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Happy 40th Birthday, Internet RFCs 58

WayHomer was one of several readers to point out the 40th birthday of an important tool in the formation of the Internet, and a look back at it by the author of the first of many. "Stephen Crocker in the New York Times writes, 'Today is an important date in the history of the Internet: the 40th anniversary of what is known as the Request for Comments (RFC).' 'RFC1 — Host Software' was published 40 years ago today, establishing a framework for documenting how networking technologies and the Internet itself work. Distribution of this memo is unlimited."
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Happy 40th Birthday, Internet RFCs

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  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:37PM (#27491241)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • John Postel (Score:5, Interesting)

    by doas777 ( 1138627 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:46PM (#27491417)
    I did a paper on John Postel a few years ago, for an IT class.
    I hadn't heard much about him before, but now, he is a personal hero of mine.
    It is a testament that his structure for documentation has lasted so long and remained pertinent a decade after his passing.
    • by jgrahn ( 181062 )

      I did a paper on John Postel a few years ago, for an IT class. I hadn't heard much about him before, but now, he is a personal hero of mine.

      And yet you cannot spell his name ...

      By the way, is the author of the NYT article *the* Steve Crocker?

  • Great article (Score:4, Insightful)

    by hedronist ( 233240 ) * on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:48PM (#27491443)

    This article was a genuine joy to read. This is like reading about the invention of the airplane...written in the first person by one of the Wright brothers.

    I particularly liked the description of his visit to Bangalore -- it goes to the heart of why we do open source.

    • Re:Great article (Score:5, Interesting)

      by COMON$ ( 806135 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @01:24PM (#27492067) Journal
      RFC? Radioactive free Coolaid?

      Honestly, you would think these dont exist when you look at the state of things and how no one seems to regard them...This is not flame bait, how many of you sysadmins out there have had difficulty with people not following RFCs and their e-mail rejecting or being rejected, piss poor networks built, or just flat out disregard for them. The creators did a wonderful thing, makes my life easy, but it is almost like an idealistic goal that will never be reached because there are too many fake admins out there. Hell I'm lucky when I walk into a door at a job that anyone has even heard of the term RFC.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        True, RFCs are not universally supported, but it's at least a basis to say "this is what you should be doing" with some authority. Otherwise you've got all those minor incompatibility issues AND no way to tell who is right or wrong.
      • RFC? Radioactive free Coolaid?

        You, apparently, are not down with RFC...

        KFC, I'd wager... but not RFC.

    • Re:Great article (Score:5, Interesting)

      by jc42 ( 318812 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @02:09PM (#27492925) Homepage Journal

      I particularly liked the description of his visit to Bangalore -- it goes to the heart of why we do open source.

      For those who didn't read TFA, this refers to "... as part of the visit I was introduced to a student who had built a fairly complex software system. Impressed, I asked where he had learned to do so much. He simply said, "I downloaded the R.F.C.'s and read them.""

      There are a lot of stories like this. The one I like to tell is about a number of projects that I worked on, where part of my job was making our software work over the OSI protocols. What happened repeatedly was that the ISO specs weren't available for downloading, so we had to buy a printed copy. This inevitably entailed making out a purchase order, getting it approved by the Right People, sending it off, and waiting for the arrival of the package.

      In the meantime, we'd work on what we could, which was the IP-based part of the code. This entailed going to an online archive and downloading the relevant FTPs, typically a matter of a few minutes, with no signatures required by anyone. By the time the ISO docs arrived a few weeks later, we'd have the IP version written, debugged, and stuck into the libraries for the use of other developers or customers. Then we could start working on the ISO code.

      The result, of course, was that everyone would end up going with the IP-based stuff, since it appeared first and was the code that was thoroughly tested. It also helped a lot that the Internet had lots of forums (mostly email at first) where one could ask dumb questions and get actual answers from others who had already stumbled around and found the answers (and wanted to show off their superior knowledge). Such forums never developed for ISO, at least not anywhere we could generally find quickly.

      In this case, the proper term isn't really "open source"; it's "open publication". This is what has made modern science the success that it is, and it's much of what put the Internet ahead of its competitors. Many people argued that several other networking schemes were better technically. This claim has been made for both DECnet and ISO, and they may be right. But it doesn't matter; IP/UDP/TCP/... was good enough, and its specs were published openly. This meant that anyone could quickly grab them and start coding; you did't need permission from anyone to read and use them.

      Of course, "open source" is based on the same idea. If you make your information easily available to everyone, they can build on your ideas. This gives your ideas dominance over other "for sale" or "by permission only" ideas, even if someone else's hidden ideas happen to be slightly better.

      I've always wondered whether DECnet was as good as its proponents claimed. But even when I worked as a contractor at DEC, I wasn't allowed access to the DECnet specs, so I guess I'll never know. I'm of mixed mind over ISO, which I learned a little about. Some parts are probably better than IP, and others aren't, but without widespread deployment we'll probably never really know how ISO would work with a billion users.

      • Yup, at my last job I wrote a RADIUS server just from the RFCs. It's still in full production use now.
        • by jc42 ( 318812 )

          Sounds familiar. One job I had at DEC needed to use SLIP connections, and they also wanted to make PPP an option. I played around with their SLIP driver for a month or more, and couldn't make it work right. We called in several "experts", and they couldn't make it work either. So one day, I printed out the RFCs for both SLIP and PPP, and took them home for bedtime reading. The next morning I started coding a SLIP, and by noon, I had a demo of a version that passed all our tests and worked fine with all

  • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:48PM (#27491445)

    Hrm, I wonder if anyone has thought about submitting an RFC for the RFC Birthday Protocol?

