Network Working Group                                         J. Pickens
Request for Comments: 369               UCSB COMPUTER SYSTEMS LABORATORY
NIC: 6801                                                   25 July 1972


                    EVALUATION OF ARPANET SERVICES
                     January through March, 1972

ABSTRACT

  RFC #302, Exercising the ARPANET, described a group organized at UCSB
  to investigate the network resources.  The stated goals were to
  develop problem solving capability and, in the process, produce
  helpful criticism for the nodes investigated.  This report summarizes
  the group's experiences and finding and suggests network refinements
  to improve user satisfaction.

  The group's encounter with ARPANET included many unexpected problems
  and difficulties.  Most worthy of mention are software heterogeneity
  and inadequate documentation.

  From this first hand experience the group has formulated criteria for
  ease in use of network resources.  The report presents these criteria
  as well as suggestions for improved documentation, better utilization
  of current resources, and a plea for regular usage of inter-personal
  communications facilities.  Individual sites have been graded on
  reliability, response, and friendliness.  Comments regarding specific
  sites have been included to help in adapting to the needs of
  uninitiated users.

  Despite problems encountered in the initial nine week exposure,
  enough was learned of ARPANET resources to enable the group to write
  useful software.  Programs to effect automatic login, file transfer,
  and interprocess communication have been written and put to use.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

     BACKGROUND
        Approach.......................................  2
        Goals..........................................  2
     THE SURVEY
        Extent and Duration............................  3
        Statistical Results............................  3
     CRITIQUE OF ARPANET SERVICES
        A Site Measurement Parameter, "Friendliness"...  4
        Software Critique..............................  5
        Community Spirit...............................  5
        Economics......................................  6



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RFC 369              EVALUATION OF ARPANET SERVICES            July 1972


     SUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVEMENT
        Software.......................................  6
        Community Spirit...............................  7
     CONCLUSION........................................  8
     APPENDIX A
        Sample of Survey Questionnaire................   9
     APPENDIX B
        Grades and Comments for Specifics Sites.......  10


BACKGROUND

Approach

  The test group was organized from a group of Electrical Engineering
  graduate students in Computer Science.  Within the group was
  represented a substantial degree of experience with high level
  languages and time sharing systems (such as the Dartmouth BASIC and
  UCSB mathematical graphics systems).  However, no one had experience
  in exercising ARPANET, and few knew what resources the ARPANET
  represented.  After two weeks of presentation from Jim White and
  Roland Bryan, the group was turned loose for open experimentation.

  Enthusiasm was high as each group managed to locate and decode the
  login procedures for various nodes and began to learn how to use the
  available resources.  In fact, half of the weekly seminar time was
  devoted to sharing learned experiences and procedures.  Interest,
  however, lagged some as the quarter progressed due to poor network
  site reliability, few active nodes, and hard to locate documentation
  (only five out of fourteen students remained active after the first
  quarter).

Goals

  The primary goal of the group was to learn how to use and to evaluate
  network resources.  It was decided to be fair but direct in
  evaluating each site, including UCSB.  Since the level of networking
  experience was initially low, the evaluation criteria was dictated
  mostly by gut feelings.

  At the conclusion of the first quarter's effort, a questionnaire was
  given to the students (a sample of which is included in Appendix A).









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  The group response is summarized for overall performance below.  Data
  for individual sites is presented in Appendix B. Some of the
  questions asked were the following:

     Estimate percentage of time spent in various trouble states
     Estimate the mean time to failure
     Describe personal experience with the network
     Suggest improvements
     Grade the investigated nodes on the factors of reliability,
     response, and friendliness

THE SURVEY

Extent and Duration

  During the period in which the major effort was expended (January-
  March, 1972) relatively few nodes were active.  Experimentation,
  therefore, concentrated most heavily on UCSB, BBN-TENEX, MIT-MULTICS,
  and SRI-ARC.  Minor investigation was performed of HARV-10, UCLA-NMC,
  and UCLA-CCN.  The remaining sites were either inactive or
  inaccessible for lack of documentation.

  Activity included the following:

     Game playing (e.g., chess, life, and doctor at BBN-TENEX)
     Text and file manipulation (e.g., COL, NLS, TECO)
     Inter-personal communication (LINK and SNDMSG)
     On line compilation (e.g., TENEX FORTRAN, MULTICS PL/1).

