMail--Hosts outside U.S. .74 .63 |
|
|
| MCI (from MCI) .21 .11 |
| (to MCI) .78 .25 |
| (Paper mail - USA) 2.31 .21 |
|
|
| Telemail .36 .25 |
|
|
| W.U. Telex--United States 1.79 1.63 |
| (You can also send Telexes outside the U.S.) |
|
|
| TWICS--Japan .89 .47 |
|
|
| * The charges given here are to the gateway to the network. The DASnet |
| user is not charged for transmission on the network itself. |
|
|
| Subscribers to DASnet get a free DASnet Network Directory as well |
| as a listing in the directory, and the ability to order optional |
| DASnet services like auto-porting or DASnet Telex Service which |
| gives you your own Telex number and answerback for $8.40 a month |
| at this time. |
|
|
| DASnet is a registered trademark of DA Systems, Inc. |
|
|
| DA Systems, Inc. 1503 E. Campbell |
| Ave. |
| Campbell, CA 95008 408-559-7434 |
| TELEX: 910 380-3530 |
|
|
| The following two sections on PeaceNet and AppleLink are in |
| association with DASnet as this network is what is used to |
| connect them to the Wide-Area Networks. |
|
|
| APPLELINK ~~~~~~~~~ AppleLink is a service of Apple Computer. |
| They have their own little network and there are a couple of |
| things to know about it. |
|
|
| First of all, there is an AppleLink-Bitnet Mail Relay which was |
| created to "enrich the cooperative research relationship of Apple |
| Computer and the higher education community by facilitating the |
| electronic exchange of information." Any Bitnet user is |
| automatically authorized to use the mail relay as well as all |
| AppleLink users. |
|
|
| To send to AppleLink from Bitnet, your header should be as |
| follows: |
|
|
| To: XB.DAS@STANFORD.BITNET Subject: username@APPLELINK!Hi, how |
| are things at Apple? |
|
|
| The username is the user's ID that you are sending to and the "!" |
| separates the DASnet To: field from the real subject. |
|
|
| To send to Bitnet from AppleLink, your header should be as |
| follows: |
|
|
| To: DASNET Subject: C488869@UMCVMB.BITNET!Please add me to the |
| Phrack Subscription List. |
|
|
| The C488869@UMCVMB.BITNET (my address) is any Bitnet address and |
| as above, the "!" separates the address from the subject of the |
| message. |
|
|
| There is one other thing to mention. Apparently, sending to |
| username@APPLELINK.APPLE.COM also will perform the same function. |
| If this does not work, try routing to |
| username%APPLELINK.APPLE.COM@APPLE.COM. |
|
|
| PEACENET ~~~~~~~~ PeaceNet is a computer-based communication |
| system "helping the peace movement throughout the world |
| communicate and cooperate more effectively and efficiently," |
| according to their information flier. It is networked through |
| Telenet and can be reached via dial-up. To subscribe to this |
| service, it costs $10 to sign up. With this sign-up fee, you |
| receive a user's manual and a "free" hour of off-peak computer |
| time (which is weekday evenings, weekends, and |
| holidays). Beyond this, you pay a monthly $10 fee for another |
| hour of off-peak computer usage and you pay $5 for additional |
| PEAK hour usage. They charge, also, for users who require extra |
| space on their system. I guess peace carries a heavy cost in the |
| long run! You do get 2 free hours of off-peak time though for |
| every additional user you bring to PeaceNet. It is a project of |
| the Tides Foundation, a San Franciscan public charity, and is |
| managed by 3 national peace organizations (non-profit, of |
| course!). Anyway, to join PeaceNet, send your name, |
| organizational affiliation, address, city, state, zip code, |
| telephone number, and who referred you to PeaceNet as well as |
| your credit card number with expiration date (and the name on the |
| card if it's different than yours) to PeaceNet, 3228 Sacramento |
| Street, San Francisco, CA 94115 or call them at 415-923-0900. |
| You can also pay by check but that requires a $50 deposit. |
|
|
| FIDONET |
| ~~~~~~~ |
| FIDONET is, of course, the ever-popular group of IBM bulletin |
| boards that made it possible for networking to be incorporated |
| into bulletin board systems. FIDONET seems to have a number of |
| gateways in the Wide-Area Networks. First of all, it has its own |
| domain -- .ifna.org -- which makes it possible to mail right to |
| FIDONET without routing through UUCP gateways or whatever. The |
| format for this gateway is: |
|
|
| Username@f<node #>.n<net #>.z<zone #>.ifna.org |
|
|
| In other words, if I wanted to mail to Silicon Swindler at |