    Back off man, it's already been submitted to the patent office...

  • by jimbudncl ( 1263912 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:50PM (#27491475)
    What?? They started at 1? Sheesh, and they claim to be computer scientists.....
    • RFC0 (Score:5, Funny)

      by TypoNAM ( 695420 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:55PM (#27491569)

      RFC0 had only NULL content, therefore wasn't retrievable due to pointer dereferencing causing segfaults, oh the headaches...

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by dwye ( 1127395 )

        > RFC0 had only NULL content, therefore wasn't retrievable
        > due to pointer dereferencing causing segfaults

        Nonsense. That would point to register zero on the DEC-10 that they would have used, at the time.

        Segfaulting due to zero being an illegal pointer value is a recent innovation not supported by all implementations (HP-UX 8 or 9 on PA-RISC would let you do that to your heart's content, frex) nor required of any.

    • by vlm ( 69642 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @01:02PM (#27491707)

      The funniest part of your post was using a ip version 4 address in your header but referencing the early days.

      Check out RFC 208 to see how addressing was actually done in the old days.

      6 bits of IMP (essentially the network address)
      2 bits of host

      8 bits total.

      http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc208 [ietf.org]

      • Only 8 bits?? I wonder why...

        Programmer: "So what address should we use?"
        Project Manager: "127."---NO CARRIER---
        Programmer: "127? Ok, so I assume the field requirements are just 7 bits? Eh, just make it 8 and call it a day? ...Hello?"
      • 8 bits total.

        Most of the computers must have been hidden behind a firewall..., otherwise they would have run out of address space before ipv6 came around.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by jc42 ( 318812 )

        Check out RFC 208 to see how addressing was actually done in the old days.

        6 bits of IMP (essentially the network address)
        2 bits of host

        Heh. I remember reading several versions of the debates leading up to an expansion of packet fields some years later. The stories generally describe it as a debate between the "conservatives" who thought a small host field would suffice, and the "radicals" who advocated a larger size for when the Net would be a lot bigger than the conservatives expected. Finally, the stor

  • by Ronald Dumsfeld ( 723277 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:55PM (#27491575)

    That's pretty much the key to the whole thing; it may have started as to a group that perhaps reached into three figures, but they were on the right track.

    Anybody can read the RFCs, and there are probably millions who have now (well, maybe not all of them). They are among the most non-intimidating technical/specification documents I've ever gone through.

    There's one little collection [dns.net] I wish had been around when I first got network access. Sending emails was a mind-fuck when you had to piss about with bang paths.

    • by markana ( 152984 )

      But that's what pathalias and the Usenet Mapping Project was for...

      those were the days...

    • by sam0vi ( 985269 )

      They are among the most non-intimidating technical/specification documents I've ever gone through.

      I hear you man! Some ten years ago, i was able to chat on irc, just by using netcat and RFC1459 . It felt pretty cool, but PING time was horrible...

      • Haha. I remember back in the day getting an ircd that didn't have services running just to screw around. Not knowing anything except BASIC and mIRC script (and not having any way of even /compiling/ a C program for Windows), I picked up a copy of the RFC and wrote channel, nick, and memo services all in mIRC script that kept all the info in a comma delimited text file all with hashed (not seeded, cmon, I was 12!) passwords. Ran pretty good, if I do say so myself!

        Now, age 22, I'm a human development and fami

      • I wrote a complete irc client in perl based on 1459, with later additions from, iirc, 2811 and 2812. Not because it was useful, or because anyone actually needed the damn thing, but because I felt like it.

        Nothing like going through the list of commands, testing input, and seeing the client behave exactly the way it *should* behave.

  • 1438 (Score:5, Funny)

    by hwyhobo ( 1420503 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @12:57PM (#27491621)
    My favorite RFC of all time: 1438 [faqs.org]. The rule "once everyone has approved the document by falling asleep over it, the process ends and the document is discarded" has been a guiding light for corporate management nationwide.
  • by JO_DIE_THE_STAR_F*** ( 1163877 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @01:00PM (#27491671)
    From the article "It probably helped that in those days we avoided patents and other restrictions; without any financial incentive to control the protocols, it was much easier to reach agreement." Exactly why patents don't work in their current form.
  • With everyone trying to create the newest and greatest thing to make money from, do people even follow or refer to RFC's for compliance?

    Try to proxy and recreate most protocols or data sessions. Many will break on the other side of a proxy once it gets created according to RFC specifications. HTTP versus out of banding garbage over port 80 is one of the better examples of how developers never seem to follow RFC's anymore.

    • With everyone trying to create the newest and greatest thing to make money from, do people even follow or refer to RFC's for compliance?"

      Do you mean the 'C' in RFC stands for compliance rather than comments?

  • by idontgno ( 624372 ) on Tuesday April 07, 2009 @01:22PM (#27492043) Journal

    As aptly summarized in 1992 by David Clark [wikipedia.org] at the 24th meeting of the IETF:

    We reject: kings, presidents and voting. We believe in: rough consensus and running code.

    *No, I'm not being ironic, sarcastic, or funny. Every now and again, something is worth of sincere and universal praise. This is one of them.

  • ... but I only had RFC 1149 implemented at the time :(

  • rfc 1149:

    A Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers

    aka tcp/ip over pigeons

    http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc1149.html [faqs.org]

    Discussion

    Multiple types of service can be provided with a prioritized pecking
    order. An additional property is built-in worm detection and
    eradication. Because IP only guarantees best effort delivery, loss
    of a carrier can be tolerated. With time, the carriers are self-

  • this anniversary really would be a BFD.

  • I wish EVERYTHING was back to normal.

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it." - Bert Lantz

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