Statistical Results

  Figure 1 below summarizes the overall response to the questionnaire
  given to the group after nine weeks experience with the ARPANET.
  Individual exposure varied from ten to sixty hours, and twelve
  students responded.  Each survey item is presented as a group average
  (sum/12) and is supplemented with a low and a high value to show the
  range of response.  The questions were slightly ambiguous in that
  they failed to distinguish between node inactivity and local NCP
  inactivity.  Also, some figures may reflect individual students'
  inadequacy in understanding local and foreign procedures.
  Nevertheless, the data is interesting as a look into uninitiated user
  experience.









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Figure 1

  Survey Item                                Average    Low    High

  % of time unable to log in any site         12,4%     2%     25%
  % of time unable to log into desired site   35.7      20     75
  % of time foreign site suddenly crashes     13        5      50
  % of time local site suddenly crashes       12.5      5      25
  % of time trouble free operation            35        0      80
  Approximate mean-time-between-failure       1h       5 min   2 hrs

  TOTAL TIME INVESTED                         32.3hrs  10 hrs  60 hrs

  First to be noted is that considering the entire ARPANET complex, no
  one approximated the mean-time-between-failure at more than two
  hours!  Secondly, the average time for "trouble free" operation was
  35%, a figure untenable for regular user usage.  In all fairness,
  however, some sites were much more "trouble free" than others, and
  individuals tend to define the term by the level of their own
  competence and experience, thus explaining the high of 80% and the
  low of 0%.

CRITIQUE OF ARPANET SERVICES

A Site Measurement Parameter, Friendliness

  Much discussed by the group was the concept of "friendliness",
  especially as it applies to on-line systems.  The following
  definition of friendliness is offered, based on direct network
  experience.

  Friendliness is:

     Concise, complete, and available documentation.
     Easy system usage (e.g., minimum numbers of keys for login
     system and job status readily available).
     Easy to reach help both on-line people and on-line files.
     No messages overkill (as sometimes unexpectedly occurs
     during login).
     Reasonable reliability and response time
     Concise, but informative error diagnostics

  The reader can probably think of more criteria, but these were the
  outstanding points of friendliness generated specifically by the
  group's experience.






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Software Critique

  1) Initial experimentation concentrated on login procedures, canned
  scenarios (e.g., Abhay K. Bhushan's ARPANET scenario, RFC #254), game
  playing, and inter-personal communication.  As the effort continued,
  attempts were made to solve problems at various nodes.  One student,
  for example, programmed a Newton-Raphson root finder in PL/1 at MIT-
  MULTICS a blackbody problem in FORTRAN at BBN-TENEX and MIT-MULTICS,
  and in PL/1 at MIT-MULTICS; and a Discrete Fourier Transform in BASIC
  at BBN-TENEX.  It is the group's conclusion that small problems can
  be written in a half hour, entered and edited in fifteen minutes and
  debugged in another fifteen minutes.  For small problems the current
  ARPANET software resources are quite adequate.

  2) By far the most annoying difficulty was obtaining adequate
  documentation.  The resource notebook was found to be interesting but
  of limited utility.

  3) Information about each node's NCP, which was requested in
  February, 1972, is still unavailable.

  4) Significant variations in procedures were found in executing
  similar tasks on different nodes.  Consider, for example, the wide
  variety of text editors with unique file naming, editing, and
  manipulation commands (TENEX, TECO, COL, NLS...).  Consider, too, the
  wide variety of compilation, load and execute procedures (RJE for
  UCSB edit, save, compile, save, load, execute for TENEX systems).
  Even more disparate are the "executive level" commands with all their
  varieties (TENEX's "Control-C", UCLA-NMC's "X", UCSB's "RESET" ...
  all of which return to the "top-lvel").  Software heterogeneity is a
  stumbling block to the user.

  5) Residents of large nodes are hard pressed to find problems which
  should be solved outside of the local environment.  With UCSB's
  mathematical graphics on-line system and direct access to batch, the
  group experienced apprehensive twinges spending hours on the network
  solving problems which could be solved in minutes locally.

Community Spirit

  1) Individuals sometimes got the impression (erroneously it is hoped)
  that some researchers in the ARPA community had little desire to
  consult and/or help.  On the other hand, others bent over backwards
  in giving assistance.  The group had hoped for a more consistent
  response.






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  2) There was difficulty in locating the source of responsibility for
  resource development.  It seemed to the seminar group that the
  complete distribution of responsibility negated incentive to locate,
  document, and create useful network resources.

Economics

  Network economics at levels above as well as the communications
  level, are a big user problem, e.g., if distributed computing is
  allowed, then distributed billing is a necessity.  It is frustrating
  to watch accounts randomly die at different nodes and have to spend
  weeks in monetary renovation.  This problem was experienced with a
  site which (a) randomly changed passwords and then (b) eliminated its
  free account.  Also there is a problem with double connect charges,
  e.g., $4.00 per hour at UCSB to sign on to BBN-TENEX at $8.00 per
  hour, which totals to $12.00 per hour!

