I have received some bug reports, and it turns out there was some very serious bug in the release, which corrupted low memory, including interrupt vectors.

A new release have been cut. Please update immediately if you have updated since the announcement I made two days ago...

        Johnny

On 2015-08-26 15:44, Johnny Billquist wrote:
Close to two months since my last official release, so I figure it's
time I do another one.

So - there is a new release of BQTCP/IP. I strongly encourage anyone who
uses this software to upgrade.

A short list of changed:
. TCP have been rewritten to not use any system pool at all.
    Even the small amount previously used added up when a lot of
    traffic was going on.
    At the same time, IPPOOL usage for connections have also decreased,
    as memory is only allocated when needed for transmissions. This
    also lead to the ability to have larger transmit buffers.
. A new HELP file have been included for some help in general.
    If installed, you can see information through HELP/IP
. FTP rate calculation was slightly wrong. Fixed now.
. Various included tasks have now been built without the need for
    language specific resident libraries so that they can be used
    on any system.
. TCP could disconnect sessions erroneously under some circumstances.
    Fixed.
. Telnet daemon can give more comprehensive welcome messages now.
. WWW server CGI scripts could cause the web connection to close
    even though the script was not finished. Fixed.
. The SPOOF detection/prevention now will not block the DNS server.
. Improved response times for TCP connection establishment.
. If a daemon created a task, and the task never picked up the
    connection that came in, the socket was left in a broken state.
    Fixed.

As usual, the distribution is available from:
ftp://madame.update.uu.se/bqtcp.dsk
ftp://madame.update.uu.se/bqtcp.tap
ftp://ftp.update.uu.se/pub/pdp11/rsx/tcpip/tcpip.dsk

The documentation is also available through ftp on Madame, or also at
http://madame.update.uu.se/tcpipdoc

Right now, I don't know what the next project will be. Some testing and
improvements. But I probably need to take a step back and look at the
bigger picture. Do anyone have any special wishes (and don't say SSH or
IPv6 :-) ).

Oh, and as a icing on the cake, http://magica.update.uu.se (or
telnet://magica.update.uu.se) will lead you to a real, physical
PDP-11/70 running this software. Magica have been on the internet in the
past, but she has been down for quite some time. But I'm happy to
announce that the machine is starting to live again.

        Johnny

On 2015-06-30 13:46, Johnny Billquist wrote:
I'm happy to announce a new release of TCP/IP for RSX-11M-PLUS.

Since I'm broadening the scope of the announcement slightly, a more
complete list of features is included, and not just what changed since
last. For anyone who is currently running TCP/IP for RSX, I strongly
encourage you to update to this latest version. Several improvements
have gone in in the last couple of weeks. Most important change is that
there now is telnet support, both client and server side.

The TCP/IP for RSX that I've written is sometimes referred to as
BQTCP/IP, just to make clear that it is a different product than Process
Software's TCPWARE, or JSA's TCP/IP.

BQTCP/IP is a rather feature rich TCP/IP implementation, which also
comes with libraries for various high level languages. The API is not
compatible, even at the source level, with Unix, but on the other hand,
if people write some code, they will see that it is a very easy API to
work with. The reasons for the incompatibilities are several, including
both resource concerns and differences between how RSX works and Unix
like operating systems.

BQTCP/IP has tried to comply with all relevant RFCs, but I'm sure there
are corners where it does not do things right. It also does not demand
much resources. It do require RSX-11M-PLUS with split I/D space, and it
has only been tested properly on RSX-11M-PLUS V4.6. It should work on
any version 4 release of RSX-11M-PLUS, but there might be a couple of
tweaks or fixes needed.

BQTCP/IP is distributed in binary form, so very little compilation is
required to get it up and running. However, pretty much all utilities do
come with sources. The actual TCP/IP stack sources are not included. I
do not have a good setup for distributing them in a sane way, and it has
had a low priority on my list of things to do. But I do not mind
distributing the sources as a general principle.

All that said, BQTCP/IP current supports the following protocols:

o Ethernet and loopback interfaces.
o ARP. BQTCP/IP can use Ethernet in co-existance with DECnet, or
    standalone using the provided Unibus ethernet device driver.
o IP. The largest IP packets supported are approximately
    8KB.
o ICMP.
o UDP. The largest UDP packets supported are approximately
    8KB.
o TCP. The window is approximately 8KB in size, and TCP do
    manage out of order packets in an efficient way.

BQTCP/IP supports the following applications:
o DHCP. DHCP can be used to configure interface addresses, network
    masks, default gateways, DNS servers and NTP servers dynamically.
o NTP. NTP can be used to set the local time.
o TELNET. The TELNET server hooks in to the standard TT: terminal
    driver, and the number of terminals to create is configurable.
    The TELNET client can be used to connect to other systems.
o FTP. The FTP server can serve all kind of files to other RSX
    systems, and can serve text and binary files to any system.
    The FTP client can retrieve RSX format files from RSX servers,
    and text, binary and block format files from any system.
o TFTP. The TFTP server and client can be used for simpler file
    transfer operations.
o RWHOD. RWHOD is a program that reports current users and uptime
    from RSX, for other systems to collect.
o IRC. IRC is a program to communicate with other users around
    the world.
o IRCBOT. IRCBOT is a small example robot program connecting to IRC
    and performing a service for IRC users.
o PCL. PCL is a protocol for printing, used by HP (and other) printers
    over a network. The PCL implementation in BQTCP/IP appears as a
    print symbiont, which you can create a printer queue for.
o WWW. WWW (or World Wide Web) is a service that can present hypertext
    information to clients. The WWW server in BQTCP/IP also supports CGI,
    which makes it possible to create dynamic content.
o DNS. BQTCP/IP have DNS implemented as an ACP, that anyone can query
    to get translations between IP addresses and domain names. It also
    supports different users using different name servers, or private
    translations.
o SINK. A standard TCP service.
o ECHO. A standard TCP service.
o DAYTIME. A standard TCP service.
o QUOTD. A standard TCP service.
o IDENTD. A standard TCP service.

BQTCP/IP also have automatic IP spoof detection and prevention.

Additional tools are IFCONFIG, PING, TRACEROUTE, NETSTAT as well as two
new pages for RMD.

High level language libraries exists for BASIC+2, PDP-11 C and FORTRAN-77.

I'm sure I have forgotten a thing or three, but that's a fairly
comprehensive list.

The documentation is a weak point, but there is hopefully enough
documentation to get people running, and I am happy to answer any
questions, or give support if needed. BQTCP/IP is already running on the
internet, and have been for a while. People who are curious to check it
out can ether look at http://madame.update.uu.se/, or telnet to
telnet://madame.update.uu.se and login as user GUEST with password
GUEST, or use ftp against ftp://madame.update.uu.se. Anonymous ftp
account exist.

As usual, the distribution is available from:
ftp://madame.update.uu.se/bqtcp.dsk
ftp://madame.update.uu.se/bqtcp.tap
ftp://ftp.update.uu.se/pub/pdp11/rsx/tcpip/tcpip.dsk

The .tap file is an RSX virtual tape. It is only possible to download
and use if you are using FTP from anther RSX system and fetch the file.
The .dsk files are virtual RL02 images that are useful both from within
RSX as well as through emulators.

The documentation is also available through ftp on Madame, or also at
http://madame.update.uu.se/tcpipdoc

      Johnny



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