| 1:135/5, the address would be |
| Silicon_Swindler@f5.n135.z1.ifna.org and, provided that your |
| mailer knows the .ifna.org domain, it should get through alright. |
| Apparently, as of the writing of this article, they have |
| implemented a new gateway name called fidonet.org which should |
| work in place of ifna.org in all routings. If your mailer does |
| not know either of these domains, use the above routing but |
| replace the first "@" with a "%" and then afterwards, use either |
| of the following mailers after the "@": CS.ORST.EDU or |
| K9.CS.ORST.EDU (i.e. username%f<node #>.n<net #>.z<zone |
| #>.fidonet.org@CS.ORST.EDU [or replace CS.ORST.EDU with |
| K9.CS.ORST.EDU]). |
|
|
| The following is a list compiled by Bill Fenner (WCF@PSUECL.BITNET) that was |
| posted on INFONETS DIGEST which lists a number of FIDONET gateways: |
|
|
| Net Node Node Name |
| ~~~ ~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ |
| 104 56 milehi.ifna.org |
| 105 55 casper.ifna.org |
| 107 320 rubbs.ifna.org |
| 109 661 blkcat.ifna.org |
| 125 406 fidogate.ifna.org |
| 128 19 hipshk.ifna.org |
| 129 65 insight.ifna.org |
| 143 N/A fidogate.ifna.org |
| 152 200 castle.ifna.org |
| 161 N/A fidogate.ifna.org |
| 369 17 megasys.ifna.org |
|
|
| NOTE: The UUCP equivalent node name is the first part of the node name. In |
| other words, the UUCP node milehi is listed as milehi.ifna.org but can |
| be mailed directly over the UUCP network. |
|
|
| Another way to mail to FIDONET, specifically for Internet people, is in this |
| format: |
|
|
| ihnp4!necntc!ncoast!ohiont!<net #>!<node #>!user_name@husc6.harvard.edu |
|
|
| And for those UUCP mailing people out there, just use the path described and |
| ignore the @husc5.harvard.edu portion. There is a FIDONET NODELIST available on |
| most any FIDONET bulletin board, but it is quite large. |
|
|
| ONTYME |
| ~~~~~~ |
| Previously known as Tymnet, OnTyme is the McDonnell Douglas revision. After |
| they bought out Tymnet, they renamed the company and opened an experimental |
| Internet gateway at ONTYME.TYMNET.COM but this is supposedly only good for |
| certain corporate addresses within McDonnell Douglas and Tymnet, not their |
| customers. The userid format is xx.yyy or xx.y/yy where xx is a net name and |
| yyy (or y/yy) is a true username. If you cannot directly nail this, try: |
|
|
| xx.yyy%ONTYME.TYMNET.COM@TYMIX.TYMNET.COM |
|
|
| A subnet of Tymnet is called GeoNet. It is a private X.25-based |
| subnet that is operated by the U.S. Geological Survey, a bureau |
| of the U.S. Department of the Interior. It supports about 165 |
| host computers including about 75 USGS Primes, 50 VAXen, and 2 |
| Amdahls. One of their VAX systems is on BITnet at USGSRESV and |
| they have SPAN nodes at IFLAG1.SPAN and EROSA.SPAN. |
|
|
| THENET |
| ~~~~~~ |
| The Texas Higher Education Network (THEnet) is comprised of many |
| of the institutions of higher education in the state of Texas. |
| Its backbone network protocol is DECnet. THEnet has recently |
| been designated as an NSF regional network, distributing Internet |
| Protocol (IP) access over DECnet in some cases and utilizing |
| multi-protocol routers in others. THEnet has a NIC (Network |
| Information Center) at THENIC.THE.NET and addresses within THEnet |
| are probably routed to user@destination.THE.NET. |
|
|
| UUCP PATHS AND NODE INFORMATION |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Many UUCP Unix nodes have the commands uuhosts and uupath. The |
| uuhosts command allows you to receive information about a |
| specified UUCP node such as the path, node contact, how it is |
| polled for USENET feeds, etc. The uupath command simply tells |
| you the path from one UUCP node to another. Well, although at |
| this time, this is only good for Bitnet users, this interactive |
| message feature is good to know just in case you need to know a |
| path to a particular node. For IBM systems using RSCS network |
| software, use the command |
|
|
| SM RSCS CMD PSUVAX1 UUPATH node1 node2 ... |
|
|
| (For people on VAXen with JNET network software, the format is: ) |
| (SEND/COMMAND PSUVAX1 UUPATH node1 ) |
|
|
| to receive standard information listed above from the uupath command. |
|
|
| Multiple nodes can be listed where node1 node2 represent separate UUCP nodes. |
|
|
| I've found that this can be useful in finding surrounding nodes |
| of the destination node in case you have a problem mailing |
| through a particular path or node. You can, with this command, |
