---------


    < INC-PROJECT, MAP-PERSPECTIVE.NLS.14, >, 12-Aug-83 11:34 AMW
    ;;;;





    RFC 871                                            September 1982
                                                               M82-47







              A PERSPECTIVE ON THE ARPANET REFERENCE MODEL





















                             M.A. PADLIPSKY
                          THE MITRE CORPORATION
                         Bedford, Massachusetts





                                Abstract




         The paper, by one of its developers, describes the
    conceptual framework in which the ARPANET intercomputer
    networking protocol suite, including the DoD standard
    Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet Protocol (IP),
    were designed.  It also compares and contrasts several aspects of
    the ARPANET Reference Model (ARM) with the more widely publicized
    International Standards Organization's Reference Model for Open
    System Interconnection (ISORM).








































                                    i




             "A PERSPECTIVE ON THE ARPANET REFERENCE MODEL"

                             M. A. Padlipsky




                              Introduction

         Despite the fact that "the ARPANET" stands as the
    proof-of-concept of intercomputer networking and, as discussed in
    more detail below, introduced such fundamental notions as
    Layering and Virtualizing to the literature, the wide
    availability of material which appeals to the International
    Standards Organization's Reference Model for Open System
    Interconnection (ISORM) has prompted many new- comers to the
    field to overlook the fact that, even though it was largely
    tacit, the designers of the ARPANET protocol suite have had a
    reference model of their own all the long.  That is, since well
    before ISO even took an interest in "networking", workers in the
    ARPA-sponsored research community have been going about their
    business of doing research and development in intercomputer
    networking with a particular frame of reference in mind.  They
    have, unfortunately, either been so busy with their work or were
    perhaps somehow unsuited temperamentally to do learned papers on
    abstract topics when there are interesting things to be said on
    specific topics, that it is only in very recent times that there
    has been much awareness in the research community of the impact
    of the ISORM on the lay mind.  When the author is asked to review
    solemn memoranda comparing such things as the ARPANET treatment
    of "internetting" with that of CCITT employing the ISORM "as the
    frame of reference," however, the time has clearly come to
    attempt to enunciate the ARPANET Reference Model (ARM)
    publicly--for such comparisons are painfully close to comparing
    an orange with an apple using redness and smoothness as the
    dominant criteria, given the philosophical closeness of the CCITT
    and ISO models and their mutual disparities from the ARPANET
    model.

         This paper, then, is primarily intended as a perspective on
    the ARM.  (Secondarily, it is intended to point out some of the
    differences between the ARM and the ISORM. For a perspective on
    this subtheme, please see Note [1])  It can't be "the official"
    version because the ARPANET Network Working Group (NWG), which
    was the collective source of the ARM, hasn't had an official
    general meeting since October, 1971, and can scarcely be
    resurrected to haggle over it.  It does, at least, represent with
    some degree of fidelity the views of a number of NWG members as
    those views were expressed in NWG general meetings, NWG protocol
    design committee meetings, and private conversations over the
    intervening years. (Members of the current ARPA Internet Working
    Group, which applied


                                    1
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    and adapted the original model to a broader arena than had
    initially been contemplated, were also consulted.)  That might
    not sound so impressive as a pronunciamento from an international
    standards organization, but the reader should be somewhat
    consoled by the consideration that not only are the views
    expressed here purported to be those of the primary workers in
    the field, but also at least one Englishman helped out in the
    review process.

                    Historical/Philosophical Context

         Although rigorous historians of science might quibble as to
    whether they were "invented" by a particular group, it is  an
    historical fact that many now widely-accepted, fundamental
    concepts of intercomputer networking were original to the ARPANET
    Network Working Group. [2]  Before attempting to appreciate the
    implications of that assertion, let's attempt to define its two
    key terms and then cite the concepts it alludes to:

         By "intercomputer networking"  we mean the attachment of
    multiple, usually general-purpose computer systems--in the sense
    of Operating Systems of potentially different manufacture (i.e.,
    "Heterogeneous Operating Systems")--to some communications
    network, or communications networks somehow interconnected, for
    the purpose of achieving resource sharing amongst the
    participating operating systems, usually called Hosts.  (By
    "resource sharing" we mean the  potential ability for programs on
    each of the Hosts to interoperate with programs on the other
    Hosts and for data housed on each of the Hosts to be made
    available to the other Hosts in a more general and flexible
    fashion than merely enabling users on each of the Hosts to be
    able to login to the other Hosts as if they were local; that is,
    we expect to do more than mere "remote access" to intercomputer
    networked Hosts.)  By "the ARPANET Network Working Group," we
    mean those system programmers and computer scientists from
    numerous Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency-sponsored
    installations whose home operating systems were intended to
    become early Hosts on the ARPANET.  (By "the ARPANET" we mean,
    depending on context, either that communications network
    sponsored by DARPA which served as proof-of-concept for the
    communications technology known as "packet switching," or,
    consistent with common usage, the intercomputer network which was
    evolved by the NWG that uses that communications network--or
    "comm subnet"--as its inter-Host data transmission medium.)

         The concepts of particular interest are as follows:  By
    analogy to the use of the term in traditional communications, the
    NWG decided that the key to the mechanization of the
    resource-sharing goal (which in turn had been posited in their
    informal charter)





                                    2
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    would be "protocols" that Hosts would interpret both in
    communicating with the comm subnet and in communicating with each
    other.  Because the active entities in Hosts (the programs in
    execution) were widely referred to in Computer Science as
    "processes," it seemed clear that the mechanization of resource
    sharing had to involve interprocess communication; protocols that
    enabled and employed interprocess communication became, almost
    axiomatically, the path to the goal.  Perhaps because the
    limitations of mere remote access were perceived early on, or
    perhaps simply by analogy to the similar usage with regard to
    distinguishing between physical tape drives and tape drives
    associated with some conventionally-defined function like the
    System Input stream or the System Output stream in batch
    operating systems, the discernible communications paths (or
    "channels") through the desired interprocess communication
    mechanism became known as "logical connections"--the intent of
    the term being to indicate that the physical path didn't matter
    but the designator (number) of the logical connection could have
    an assigned meaning, just like logical tape drive numbers.
    Because "modularity" was an important issue in Computer Science
    at the time, and because the separation of Hosts and Interface
    Message Processors (IMP's) was a given, the NWG realized that the
    protocols it designed should be "layered," in the sense that a
    given set of related functions (e.g., the interprocess
    communication mechanism, or "primitives," as realized in a
    Host-to-Host protocol) should not take special cognizance of the
    detailed internal mechanics of another set of related functions
    (e.g., the comm subnet attachment mechanism, as realized in a
    Host-Comm Subnet Processor protocol), and that, indeed, protocols
    may be viewed as existing in a hierarchy.

         With the notion of achieving resource sharing via layered
    protocols for interprocess communication over logical connections
    fairly firmly in place, the NWG turned to how best to achieve the
    first step of intercomputer networking:  allowing a distant user
    to login to a Host as if local--but with the clear understanding
    that the mechanisms employed were to be generalizable to other
    types of resource sharing.  Here we come to the final fundamental
    concept contributed by the NWG, for it was observed that if n
    different types of Host (i.e., different operating systems) had
    to be made aware of the physical characteristics of m different
    types of terminal in order to exercise physical control over
    them--or even if n different kinds of Host had to become aware of
    the native terminals supported by m other kinds of Hosts if
    physical control were to remain local--there would be an
    administratively intractable "n x m problem."  So the notion of
    creating a "virtual terminal" arose, probably by analogy to
    "virtual memory" in the sense of something that "wasn't really
    there" but could be used as if it






                                    3
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    were; that is, a common intermediate representation (CIR) of
    terminal characteristics was defined in order to allow the Host
    to which a terminal was physically attached to map the particular
    characteristics of the terminal into a CIR, so that the Host
    being logged into, knowing the CIR as part of the relevant
    protocol, could map out of it into a form already acceptable to
    the native operating system.  And when it came time to develop a
    File Transfer Protocol, the same virtualizing or CIR trick was
    clearly just as useful as for a terminal oriented protocol, so
    virtualizing became part of the axiom set too.

