| ==Phrack Inc.== |
|
|
| Volume Three, Issue 30, File #5 of 12 |
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| ()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()() |
| () () |
| () The DECWRL Mail Gateway () |
| () () |
| () by Dedicated Link () |
| () () |
| () September 20, 1989 () |
| () () |
| ()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()() |
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|
| INTRODUCTION |
|
|
| DECWRL is a mail gateway computer operated by Digital's Western Research |
| Laboratory in Palo Alto, California. Its purpose is to support the interchange |
| of electronic mail between Digital and the "outside world." |
|
|
| DECWRL is connected to Digital's Easynet, and also to a number of different |
| outside electronic mail networks. Digital users can send outside mail by |
| sending to DECWRL::"outside-address", and digital users can also receive mail |
| by having your correspondents route it through DECWRL. The details of incoming |
| mail are more complex, and are discussed below. |
|
|
| It is vitally important that Digital employees be good citizens of the networks |
| to which we are connected. They depend on the integrity of our user community |
| to ensure that tighter controls over the use of the gateway are not required. |
| The most important rule is "no chain letters," but there are other rules |
| depending on whether the connected network that you are using is commercial or |
| non-commercial. |
|
|
| The current traffic volume (September 1989) is about 10,000 mail messages per |
| day and about 3,000 USENET messages per day. Gatewayed mail traffic has |
| doubled every year since 1983. DECWRL is currently a Vax 8530 computer with 48 |
| megabytes of main memory, 2500 megabytes of disk space, 8 9600-baud (Telebit) |
| modem ports, and various network connections. They will shortly be upgrading |
| to a Vax 8650 system. They run Ultrix 3.0 as the base operating system. |
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| ADMINISTRATION |
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| The gateway has engineering staff, but no administrative or clerical staff. |
| They work hard to keep it running, but they do not have the resources to answer |
| telephone queries or provide tutorials in its use. |
|
|
| They post periodic status reports to the USENET newsgroup dec.general. Various |
| helpful people usually copy these reports to the VAXNOTES "gateways" conference |
| within a day or two. |
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| HOW TO SEND MAIL |
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|
| DECWRL is connected to quite a number of different mail networks. If you were |
| logged on directly to it, you could type addresses directly, e.g. |
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| To: strange!foreign!address. |
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|
| But since you are not logged on directly to the gateway, you must send mail so |
| that when it arrives at the gateway, it will be sent as if that address had |
| been typed locally. |
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|
|
| * Sending from VMS |
|
|
| If you are a VMS user, you should use NMAIL, because VMS mail does not know how |
| to requeue and retry mail when the network is congested or disconnected. From |
| VMS, address your mail like this: |
|
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| To: nm%DECWRL::"strange!foreign!address" |
|
|
| The quote characters (") are important, to make sure that VMS doesn't try to |
| interpret strange!foreign!address itself. If you are typing such an address |
| inside a mail program, it will work as advertised. If you are using DCL and |
| typing directly to the command line, you should beware that DCL likes to remove |
| quotes, so you will have to enclose the entire address in quotes, and then put |
| two quotes in every place that one quote should appear in the address: |
|
|
| $ mail test.msg "nm%DECWRL::""foreign!addr""" /subj="hello" |
|
|
| Note the three quotes in a row after foreign!addr. The first two of them are |
| doubled to produce a single quote in the address, and the third ends the |
| address itself (balancing the quote in front of the nm%). |
|
|
| Here are some typical outgoing mail addresses as used from a VMS system: |
|
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| To: nm%DECWRL::"lll-winkin!netsys!phrack" |
| To: nm%DECWRL::"postmaster@msp.pnet.sc.edu" |
| To: nm%DECWRL::"netsys!phrack@uunet.uu.net" |
| To: nm%DECWRL::"phrackserv@CUNYVM.bitnet" |
| To: nm%DECWRL::"Chris.Jones@f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org" |
