Annotation of 43BSDReno/contrib/isode-beta/doc/isode6/isode6.tex, revision 1.1.1.1

1.1       root        1: % -*- LaTeX -*-                (really SLiTeX)
                      2: 
                      3: \documentstyle[blackandwhite,landscape,oval,pagenumbers,small]{NRslides}
                      4: 
                      5: \font\xx=cmbx10
                      6: \font\yy=cmbx7
                      7: 
                      8: \raggedright
                      9: 
                     10: \input trademark
                     11: \let\tradeNAMfont=\relax
                     12: \let\tradeORGfont=\relax
                     13: 
                     14: \begin{document}
                     15: 
                     16: \title {ISODE 6.0:\\ OPENLY AVAILABLE OSI}
                     17: \author        {Marshall T.~Rose\\ NYSERNet, Inc.}
                     18: \date  {December 5, 1989}
                     19: \maketitlepage
                     20: 
                     21: 
                     22: \begin{bwslide}
                     23: \part* {AGENDA}\bf
                     24: 
                     25: \begin{description}
                     26: \item[PART I:]         WHAT'S THERE NOW
                     27: 
                     28: \item[PART II:]                WHAT'S IN PROGRESS
                     29: \end{description}
                     30: \end{bwslide}
                     31: 
                     32: 
                     33: \begin{bwslide}
                     34: \ctitle        {WHAT IS ISODE?}
                     35: 
                     36: \begin{nrtc}
                     37: \item  THE ISO DEVELOPMENT ENVIRONMENT
                     38: 
                     39: \item  AN OPENLY AVAILABLE IMPLEMENATION OF THE UPPER LAYERS OF OSI?
                     40: 
                     41: \item  A BASIS FOR THE TRANSITION TO OSI?
                     42: 
                     43: \item  A PLAYGROUND FOR ``THE PIED-PIPER OF OSI''?
                     44: \end{nrtc}
                     45: \end{bwslide}
                     46: 
                     47: 
                     48: \begin{bwslide}
                     49: \part  {WHAT'S THERE NOW}\bf
                     50: 
                     51: \begin{nrtc}
                     52: \item  TRANSPORT SWITCH
                     53: 
                     54: \item  APPLICATION ARCHITECTURE
                     55: 
                     56: \item  APPLICATION COOKBOOK
                     57: 
                     58: \item  APPLICATIONS
                     59: \end{nrtc}
                     60: \end{bwslide}
                     61: 
                     62: 
                     63: \begin{bwslide}
                     64: \part* {CURRENT DISTRIBUTION}\bf
                     65: 
                     66: \begin{nrtc}
                     67: \item  STATUS: OPENLY AVAILABLE UNDER AN IMPLICIT ``HOLD HARMLESS'' CLAUSE
                     68: 
                     69: \item  CURRENT RELEASE: 6.0
                     70:     \begin{nrtc}
                     71:     \item      AVAILABLE JANUARY 24, 1990
                     72:     \end{nrtc}
                     73: 
                     74: \item  SOURCE SIZE: \~{}250K LINES OF C AND ASN.1
                     75: \end{nrtc}
                     76: \end{bwslide}
                     77: 
                     78: 
                     79: \begin{bwslide}
                     80: \ctitle        {CURRENT DISTRIBUTION (cont.)}
                     81: 
                     82: \begin{nrtc}
                     83: \item  DISTRIBUTION EITHER VIA POSTAL MAIL, FTP, or FTAM
                     84:     \begin{nrtc}
                     85:     \item      SOURCE: \~{}14MB
                     86: 
                     87:     \item      DOC: 5~VOLUME USER'S MANUAL (\~{}1000~PAGES)
                     88: 
                     89:     \item      DISTRIBUTION SITES: US, UK, NL, AND AU
                     90: 
                     91:     \item      PRICE: \~{}375~US DOLLARS
                     92:     \end{nrtc}
                     93: \end{nrtc}
                     94: \end{bwslide}
                     95: 
                     96: 
                     97: \begin{bwslide}
                     98: \ctitle        {NORTH AMERICA DISTRIBUTION}\small
                     99: 
                    100: \[\begin{tabular}{rl}
                    101: Postal address:&UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA\\
                    102: &              DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER AND INFORMATION SCIENCE\\
                    103: &              MOORE SCHOOL\\
                    104: &              ATTN: DAVID J. FARBER (ISODE DISTRIBUTION)\\
                    105: &              200 SOUTH 33RD STREET\\
                    106: &              PHILADELPHIA, PA 19104-6314\\
                    107: &              USA\\[0.2in]
                    108: Telephone:&    +1--215--898--8560\\[0.2in]
                    109: Price:&                US\$375.00 (CHECKS ONLY)
                    110: \end{tabular}\]
                    111: \end{bwslide}
                    112: 
                    113: 
                    114: \begin{bwslide}
                    115: \ctitle        {LANGUAGES AND OPERATING SYSTEMS}
                    116: 
                    117: \begin{nrtc}
                    118: \item  CODED ENTIRELY IN C FOR \unix/
                    119:     \begin{nrtc}
                    120:     \item      REQUIRES NO KERNEL MODIFICATIONS    
                    121:     \end{nrtc}
                    122: 
                    123: \item  KNOWN PORTS FOR BERKELEY \unix/ (4.x):
                    124:     \begin{nrtc}
                    125:     \item      VAXen, SUNs, Pyramids, RTs, etc.