SUGGESTIONS FOR IMPROVEMENT

  In spite of the many difficulties and frustrations, the class was
  impressed with the potential of ARPANET and produced several
  suggestions for improvement.

Software

  1) Working groups should be organized to define problems which
  require the use of a significant set of the network resources.

  2) The ARPANET represents a great resource already, even with TELNET
  as the only operational protocol.  More effort should be put in
  utilization of what currently exists.  Two illustrative examples
  follow:

     a) By combining the resources represented by UCSB's OLS and UCSB's
        TELNET, user programs were created to sign on automatically to
        the various sites.  Thus a network user need know only the
        sign-on procedure for UCSB; all settings of local/remote echo,
        character/line at a time, upper/lower case, etc. are taken care
        of automatically by the pre-written user programs.

     b) Combining the resources of TELNET PROTOCOL, PL/1 subroutine
        calls to the UCSB NCP, and 360 O/S multi-programming, a group
        of students created a batch-fed command language in PL/1 to
        communicate via telnet with foreign sites.  This program has
        been used successfully to investigate file transfer (NIC files
        are regularly copied on 8-1/2 x 11" white printer paper, and
        cards will soon be transferred to I4-TENEX), interprocess
        communication (a program was started at BBN-TENEX to be used as



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        a subroutine locally; plans exist to initiate and monitor a
        chess game between BBN-TENEX and SU-AI), and data transfer
        (pre-formatted files of data have been transferred from UCLA-
        NMC to UCSB; UCLA-NMC will soon make available survey and
        measurement data ala TELNET PROTOCOL and through direct ICP!).
        Moe details of this program will be available in a future
        report.

  3) Documentation: A self-sufficient mini-user-manual (MINIMAN) should
  exist for each site and also for each function network wide, such as
  the FORTRAN compilers.  The MINIMAN would be similar in some respects
  to the resource notebook, but would be more oriented to helping the
  user run.  A site dependent MINIMAN would contain the following:

     Sign on procedure
     Simple file manipulation and editing commands
     Compilation and execution instructions
     TELNET access
     Brief (!) summary of programs and subroutines
     Direction on how to get help.

  Overall documentation of hardware, software and human resources
  should be more complete.  A documentation questionnaire should
  perhaps be circulated to authors of network programs, including the
  authors of Network Control Programs.  Merging information from the
  questionnaire with the Resource Notebook would facilitate the
  construction of a resource-location cross referenced index.  Such an
  index, perhaps on-line, would aid the network user in locating both
  software and hardware.  Whatever the final scheme, more planning is
  required to improve the user versus documentation battle.  The recent
  effort in this direction by Marshall D. Abrams entitled "Serving
  Remote Users on the ARPANET" (NIC 10606 RFC #364) is well timed and
  should be thoroughly considered.

  4) Finally, high level subroutine calls to each NCP, such as those
  offered by UCSB, should be universally available.

Community Spirit

  1) Networks have great though unexploited potential for inter-
  personal communication.  The communication resources (NIC's JOURNAL,
  NLS TENEX's SENDMSG, LINK; UCLA-NMC'S S_.MSG:C to name a few) are
  used today only by the proficient few, but should be utilized
  regularly by all.  Two symptoms of the current state of network
  communications from the group's point of view are that most
  procedural information was shared verbally in class and that many





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  problems in locating documentation were solved by a last resort to
  that old standby, the telephone.  Improved communications will
  stimulate cooperation on joint projects.

  2) Names and interests of programmers/researchers willing to
  cooperate on joint projects and corresponding "blue sky" lists of
  software projects should be maintained.

  3) A network NEWS and NOTES should be published to inform and advise
  network participants of new resources and procedural modifications.
  Care must be taken, however, to keep this document concise (i.e.,
  avoid "message over-kill").  Perhaps a one page flier published
  weekly would meet this need.

  4) A network consulting center should be created, perhaps at the
  existing NIC, which would specialize in non-partisan matching of
  network users to network resources.

  5) A strong potential of the network is in Computer Science
  education.  Being exposed to many varieties of computer systems helps
  the student/user avoid the narrowness of experience and opinion which
  sometimes exists in centers of learning and computing.  In this
  respect the TIP user is probably the most benefited as, for little
  investment in local resources, many styles of systems are at his
  "finger-tips".  Yet even for service nodes, the network represents an
  inexpensive extension to local educational resources.  Current
  efforts to tap the educational value of ARPANET should be encouraged
  and extended.