|
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| * Sending from Ultrix |
|
|
| If your Ultrix system has been configured for it, then you can, from your |
| Ultrix system, just send directly to the foreign address, and the mail software |
| will take care of all of the gateway routing for you. Most Ultrix systems in |
| Corporate Research and in the Palo Alto cluster are configured this way. |
|
|
| To find out whether your Ultrix system has been so configured, just try it and |
| see what happens. If it doesn't work, you will receive notification almost |
| instantly. |
|
|
| NOTE: The Ultrix mail system is extremely flexible; it is almost |
| completely configurable by the customer. While this is valuable to |
| customers, it makes it very difficult to write global instructions for |
| the use of Ultrix mailers, because it is possible that the local changes |
| have produced something quite unlike the vendor-delivered mailer. One of |
| the popular changes is to tinker with the meaning of quote characters (") |
| in Ultrix addresses. Some systems consider that these two addresses are |
| the same: |
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| site1!site2!user@host.dec.com |
|
|
| and |
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| "site1!site2!user"@host.dec.com |
|
|
| while others are configured so that one form will work and the other |
| will not. All of these examples use the quotes. If you have trouble |
| getting the examples to work, please try them again without the quotes. |
| Perhaps your Ultrix system is interpreting the quotes differently. |
|
|
| If your Ultrix system has an IP link to Palo Alto (type "/etc/ping |
| decwrl.dec.com" to find out if it does), then you can route your mail to the |
| gateway via IP. This has the advantage that your Ultrix mail headers will |
| reach the gateway directly, instead of being translated into DECNET mail |
| headers and then back into Ultrix at the other end. Do this as follows: |
|
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| To: "alien!address"@decwrl.dec.com |
|
|
| The quotes are necessary only if the alien address contains a ! character, but |
| they don't hurt if you use them unnecessarily. If the alien address contains |
| an "@" character, you will need to change it into a "%" character. For |
| example, to send via IP to joe@widget.org, you should address the mail |
|
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| To: "joe%widget.org"@decwrl.dec.com |
|
|
| If your Ultrix system has only a DECNET link to Palo Alto, then you should |
| address mail in much the same way that VMS users do, save that you should not |
| put the nm% in front of the address: |
|
|
| To: DECWRL::"strange!foreign!address" |
|
|
| Here are some typical outgoing mail addresses as used from an Ultrix system |
| that has IP access. Ultrix systems without IP access should use the same |
| syntax as VMS users, except that the nm% at the front of the address should not |
| be used. |
|
|
| To: "lll-winken!netsys!phrack"@decwrl.dec.com |
| To: "postmaster%msp.pnet.sc.edu"@decwrl.dec.com |
| To: "phrackserv%CUNYVM.bitnet"@decwrl.dec.com |
| To: "netsys!phrack%uunet.uu.net"@decwrl.dec.com |
| To: "Chris.Jones@f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org"@decwrl.dec.com |
|
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| DETAILS OF USING OTHER NETWORKS |
|
|
| All of the world's computer networks are connected together, more or less, so |
| it is hard to draw exact boundaries between them. Precisely where the Internet |
| ends and UUCP begins is a matter of interpretation. |
|
|
| For purposes of sending mail, though, it is convenient to divide the network |
| universe into these categories: |
|
|
| Easynet Digital's internal DECNET network. Characterized by addresses |
| of the form NODE::USER. Easynet can be used for commercial |
| purposes. |
|
|
| Internet A collection of networks including the old ARPAnet, the NSFnet, |
| the CSnet, and others. Most international research, |
| development, and educational organizations are connected in |
| some fashion to the Internet. Characterized by addresses of |
| the form user@site.subdomain.domain. The Internet itself |
| cannot be used for commercial purposes. |
|
|
| UUCP A very primitive network with no management, built with |
| auto-dialers phoning one computer from another. Characterized |
| by addresses of the form place1!place2!user. The UUCP network |
| can be used for commercial purposes provided that none of the |
| sites through which the message is routed objects to that. |
|
|
| USENET Not a network at all, but a layer of software built on top of |
| UUCP and Internet. |