                    126:     \end{nrtc}
                    127: 
                    128: \item  KNOWN PORTS FOR AT\&T \unix/ (SVR2 and SVR3):
                    129:     \begin{nrtc}
                    130:     \item      SGI, 3Bs, 386s, RT (AIX)
                    131:     \end{nrtc}
                    132: \end{nrtc}
                    133: \end{bwslide}
                    134: 
                    135: 
                    136: \begin{bwslide}
                    137: \part* {THE TRANSPORT SWITCH}\bf
                    138: 
                    139: \begin{nrtc}
                    140: \item  DECIDES WHICH TS-STACK TO USE FOR A CONNECTION
                    141: 
                    142: \item  FOR RFC1006: TCP
                    143: 
                    144: \item  FOR TP0: X.25
                    145: 
                    146: \item  FOR TP4: 4.4BSD OSI, SunLink OSI
                    147: 
                    148: \item  EXPERIENCE SHOWS IT IS FAIRLY EASY TO ADD A NEW TS-STACK TO THE SWITCH
                    149: \end{nrtc}
                    150: \end{bwslide}
                    151: 
                    152: 
                    153: \begin{bwslide}
                    154: \ctitle        {TRANSPORT-SERVICE BRIDGES}
                    155: 
                    156: \vskip.5in
                    157: \diagram[p]{figure1}
                    158: \end{bwslide}
                    159: 
                    160: 
                    161: \begin{bwslide}
                    162: \ctitle        {TCP vs. X.25 CONNECTIVITY}
                    163: 
                    164: \vskip.5in
                    165: \diagram[p]{figure2}
                    166: \end{bwslide}
                    167: 
                    168: 
                    169: \begin{bwslide}
                    170: \ctitle        {CONS vs. CLNS CONNECTIVITY}
                    171: 
                    172: \vskip.5in
                    173: \diagram[p]{figure3}
                    174: \end{bwslide}
                    175: 
                    176: 
                    177: \begin{bwslide}
                    178: \ctitle        {POSSIBLE XNS SCENARIO}
                    179: 
                    180: \vskip.5in
                    181: \diagram[p]{figure4}
                    182: \end{bwslide}
                    183: 
                    184: 
                    185: \begin{bwslide}
                    186: \part* {APPLICATION ARCHITECTURE}\bf
                    187: 
                    188: \begin{nrtc}
                    189: \item  A (NEARLY) COMPLETE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE UPPER LAYERS
                    190: 
                    191: \item  ``IS'' LEVEL SINCE 5.0 RELEASE
                    192: 
                    193: \item  ALIGNED WITH VARIOUS NATIONAL OSI PROFILS
                    194:     \begin{nrtc}
                    195:     \item      (INFORMALLY, OF COURSE!)