         The NWG, then, at least pioneered and probably invented the
    notion of doing intercomputer networking/resource sharing via
    hierarchical, layered protocols for interprocess communication
    over logical connections of common intermediate representations/
    virtualizations.  Meanwhile, outside of the ARPA research
    community, "the ARPANET" was perceived to be a major
    technological advance. "Networking" became the "in" thing.  And
    along with popular success came the call for standards; in
    particular, standards based on a widely-publicized "Reference
    Model for Open System Interconnection" promulgated by the
    International Standards Organization.  Not too surprisingly, Open
    System Interconnection looks a lot like resource sharing, the
    ISORM posits a layered protocol hierarchy, "connections" occur
    frequently, and emerging higher level protocols tend to
    virtualize; after all, one expects standards to reflect the state
    of the art in question.  But even if the ISORM, suitably refined,
    does prove to be the wave of the future, this author feels that
    the ARM is by no means a whitecap, and deserves explication--both
    in its role as the ISORM's "roots" and as the basis of a
    still-viable alternative protocol suite.

                             Axiomatization

         Let's begin with the axioms of the ARPANET Reference Model.
    Indeed, let's begin by recalling what an axiom is, in common
    usage: a principle the truth of which is deemed self-evident.
    Given that definition, it's not too surprising that axioms rarely
    get stated or examined in non-mathematical discourse.  It turns
    out, however, that the axiomatization of the ARM--as best we can
    recall and reconstruct it--is not only germane to the enunciation
    of the ARM, but is also a source of instructive contrasts with
    our view of the axiomatization of the ISORM.  (See [1] again.)

    Resource Sharing

         The fundamental axiom of the ARM is that intercomputer
    networking protocols (as distinct from communications network







                                    4
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    protocols) are to enable heterogeneous computer operating systems
    ("Hosts") to achieve resource sharing.  Indeed, the session at
    the 1970 SJCC in which the ARPANET entered the open literature
    was entitled "Resource Sharing Computer Networks".

         Of course, as self-evident truths, axioms rarely receive
    much scrutiny.  Just what resource sharing is isn't easy to pin
    down--nor, for that matter, is just what Open System
    Interconnection is. But it must have something to do with the
    ability of the programs and data of the several Hosts to be used
    by and with programs and data on other of the Hosts in some sort
    of cooperative fashion.  It must, that is, confer more
    functionality upon the human user than merely the ability to log
    in/on to a Host miles away ("remote access").

         A striking property of this axiom is that it renders
    protocol suites such as "X.25"/"X.28"/ "X.29" rather
    uninteresting for our purposes, for they appear to have as their
    fundamental axiom the ability to achieve remote access only.  (It
    might even be a valid rule of thumb that any "network" which
    physically interfaces to Hosts via devices that resemble milking
    machines--that is, which attach as if they were just a group of
    locally-known types of terminals--isn't a resource sharing
    network.)

         Reference [3] addresses the resource sharing vs. remote
    access topic in more detail.

    Interprocess Communication

         The second axiom of the ARM is that resource sharing will be
    achieved via an interprocess communication mechanism of some
    sort.  Again, the concept isn't particularly well-defined in the
    "networking" literature.  Here, however, there's some
    justification, for the concept is fairly well known in the
    Operating Systems branch of the Computer Science literature,
    which was the field most of the NWG members came from.
    Unfortunately, because intercomputer networking involves
    communications devices of several sorts, many whose primary field
    is Communications became involved with "networking" but were not
    in a position to appreciate the implications of the axiom.

         A process may be viewed as the active element of a Host, or
    as an address space in execution, or as a "job", or as a "task",
    or as a "control point"--or, actually, as any one (or more) of at
    least 29 definitions from at least 28 reputable computer
    scientists.  What's important for present purposes isn't the
    precise definition (even if there were one), but the fact that
    the axiom's presence dictates the absence of at least one other
    axiom at the same level of





                                    5
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    abstraction.  That is, we might have chosen to attempt to achieve
    resource sharing through an explicitly interprocedure
    communication oriented mechanism of some sort--wherein the
    entities being enabled to communicate were subroutines, or pieces
    of address spaces--but we didn't.  Whether this was because
    somebody realized that you could do interprocedure communication
    (or achieve a "virtual address space" or "distributed operating
    system" or some such formulation) on top of an interprocess
    communication mechanism (IPC), or whether "it just seemed
    obvious" to do IPC doesn't matter very much.  What matters is
    that the axiom was chosen, assumes a fair degree of familiarity
    with Operating Systems, doesn't assume extremely close coupling
    of Hosts, and has led to a working protocol suite which does
    achieve resource sharing--and certainly does appear to be an
    axiom the ISORM tacitly accepted, along with resource sharing.