|
|
| BITNET An IBM-based network linking primarily educational sites. |
| Digital users can send to BITNET as if it were part of |
| Internet, but BITNET users need special instructions for |
| reversing the process. BITNET cannot be used for commercial |
| purposes. |
|
|
| Fidonet A network of personal computers. I am unsure of the status of |
| using Fidonet for commercial purposes, nor am I sure of its |
| efficacy. |
|
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|
| DOMAINS AND DOMAIN ADDRESSING |
|
|
| There is a particular network called "the Internet;" it is somewhat related to |
| what used to be "the ARPAnet." The Internet style of addressing is flexible |
| enough that people use it for addressing other networks as well, with the |
| result that it is quite difficult to look at an address and tell just what |
| network it is likely to traverse. But the phrase "Internet address" does not |
| mean "mail address of some computer on the Internet" but rather "mail address |
| in the style used by the Internet." Terminology is even further confused |
| because the word "address" means one thing to people who build networks and |
| something entirely different to people who use them. In this file an "address" |
| is something like "mike@decwrl.dec.com" and not "192.1.24.177" (which is what |
| network engineers would call an "internet address"). |
|
|
| The Internet naming scheme uses hierarchical domains, which despite their title |
| are just a bookkeeping trick. It doesn't really matter whether you say |
| NODE::USER or USER@NODE, but what happens when you connect two companies' |
| networks together and they both have a node ANCHOR?? You must, somehow, |
| specify which ANCHOR you mean. You could say ANCHOR.DEC::USER or |
| DEC.ANCHOR::USER or USER@ANCHOR.DEC or USER@DEC.ANCHOR. The Internet |
| convention is to say USER@ANCHOR.DEC, with the owner (DEC) after the name |
| (ANCHOR). |
|
|
| But there could be several different organizations named DEC. You could have |
| Digital Equipment Corporation or Down East College or Disabled Education |
| Committee. The technique that the Internet scheme uses to resolve conflicts |
| like this is to have hierarchical domains. A normal domain isn't DEC or |
| STANFORD, but DEC.COM (commercial) and STANFORD.EDU (educational). These |
| domains can be further divided into ZK3.DEC.COM or CS.STANFORD.EDU. This |
| doesn't resolve conflicts completely, though: both Central Michigan University |
| and Carnegie-Mellon University could claim to be CMU.EDU. The rule is that the |
| owner of the EDU domain gets to decide, just as the owner of the CMU.EDU gets |
| to decide whether the Electrical Engineering department or the Elementary |
| Education department gets subdomain EE.CMU.EDU. |
|
|
| The domain scheme, while not perfect, is completely extensible. If you have |
| two addresses that can potentially conflict, you can suffix some domain to the |
| end of them, thereby making, say, decwrl.UUCP be somehow different from |
| DECWRL.ENET. |
|
|
| DECWRL's entire mail system is organized according to Internet domains, and in |
| fact we handle all mail internally as if it were Internet mail. Incoming mail |
| is converted into Internet mail, and then routed to the appropriate domain; if |
| that domain requires some conversion, then the mail is converted to the |
| requirements of the outbound domain as it passes through the gateway. For |
| example, they put Easynet mail into the domain ENET.DEC.COM, and they put |
| BITNET mail into the domain BITNET. |
|
|
| The "top-level" domains supported by the DECWRL gateway are these: |
|
|
| .EDU Educational institutions |
| .COM Commercial institutions |
| .GOV Government institutions |
| .MIL Military institutions |
| .ORG Various organizations |
| .NET Network operations |
| .BITNET The BITNET |
| .MAILNET The MAILNET |
| .?? 2-character country code for routing to other countries |
| .OZ Part of the Australian (.AU) name space. |
|
|
| 2-character country codes include UK (United Kingdom), FR (France), IT (Italy), |
| CA (Canada), AU (Australia), etc. These are the standard ISO 2-character |
| country codes. |
|
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|
|
| MAILING TO EASYNET |
|
|
| To mail to user SPRINTER at node WASH (which is DECNET address WASH::SPRINTER), |
| Internet mail should be addressed to sprinter@wash.enet.dec.com. Easynet |
| addresses are not case-dependent; WASH and wash are the same node name and |
| SPRINTER and sprinter are the same user name. |
|
|
| Sites that are not directly connected to the Internet may have difficulty with |
| Internet addresses like wash.enet.dec.com. They can send into the Easynet by |