                    196:     \end{nrtc}
                    197: \end{nrtc}
                    198: \end{bwslide}
                    199: 
                    200: 
                    201: \begin{bwslide}
                    202: \ctitle        {THE APPLICATION ENVIRONMENT}
                    203: 
                    204: \vskip.5in
                    205: \diagram[p]{figure9}
                    206: \end{bwslide}
                    207: 
                    208: 
                    209: \begin{bwslide}
                    210: \ctitle        {AN ALTERNATE ENVIRONMENT:\\ LIGHTWEIGHT PRESENTATION}
                    211: 
                    212: \vskip.5in
                    213: \diagram[p]{figure5}
                    214: \end{bwslide}
                    215: 
                    216: 
                    217: \begin{bwslide}
                    218: \ctitle        {AN ALTERNATE ENVIRONMENT:\\ MHS ARCHITECTURE (c.~1984)}
                    219: 
                    220: \vskip.5in
                    221: \diagram[p]{figure10}
                    222: \end{bwslide}
                    223: 
                    224: 
                    225: \begin{bwslide}
                    226: \part* {THE APPLICATIONS COOKBOOK}\bf
                    227: 
                    228: \begin{nrtc}
                    229: \item  TOOLS TO FACILITATE DEVELOPMENT OF APPLICATIONS ARE CRITICAL
                    230: 
                    231: \item  IDEA IS TO DEVELOP TOOLS TO AUTOMATE USE OF OSI REMOTE OPERATIONS
                    232:        SERVICE AS A GENERAL REMOTE PROCEDURE CALL FACILITY
                    233: 
                    234: \item  FOR MORE DETAILS:
                    235: \begin{quote}
                    236: BUILDING DISTRIBUTED APPLICATIONS IN AN OSI FRAMEWORK
                    237: \end{quote}
                    238: APPEARING IN ConneXions, MARCH, 1988
                    239: \end{nrtc}
                    240: \end{bwslide}
                    241: 
                    242: 
                    243: \begin{bwslide}
                    244: \ctitle        {REMOTE OPERATIONS SERVICE (ROS)}
                    245: 
                    246: \begin{nrtc}
                    247: \item  STANDARDIZED MECHANISM FOR SPECIFYING TRANSACTIONS
                    248: 
                    249: \item  EMPLOYS POWER OF ASN.1
                    250: 
                    251: \item  USED IN MANY INTERESTING OSI APPLICATIONS
                    252:     \begin{nrtc}
                    253:     \item      MESSAGE HANDLING SYSTEMS
                    254: 
                    255:     \item      DIRECTORY SERVICES
                    256: 
                    257:     \item      NETWORK MANAGEMENT
                    258: 
                    259:     \item      REMOTE DATABASE ACCESS
                    260:     \end{nrtc}
                    261: 
                    262: \item  CURRENTLY CONNECTION-ORIENTED, BUT CONNECTIONLESS-MODE IS UNDER STUDY
                    263: \end{nrtc}
                    264: \end{bwslide}
                    265: 
                    266: 
                    267: \begin{bwslide}
                    268: \ctitle        {GENERAL ORGANIZATION}
                    269: 
                    270: \begin{nrtc}
                    271: \item  AT COMPILE-TIME:
                    272:     \begin{nrtc}
                    273:     \item      USE RO-SPECIFICATION TO GENERATE SUPPORT FACILITIES
                    274:     \end{nrtc}
                    275: 
                    276: \item  AT RUN-TIME:
                    277:     \begin{nrtc}
                    278:     \item      USE DIRECTORY SERVICES TO LOCATE/REGISTER NETWORK SERVICES
                    279:                (NEARLY THERE!)
                    280: 
                    281:     \item      USE ASSOCIATION CONTROL TO BIND/UNBIND APPLICATIONS
                    282: 
                    283:     \item      USE REMOTE OPERATIONS TO INVOKE TRANSACTIONS
                    284:     \end{nrtc}
                    285: \end{nrtc}
                    286: \end{bwslide}
                    287: 
                    288: 
                    289: \begin{bwslide}
                    290: \ctitle        {STATIC (COMPILE-TIME) ORGANIZATION}
                    291: 
                    292: \vskip.15in
                    293: \diagram[p]{figure11}
                    294: \end{bwslide}
                    295: 
                    296: 
                    297: \begin{bwslide}
                    298: \ctitle        {DYNAMIC (RUN-TIME) ORGANIZATION}
                    299: 
                    300: \vskip.15in
                    301: \diagram[p]{figure12}
                    302: \end{bwslide}
                    303: 
                    304: 
                    305: \begin{bwslide}
                    306: \ctitle        {PERFORMANCE}
                    307: 
                    308: \begin{nrtc}
                    309: \item  USE OF ASN.1 TOOLS LEADS TO LARGE PROCESSES:
                    310:     \begin{nrtc}
                    311:     \item      MINIMUM 300KB, DSA: 500KB, FTAM: 800KB
                    312: 
                    313:     \item      INITIALIZATION SPEED SUFFERS MOST OWING TO PAGING IN
                    314:     \end{nrtc}
                    315: 
                    316: \item  A LOT OF TIME SPENT AVOIDING BYTE COPYING
                    317: 
                    318: \item  SPEEDS SLOWER (BUT COMPARITIVE) TO INTERNET APPLICATIONS WHEN USING
                    319:        TCP-BASED TRANSPORT
                    320: 
                    321: \item  X.25 TOO SLOW FOR COMPARISON
                    322: 
                    323: \item  USE OF LIGHTWEIGHT PRESENTATION SOMETIMES RESULTS IN PROCESSES HALF
                    324:        AS LARGE AND TWICE AS FAST
                    325: \end{nrtc}
                    326: \end{bwslide}
                    327: 
                    328: 
                    329: \begin{bwslide}
                    330: \part* {APPLICATIONS}\bf
                    331: 
                    332: \begin{nrtc}
                    333: \item  EVERYTHING BUT MHS (sigh!)