    Logical Connections

         The next axiom has to do with whether and how to demultiplex
    IPC "channels", "routes", "paths", "ports", or "sockets".  That
    is, if you're doing interprocess communication (IPC), you still
    have to decide whether a process can communicate with more than
    one other process, and, if so, how to distinguish between the bit
    streams. (Indeed, even choosing streams rather than blocks is a
    decision.) Although it isn't treated particularly explicitly in
    the literature, it seems clear that the ARM axiom is to do IPC
    over logical connections, in the following sense:  Just as batch
    oriented operating systems found it useful to allow processes
    (usually thought of as jobs--or even "programs") to be insulated
    from the details of which particular physical tape drives were
    working well enough at a particular moment to spin the System
    Input and Output reels, and created the view that a reference to
    a "logical tape number" would always get to the right physical
    drive for the defined purpose, so too the ARM's IPC mechanism
    creates logical connections between processes.  That is, the IPC
    addressing mechanism has semantics as well as syntax.

         "Socket" n on any participating Host will be defined as the
    "Well-Known Socket" (W-KS) where a particular service (as
    mechanized by a program which follows, or "interprets", a
    particular  protocol [4]) is found.  (Note that the W-KS is
    defined for the "side" of a connection where a given service
    resides; the user side will, in  order to be able to demultiplex
    its network-using processes, of course assign different numbers
    to its "sides" of connections to a given W-KS.  Also, the serving
    side takes cognizance of the using side's Host designation as
    well as the proferred socket, so it too can demultiplex.)
    Clearly, you want free sockets as well as Well-Known ones, and we
    have them.  Indeed, at each level of the ARM






                                    6
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    hierarchy the addressing entities are divided into assigned and
    unassigned sets, and the distinction has proven to be quite
    useful to networking researchers in that it confers upon them the
    ability to experiment with new functions without interfering with
    running mechanisms.

         On this axiom, the ISORM differs from the ARM.  ISORM
    "peer-peer" connections (or "associations") appear to be used
    only for demultiplexing, with the number assigned by the receive
    side rather than the send side.  That is, a separate protocol is
    intro- duced to establish that a particular "transport"
    connection will be used in the present "session" for some
    particular service.  At the risk of editorializing, logical
    connections seem much cleaner than "virtual" connections (using
    virtual in the sense of something that "isn't really there" but
    can be used as if it were, by analogy to virtual memory, as noted
    above, and in deference to the X.25 term "virtual circuit", which
    appears to have dictated the receiver-assigned posture the ISORM
    takes at its higher levels.) Although the ISORM view "works", the
    W-KS approach avoids the introduction of an extra protocol.

    Layering

         The next axiom is perhaps the best-known, and almost
    certainly the worst-understood.  As best we can reconstruct
    things, the NWG was much taken with the Computer Science buzzword
    of the times, "modularity".  "Everybody knew" modularity was a
    Good Thing.  In addition, we were given a head start because the
    IMP's weren't under our direct control anyway, but could possibly
    change at some future date, and we didn't want to be "locked in"
    to the then-current IMP-Host protocol.  So it was enunciated that
    protocols which were to be members of the ARM suite (ARMS, for
    future reference, although at the time nobody used "ARM", much
    less "ARMS") were to be layered.  It was widely agreed that this
    meant a given protocol's control information (i.e., the control
    information exchanged by counterpart protocol interpreters, or
    "peer entities" in ISORM terms) should be treated strictly as
    data by a protocol "below" it, so that you could invoke a
    protocol interpreter (PI) through a known interface, but if
    either protocol changed there would not be any dependencies in
    the other on the former details of the one, and as long as the
    interface didn't change you wouldn't have to change the PI of the
    protocol which hadn't changed.