| explicitly routing the mail through DECWRL. From domain-based Internet |
| mailers, the address would be sprinter%wash.enet@decwrl.dec.com. From UUCP |
| mailers, the address would be decwrl!wash.enet!sprinter. Some Internet mailers |
| require the form <@decwrl.dec.com:sprinter@wash.enet>. (This last form is the |
| only technically correct form of explicit route, but very few Internet sites |
| support it.) |
|
|
| The DECWRL gateway also supports various obsolete forms of addressing that are |
| left over from the past. In general they support obsolete address forms for |
| two years after the change, and then remove it. |
|
|
|
|
| MAILING TO DIGITAL ALL-IN-1 USERS |
|
|
| Some Easynet users do not have a direct DECNET node address, but instead read |
| their mail with All-in-1, which uses addresses of the form "Nate State @UCA". |
| Here "UCA" is a Digital location code name. To route mail to such people, send |
| to Nate.State@UCA.MTS.DEC.COM. Mail received from the All-in-1 mailer is |
| unreplyable, and in fact unless the respondent tells you his return address in |
| the body of the message, it is not normally possible even to puzzle out the |
| return address by studying the message header. Mail from All-in-1 to Easynet |
| passes through a gateway program that does not produce valid return addresses. |
|
|
|
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| MAILING TO THE INTERNET |
|
|
| DECWRL's mailer is an Internet mailer, so to mail to an Internet site, just use |
| its address. If you are having trouble determining the Internet address, you |
| might find that the Ultrix host table /etc/hosts.txt is useful. If you can't |
| find one anywhere else, there's one on DECWRL. See the comments above under |
| "how to send mail" for details about making sure that the mail program you are |
| using has correctly interpreted an address. |
|
|
|
|
| MAILING TO UUCP |
|
|
| UUCP mail is manually routed by the sender, using ! as the separator character. |
| Thus, the address xxx!yyy!zzz!user means to dial machine xxx and relay to it |
| the mail, with the destination address set to yyy!zzz!user. That machine in |
| turn dials yyy, and the process repeats itself. |
|
|
| To correctly address UUCP mail, you must know a working path through the UUCP |
| network. The database is sufficiently chaotic that automatic routing does not |
| work reliably (though many sites perform automatic routing anyhow). The |
| information about UUCP connectivity is distributed in the USENET newsgroup |
| comp.mail.maps; many sites collect this data and permit local queries of it. |
|
|
| At the end of this file is a list of the UUCP nodes to which DECWRL currently |
| has a working connection. |
|
|
|
|
| MAILING TO USENET |
|
|
| Usenet is not a network. It's a software layer, and it spans several networks. |
| Many people say "Usenet" when they really mean UUCP. You can post a message to |
| a Usenet newsgroup by mailing it to "name@usenet" at DECWRL. For example, |
| mailing from VMS to this address: |
|
|
| nm%DECWRL::"alt.cyberpunk@usenet" |
|
|
| causes the mail message to be posted as an article to the Usenet newsgroup |
| alt.cyberpunk. It is better to use Usenet software for posting articles, as |
| more features are available that way, such as restricted distributions, |
| crossposting, and cancellation of "wish I hadn't sent that" articles. |
|
|
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| MAILING TO BITNET |
|
|
| Legend has it that the "BIT" in BITNET stands for "Because It's There" or |
| "Because It's Time." It is a network consisting primarily of IBM computers. A |
| native BITNET address is something like "OMAR at STANFORD", but when translated |
| into our Internet format it becomes omar@stanford.bitnet. Once translated into |
| Internet form, a BITNET address is used just like any other Internet address. |
|
|
|
|
| MAILING TO FIDONET |
|
|
| By comparison with the other linked networks, Fidonet has an addressing |
| complexity bordering on the bizarre. The Fidonet people have provided me with |
| this description: |
|
|
| Each Fidonet node is a member of a "network," and may have subsidiary nodes |
| called "point nodes." A typical Fido address is "1:987/654" or "987/654"; a |
| typical Fido "point node" address is "1:987/654.32" or "987/654.32". This is |
| zone 1, network 987, Fido (node) 654, "point node" 32. If the zone number is |
| missing, assume it is zone 1. The zone number must be supplied in the outgoing |
| message. |
|
|
| To send a message to Chris Jones on Fidonet address 1:987/654, use the address |