                    334: \end{nrtc}
                    335: \end{bwslide}
                    336: 
                    337: 
                    338: \begin{bwslide}
                    339: \ctitle        {CURRENT APPLICATIONS}
                    340: 
                    341: \begin{nrtc}
                    342: \item  FILE TRANSFER, ACCESS AND MANAGEMENT (FTAM)
                    343: 
                    344: \item  FTAM-FTP GATEWAY
                    345: 
                    346: \item  DIRECTORY SERVICES (X.500)
                    347:     \begin{nrtc}
                    348:     \item      AND WHITE PAGES ABSTRACTION
                    349:     \end{nrtc}
                    350: 
                    351: \item  VIRTUAL TERMINAL
                    352: 
                    353: \item  ISODE MISCELLANY SERVICE
                    354:     \begin{nrtc}
                    355:     \item      e.g., FINGER, QUOTE-OF-THE-DAY, etc.
                    356:     \end{nrtc}
                    357: 
                    358: \item  PLUS NUMEROUS ``DEMO'' PROGRAMS
                    359:     \begin{nrtc}
                    360:     \item      e.g., IMAGE SERVICE, PASSWORD LOOKUP, IDIST, etc.
                    361:     \end{nrtc}
                    362: \end{nrtc}
                    363: \end{bwslide}
                    364: 
                    365: 
                    366: \begin{bwslide}
                    367: \ctitle        {NETWORK MANAGEMENT}
                    368: 
                    369: \begin{nrtc}
                    370: \item  FOR BERKELEY UNIX SYSTEMS:
                    371:     \begin{nrtc}
                    372:     \item      SNMP!
                    373:     \end{nrtc}
                    374: 
                    375: \item  WHY?
                    376:     \begin{nrtc}
                    377:     \item      IT WORKS
                    378: 
                    379:     \item      CONTINUED SURVIVAL OF THE INTERNET HINGES ON ALL NODES BEING
                    380:                NETWORK MANAGEABLE
                    381:     \end{nrtc}
                    382: 
                    383: \item  NOT A COMPLETE PACKAGE
                    384:     \begin{nrtc}
                    385:     \item      AN AGENT WITH A MINIMAL INITIATOR
                    386: 
                    387:     \item      (NO NOC)
                    388:     \end{nrtc}
                    389: \end{nrtc}
                    390: \end{bwslide}
                    391: 
                    392: 
                    393: \begin{bwslide}
                    394: \ctitle        {DIRECTORY SERVICES}
                    395: 
                    396: \begin{nrtc}
                    397: \item  THE UCL DIRECTORY, QUIPU, HAS NOW COMPLETED ITS MAJOR DEVELOPMENT
                    398: 
                    399: \item  SEVERAL INTERESTING FEATURES:
                    400:     \begin{nrtc}
                    401:     \item      MEMORY, RATHER THAN DISK-BASED, ACCESS
                    402: 
                    403:     \item      INTERNAL SCHEDULING FOR MULTIPLE ACCESS
                    404: 
                    405:     \item      FLEXIBLE SEARCHING (SOUNDEX)
                    406: 
                    407:     \item      NOT STANDARDIZED:
                    408:        \begin{nrtc}
                    409:        \item   ACCESS CONTROL
                    410: 
                    411:        \item   REPLICATION
                    412: 
                    413:        \item   CACHING
                    414:        \end{nrtc}
                    415:     \end{nrtc}
                    416: 
                    417: \item  ALREADY INTEROPERABILITY TESTED AGAINST TWO (EMBRYONIC) IMPLEMENATIONS
                    418: \end{nrtc}
                    419: \end{bwslide}
                    420: 
                    421: \begin{bwslide}
                    422: \ctitle        {WHITE PAGES PILOT}
                    423: 
                    424: \begin{nrtc}
                    425: \item  A ``GRASS ROOTS'' EFFORT TO PROVIDE A WHITE PAGES SERVICE
                    426: 
                    427: \item  SEMI-PUBLIC INFORMATION (TELEPHONE/MAIL BOOKS)
                    428: 
                    429: \item  MOST SITES RESPONSIBLE FOR MAINTAINING INFORMATION
                    430: 
                    431: \item  ACCESS VIA NETWORK AND DIALUP LOGINS