CONCLUSION

  Existing site surveys measure and evaluate the performance of IMP
  hardware, host hardware, and host NCP programs, but little has been
  done to evaluate software performance.  The UCSB EE 210 graduate
  students attempted a primitive first pass evaluation of network
  resources in the period between January and March 1972.  Out of this
  effort have come definitions and criteria which would be useful to
  other individuals or agencies in developing evaluation schemes on the
  USER protocol level.  To this end, it is hoped that this report is
  useful.











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APPENDIX A - Sample Student Questionnaire

ARPANET

  Grade Given:  A=Excellent                 Evaluation by:
                F=Bad

  -------------------------------------------------------------------
  SITE | RELIABILITY| RESPONSE | FRIENDLINESS | # HOURS  | COMMENTS |
       |            |          |              |   USED   |          |
  -----|------------|----------|--------------|----------|----------|
       |            |          |              |          |          |
       |            |          |              |          |          |

                           ARPANET Evaluation

  -- Indicate % of your sessions which were in the following categories:

             %               State
        +--------+-------------------------------------------+
        |        |  Unable to Log in to any site.            |
        |--------|-------------------------------------------|
        |        |  Unable to Log in to Desired site.        |
        |--------|-------------------------------------------|
        |        |  Foreign site suddenly crashes.           |
        |--------|-------------------------------------------|
        |        |  Local site crashes.                      |
        |--------|-------------------------------------------|
        |        |  Trouble free operation.                  |
        |--------|-------------------------------------------|
        |        |  Other                                    |
        +--------+-------------------------------------------+

  -- Considering the performance of the local host, communication
     network, and remote hosts, estimate the mean time to failure of
     ARPANET:
        Mean-Time-Between-Failure=___________

  -- What was your total time invested in the ARPANET this quarter?
        Total Time Invested=___________

  -- Describe your overall experience with the ARPANET (e.g., rise and
     fall of personal interest factors involved, etc.).

  -- What suggestions for changes or improvements or new capabilities
     do you have to make to ARPANET hosts?

     (Use back side or other paper for these questions if necessary)



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APPENDIX B - Specific Sites, Grades and Comments

  The following grades and comments are based on the two to four most
  representative questionnaire responses for each site.  Reliability,
  Response, and Friendliness are averaged grades and reflect subjective
  criticism.  Total Invested time is the sum total of the
  experimentation times reported by individual respondents.  It is
  hoped that future evaluations might be more specific and complete
  than the current efforts, yet the value of these initial efforts
  should not be underestimated.

  Grades:

        A=Excellent

        F=Bad
                                                   Total Time
  Site        Reliability  Response  Friendliness   Invested
  --------------------------------------------------------------
  BBN-TENEX       A            A         A             71 hours
  UCSB            B            B+        B-            36
  SRI-ARC         B            B         A             75
  HARV-10         C            A-        B             14
  UCLA-NMC        C-           C         D             14
  MIT-MULTICS     C-           D         C+            82
  --------------------------------------------------------------

Group Comments

     Site:  BBN-TENEX
        Very popular site
        Doctor, life and chess are stimulating and easy to use games
        Operators are very helpful
        Account problems kept site from being useful
        BASIC is well-written and easy to use
        FORTRAN is difficult to use because of the many steps to
        create-compile-execute.

     Site:  UCSB
        There are many problems with old key boards
        TELNET diagnostics are poor
        Online help files are sorely lacking
        Graphics are necessary for full utility
        Operator would not reload NCP when down
        List of TELNET site names are not current or complete






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     Site:  SRI-ARC
        Good documentation exists on NLS specifics, but general
          overview is lacking
        Inter-console link is convenient and often used.
        NLS-JOURNAL is useful but requires significant training
        Online perusal is difficult at terminals with small display faces.

     Site:  HARV-10
        Operator is readily available
        FORTRAN is straight forward
        Easy to use editor
        Couldn't get operator to put BASIC on.

     Site:  UCLA-NMC
        Self-explanatory ABACUS program is not self-explanatory
        System often disappears
        Hard to get past LOG ON* without TIMEOUT GOODBYE
        Message system is well organized.

     Site:  UCLA-CCN
        Always up, but nothing can be done (HELP is not supported)
        When RJS is executed, there is no response until correct signon
        procedure is entered (spurious death indication).

     Site:  MIT-MULTICS
        Response is very slow
        Automatic logout of autonomous user is excruciatingly painful
        Text editor is very easy and helpful
        PL/1 and FORTRAN are easy to use.





       [This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry]
    [into the online RFC archives by Hélène Morin, Viagénie 12/99]















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