| use alternate routings by specifying them with a "bang-path" that |
| will indicate to the UUCP gateway where the message is to be sent |
| to next. This is in the format of, say, |
| "psuvax1!catch22!msp!taran@UUCPGATE" or whatever where UUCPGATE |
| can be any UUCP gateway such as PSUVAX1 or UUNET.UU.NET to name a |
| few. |
|
|
| NICS |
| ~~~~ |
| The Network Information Centers (NICs) can be extremely useful in |
| figuring out various problems on the networks, such as routings |
| or the place at which the node resides, etc. |
|
|
| BITNIC is the BITnet Network Information Center which is located |
| in New Jersey. Its node name is BITNIC.BITNET and it contains a |
| variety of resources which can be utilized via mail or via direct |
| messages from Bitnet users. |
|
|
| The DATABASE@BITNIC contains lists of all kinds. This database |
| does not limit itself to information about the networks. It does |
| contain this information, but also holds various trivialities. |
| Send the HELP command either via direct message to |
| DATABASE@BITNIC if on Bitnet or send mail to that address |
| containing the command you wish to perform (i.e. send a message |
| saying HELP to DATABASE@BITNIC.BITNET from another network or |
| from Bitnet if you're at a node without direct message |
| capabilities). |
|
|
| LISTSERV@BITNIC contains the standard listserver files that you'd |
| expect to find plus some other interesting ones. I'm not going |
| to take the time to tutor you, the reader, in using these, so |
| just send a HELP command the same as you would to DATABASE@BITNIC |
| for more information. |
|
|
| NETSERV@BITNIC is a file server which contains information files |
| pertaining to various networks that are connected to Bitnet, as |
| well as files about Bitnet. From here, you can get network node |
| lists, information files on networks such as SPAN, ARPANET, |
| NETNORTH, etc. and other network related files. This can be an |
| extremely useful resource when you're trying to mail someone at |
| another network. |
|
|
| The Data Defense Network NIC (DDN NIC) is located at SRI-NIC.ARPA |
| and has various useful files about the DDN as well as the |
| Internet. |
|
|
| There are a number of ways to obtain information from the DDN |
| NIC. First of all, people on the Internet with the Telnet |
| capability can Telnet to SRI-NIC.ARPA and perform a number of |
| procedures from the pre-login screen. First of all, you can get |
| TAC News updates by typing TACNEWS. The NIC command allows you |
| to find various facts about the whereabouts of network |
| information files, etc. The WHOIS command is probably the most |
| useful of these 3. The WHOIS program allows you to find |
| addresses for registered users of the networks as well as |
| information about networks and nodes on the networks, depending |
| on what you ask the WHOIS program for. To find only a certain |
| record type, you can use the following specifiers: |
|
|
| Arpanet DOmain GAteway GRoup HOst IMp |
| Milnet NEtwork Organization PSn TAc |
|
|
| To search for a specific field, use the following specifiers: |
|
|
| HAndle or "!" Mailbox or if it contains "@" NAme or a "." leading |
|
|
| These features return whatever information is available from the DDN NIC |
| database. If you do not have the capability to use Telnet, mail can be sent to |
| SERVICE@SRI-NIC.ARPA with the "SUBJECT:" line containing the following |
| commands: |
|
|
| HELP This will send you a help file for using the DDN NIC. |
| RFC nnn This sends you a Request For Comments file (where nnn is either |
| the number of the RFC file or else is INDEX to list them). |
| IEN nnn This sends you an Internet Engineering Notes file where nnn is |
| the same as above. |
| NETINFO xxx This feature allows you to get files about the networks where |
| xxx is the filename or else the word INDEX for a list of |
| available files. |
| HOST xxx This returns information pertaining to the xxx host specified. |
| WHOIS xxx This is the same as using the WHOIS command from Telnet. For |
| details on how to use this, send the WHOIS HELP command on the |
| "Subject:" line. |
|
|
| There are other Network Information Centers throughout the networks but as far |
| as I know, their abilities are nothing near as powerful as SRI-NIC.ARPA. They |
| are the places, though, to mail to for answers concerning those networks if |
| you have some question as to the workings of the network or anything else. |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
|
|