                    432: 
                    433: \item  CRT-BASED INTERFACE WITH X-WINDOWS SUPPORT
                    434: \end{nrtc}
                    435: \end{bwslide}
                    436: 
                    437: 
                    438: \begin{bwslide}
                    439: \ctitle        {VIRTUAL TERMINAL}
                    440: 
                    441: \begin{nrtc}
                    442: \item  MITRE HAS DEVELOPED A DIS VT IMPLEMENTATION
                    443: 
                    444: \item  ROUGHLY EQUIVALENT TO BSD TELNET IN TERMS OF FUNCTIONALITY
                    445:     \begin{nrtc}
                    446:     \item      (BASIC CLASS, TELNET PROFILE)
                    447:     \end{nrtc}
                    448: 
                    449: \item  INTEROPERABILITY TESTED AGAINST THE BRIDGE/3COM VT
                    450: 
                    451: \item  MITRE IS WORKING ON A FORMS CLASS IMPLEMENTATION
                    452: 
                    453: \item  ULTIMATELY, MUST BE UPGRADED TO IS IMPLEMENTATION
                    454: \end{nrtc}
                    455: \end{bwslide}
                    456: 
                    457: 
                    458: \begin{bwslide}
                    459: \ctitle        {OTHER APPLICATIONS\\ (NOT A PART OF ISODE)}
                    460: 
                    461: \begin{nrtc}
                    462: \item  NETWORK MANAGEMENT
                    463: 
                    464: \item  ODA/ODIF
                    465: 
                    466: \item  MOBILE X.400 PILOT
                    467:     \begin{nrtc}
                    468:     \item      MS-DOS CLIENT SIDE ONLY PORT DONE BY HP
                    469:     \end{nrtc}
                    470: \end{nrtc}
                    471: \end{bwslide}
                    472: 
                    473: 
                    474: \begin{bwslide}
                    475: \part  {WHAT'S IN PROGRESS}\bf
                    476: 
                    477: \begin{nrtc}
                    478: \item  MESSAGE HANDLING SYSTEMS
                    479: 
                    480: \item  INTEROPERABILITY TESTING
                    481: 
                    482: \item  OSI-POSIX PROJECT
                    483: \end{nrtc}
                    484: \end{bwslide}
                    485: 
                    486: 
                    487: \begin{bwslide}
                    488: \part* {MESSAGE HANDLING SYSTEMS}\bf
                    489: 
                    490: \begin{nrtc}
                    491: \item  UCL AND UNott ARE DEVELOPING AN X.400 TRANSPORT SYSTEM (PP)
                    492: 
                    493: \item  USE EXPERIENCE GAINED FROM NUMEROUS SOPHISTICATED TEXT-BASED MESSAGE
                    494:        TRANSFER SYSTEMS
                    495: 
                    496: \item  OWES MANY OF ITS DESIGN IDEAS TO THE UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE MESSAGE
                    497:        SYSTEM, MMDF
                    498: 
                    499: \item  WILL UTILIZE DIRECTORY SERVICES
                    500: \end{nrtc}
                    501: \end{bwslide}
                    502: 
                    503: 
                    504: \begin{bwslide}
                    505: \ctitle        {TOP-LEVEL ARCHITECTURE}
                    506: 
                    507: \vskip.15in
                    508: \diagram[p]{figure6}
                    509: \end{bwslide}
                    510: 
                    511: 
                    512: \begin{bwslide}
                    513: \ctitle        {INTERESTING FEATURES}
                    514: 
                    515: \begin{nrtc}
                    516: \item  SUPPORT FOR A WIDE RANGE OF ENCODED INFORMATION TYPES 
                    517:     \begin{nrtc}
                    518:     \item      AND REFORMATTING BETWEEN THEM
                    519:     \end{nrtc}
                    520: 
                    521: \item  SUPPORT FOR DIFFERENT MESSAGE TRANSPORT PROTOCOLS
                    522:     \begin{nrtc}
                    523:     \item      AND CONVERSION BETWEEN THEM
                    524:     \end{nrtc}
                    525:     e.g., INCLUDES RFC987 (X.400 TO 821/822)
                    526: 
                    527: \item  ROBUSTNESS FOR USE IN LARGE SCALE SERVICE ENVIRONMENTS
                    528: \end{nrtc}