| Chris.Jones@f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org. To send a message to Mark Smith at |
| Fidonet node 987/654.32, use address Mark.Smith@p32.f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org. |
| Use them just like any other Internet address. |
|
|
| Sometimes the return addresses on messages from Fidonet will look different. |
| You may or may not be able to reply to them. |
|
|
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - |
|
|
| Appendix: List of UUCP Neighbor Sites |
|
|
| This table shows most of the sites that DECWRL dials directly via UUCP. You |
| may find it useful to help you construct a UUCP route to a particular |
| destination. Those sites marked with "*" are major UUCP routing nodes. You |
| should prefer UUCP routes that use these sites as the first hop from DECWRL. |
| Case is significant in UUCP host names. |
|
|
| 3comvax 3Com Corporation, Santa Clara, CA |
| abvax Allen-Bradley Company, Highland Heights, OH |
| acad Autodesk, Inc, Sausalito, CA |
| adobe Adobe Systems Inc., Mountain View, CA |
| alberta University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
| allegra AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ |
| *amdahl Amdahl Corp., Sunnyvale, CA |
| amdcad Advanced Micro Devices, Sunnyvale, CA |
| ames NASA Ames Research Center, Mountain View, CA |
| *apple Apple Computers, Cupertino, CA |
| ardent Ardent Computer Corp., Sunnyvale, CA |
| argosy MassPar Computer Corp., Sunnyvale, CA |
| atha Athabasca University, Athabasca, Alberta, Canada |
| athertn Atherton Technology, Sunnyvale, CA |
| *att AT&T Bell Laboratories, Columbus, Ohio |
| avsd Ampex Corporation, Redwood City, CA |
| cae780 Tektronix Inc. (Santa Clara Field Office) Santa Clara, CA |
| chip M/A-COM Government Systems, San Diego, CA |
| claris Claris Corporation, Mountain View, CA |
| daisy Daisy Systems, Mountain View, CA |
| decuac DEC/Ultrix Applications Ctr, Landover, MD |
| *decvax DEC/Ultrix Engineering, Nashua, NH |
| dsinc Datacomp Systems, Inc, Huntington Valley, PA |
| eda EDA Systems Inc., Santa Clara, CA |
| emerald Emerald Systems Corp., San Diego, CA |
| escd Evans and Sutherland Computer Division, Mountain View, CA |
| esunix Evans and Sutherland Corp., Salt Lake City, UT |
| fluke John Fluke Manufacturing, Everett, WA |
| gryphon Trailing Edge Technology, Redondo Beach, CA |
| handel Colorodo State Univ., CS Dept., Ft. Collins, CO |
| hoptoad Nebula Consultants, San Francisco, CA |
| *hplabs Hewlett Packard Research Labs, Palo Alto, CA |
| ide Interactive Development Environments, San Francisco, CA |
| idi Intelligent Decisions, Inc., San Jose, CA |
| imagen Imagen Corp., Santa Clara, CA |
| intelca Intel Corp., Santa Clara, CA |
| limbo Intuitive Systems, Los Altos, CA |
| logitech Logitech, Inc., Palo Alto, CA |
| megatest Megatest Corp., San Jose, CA |
| metaphor Metaphor Corp., Mountain View, CA |
| microsoft Microsoft, Bellevue, WA |
| mindcrf Mindcraft Corp., Palo Alto, CA |
| mips MIPS Computer Systems, Mountain View, CA |
| mntgfx Mentor Graphics Corp., Beaverton, OR |
| mordor Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Livermore, CA |
| mtu Michigan Tech Univ., Houghton, MI |
| mtxinu Mt. Xinu, Berkeley, CA |
| nsc National Semiconductor Corp., Sunnyvale, CA |
| oli-stl Olivetti Software Techn. Lab, Menlo Park, CA |
| oracle Oracle Corp., Belmont, CA |
| *pacbell Pacific Bell, San Ramon, CA |
| parcplace Parc Place Systems, Palo Alto, CA |
| purdue Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN |
| *pyramid Pyramid Technology Corporation, Mountain View, CA |
| qubix Qubix Graphic Systems, San Jose, CA |
| quintus Quintus Computer Systems, Mountain View, CA |
| research AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ |
| riacs Res.Inst. for Adv. Compu. Sci., Mountain View, CA |
| rtech Relational Technology Inc., Alameda, CA |
| sci Silicon Compilers, San Jose, CA |
| sco Santa Cruz Operation, Santa Cruz, CA |
| sequent Sequent Computer System, Inc., Beaverton, OR |
| sgi Silicon Graphics, Inc., Mountain View, CA |
| shell Shell Development Corp., Houston, TX |
| simpact Simpact Assoc., San Diego, CA |
| sjsca4 Schlumberger Technologies, San Jose, CA |
| sun Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, CA |
| td2cad Intel Corp., Santa Clara, CA |
| teraida Teradyne EDA Inc., Santa Clara, CA |
| theta Process Software Inc., Wellesley, MA |
| turtlevax CIMLINC, Inc, Palo Alto, CA |
| *ucbvax University of California, Berkeley, CA |
| utcsri Univ. of Toronto, Computer Science, Toronto, CA |
| vlsisj VLSI Technology Inc., San Jose, CA |
| wyse Wyse Technology, San Jose, CA |
| zehntel Zehntel, Inc., Walnut Creek, CA |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ |
|
|