                    529: \end{bwslide}
                    530: 
                    531: 
                    532: \begin{bwslide}
                    533: \ctitle        {MAJOR GOALS}
                    534: 
                    535: \begin{nrtc}
                    536: \item  FULL X.400(84/88) SUPPORT, EXCEPT FOR X.400(88) SECURITY SERVICES
                    537: 
                    538: \item  PROVIDES A ``CLEAN'' INTERFACE FOR MESSAGE SUBMISSION AND DELIVERY
                    539:     \begin{nrtc}
                    540:     \item      TO SUPPORT A WIDE RANGE OF USER AGENTS,
                    541: 
                    542:     \item      AND APPLICATIONS OTHER THAN INTERPERSONAL MESSAGING
                    543:     \end{nrtc}
                    544: 
                    545: \item  QUEUE MANAGEMENT DONE VIA A ROS-BASED PROTOCOL
                    546:     \begin{nrtc}
                    547:     \item      SOPHISTICATED SCHEDULING OF MESSAGE DELIVERY
                    548: 
                    549:     \item      LOCAL AND REMOTE MONITORING FOR MANAGERS AND USERS
                    550: 
                    551:     \item      ROBUSTNESS REQUIRED TO SUPPORT HIGH LEVELS OF TRAFFIC
                    552: 
                    553:     \item      SUPPORT FOR ADMINISTRATIVE POLICIES ON SUBMISSION
                    554:     \end{nrtc}
                    555: 
                    556: \item  LIST EXPLODER AND LIST MANAGMENT    
                    557: \end{nrtc}
                    558: \end{bwslide}
                    559: 
                    560: 
                    561: \begin{bwslide}
                    562: \ctitle        {OTHER THINGS}
                    563: 
                    564: \begin{nrtc}
                    565: \item  TWO USER INTERFACES PLANNED
                    566:     \begin{nrtc}
                    567:     \item      MH INTERFACE
                    568: 
                    569:     \item      WINDOW-BASED INTERFACE
                    570:     \end{nrtc}
                    571: 
                    572: \item  INTEGRATION OF FAX PLANNED
                    573: 
                    574: \item  BETA TESTING STARTED JANUARY, 1990
                    575: \end{nrtc}
                    576: \end{bwslide}
                    577: 
                    578: 
                    579: \begin{bwslide}
                    580: \part* {INTEROPERABILITY TESTING}\bf
                    581: 
                    582: \begin{nrtc}
                    583: \item  THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE FOR PAIRWISE INTEROPERABILITY TESTING
                    584: 
                    585: \item  LET GROUPS SUCH AS OSInet, EUROSInet, etc., CONNECT TO HOSTS
                    586:        RUNNING X.25 AND ISODE
                    587: 
                    588: \item  TESTING IS UNATTENDED UNLESS PROBLEMS ARE WITH THE ISODE (gasp!)
                    589: \end{nrtc}
                    590: \end{bwslide}
                    591: 
                    592: 
                    593: \begin{bwslide}
                    594: \part* {OSI-POSIX PROJECT}\bf
                    595: 
                    596: \begin{nrtc}
                    597: \item  GOAL: ACCELLERATE THE UBIQUITY OF OSI
                    598: 
                    599: \item  APPROACH: OPENLY AVAILABLE, COMPLETE OSI IMPLEMENTATION FOR NEXT MAJOR
                    600:        RELEASE OF BERKELEY \unix/
                    601: 
                    602: \item  FOR MORE DETAILS:
                    603: \begin{quote}
                    604: OSI PROTOCOLS WITHIN AN OPENLY AVAILABLE, POSIX-CONFORMANT, BERKELEY UNIX
                    605: ENVIRONMENT
                    606: \end{quote}
                    607: APPEARING IN ConneXions, OCTOBER, 1988
                    608: \end{nrtc}
                    609: \end{bwslide}
                    610: 
                    611: 
                    612: \begin{bwslide}
                    613: \diagram[p]{figure13}
                    614: \end{bwslide}
                    615: 
                    616: 
                    617: \begin{bwslide}
                    618: \diagram[p]{figure14}
                    619: \end{bwslide}
                    620: 
                    621: 
                    622: \end{document}

unix.superglobalmegacorp.com

This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.