         All well and good, if somewhat cryptic.  The important point
    for present purposes, however, isn't a seemingly-rigorous
    definition of Layering, but an appreciation of what the axiom
    meant in the evolution of the ARM.  What it meant was that we
    tried to come up






                                    7
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    with protocols that represented reasonable "packagings" of
    functionality.  For reasons that are probably unknowable, but
    about which some conjectures will be offered subsequently, the
    ARM and the ISORM agree strongly on the presence of Layering in
    their respective axiomatizations but differ strikingly as to what
    packagings of functionality are considered appropriate.  To
    anticipate a bit, the ARM concerns itself with three layers and
    only one of them is mandatorily traversed;  whereas the ISORM,
    again as everybody knows, has, because of emerging "sub-layers",
    what must be viewed as at least seven layers, and many who have
    studied it believe that all of the layers must be traversed on
    each transmission/reception of data.

         Perhaps the most significant point of all about Layering is
    that the most frequently-voiced charge at NWG protocol committee
    design meetings was, "That violates Layering!" even though nobody
    had an appreciably-clearer view of what Layering meant than has
    been presented here, yet the ARMS exists.  We can only guess what
    goes on in the design meetings for protocols to become members of
    the ISORM suite (ISORMS), but it doesn't seem likely that having
    more layers could possibly decrease the number of arguments....

         Indeed, it's probably fair to say that the ARM view of
    Layering is to treat layers as quite broad functional groupings
    (Network Interface, Host-Host, and Process-Level, or
    Applications), the constituents of which are to be modular.
    E.g., in the Host-Host layer of the current ARMS, the Internet
    Protocol, IP, packages internet addressing--among other
    things--for both the Transmission Control Protocol, TCP, which
    packages reliable interprocess communication, and UDP--the less
    well-known User Datagram Protocol--which packages only
    demultiplexable interprocess communication ... and for any other
    IPC packaging which should prove desirable.  The ISORM view, on
    the other hand, fundamentally treats layers as rather narrow
    functional groupings, attempting to force modularity by requiring
    additional layers for additional functions (although the
    "classes" view of the proposed ECMA-sponsored ISORM Transport
    protocol tends to mimic the relations between TCP, UDP, and IP).

         It is, by the way, forcing this view of modularity by
    multiplying layers rather than by trusting the designers of a
    given protocol to make it usable by other protocols within its
    own layer that we suspect to be a major cause of the divergence
    between the ISORM and the ARM, but, as indicated, the issue
    almost certainly is not susceptible of proof.  (The less
    structured view of modularity will be returned to in the next
    major section.)  At any rate, the notion that "N-entities" must
    communicate with one another by means of "N-1 entities" does seem
    to us to take the ISORM out of its






                                    8
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    intended sphere of description into the realm of prescription,
    where we believe it should not be, if for no other reason than
    that for a reference model to serve a prescriptive role levies
    unrealizable requirements of precision, and of familiarity with
    all styles of operating systems, on its expositors.  In other
    words, as it is currently presented, the ISORM hierarchy of
    protocols turns out to be a rather strict hierarchy, with
    required, "chain of command" implications akin to the Elizabethan
    World Picture's Great Chain of Being some readers might recall if
    they've studied Shakespeare, whereas in the ARM a cat can even
    invoke a king, much less look at one.

    Common Intermediate Representations

         The next axiom to be considered might well not be an axiom
    in a strict sense of the term, for it is susceptible of "proof"
    in some sense.  That is, when it came time to design the first
    Process-Level (roughly equivalent to ISORM Level 5.3 [5] through
    7) ARMS protocol, it did seem self-evident that a "virtual
    terminal" was a sound conceptual model--but it can also be
    demonstrated that it is.  The argument, customarily shorthanded
    as "the N X M Problem", was sketched above; it goes as follows:
    If you want to let users at remote terminals log in/on to Hosts
    (and you do--resource sharing doesn't preclude remote access, it
    subsumes it), you have a problem with Hosts' native terminal
    control software or "access methods", which only "know about"
    certain kinds/brands/types of terminals, but there are many more
    terminals out there than any Host has internalized (even those
    whose operating systems take a generic view of I/O and don't
    allow applications programs to "expect" particular terminals).

         You don't want to make N different types of Host/Operating
    System have to become aware of M different types of terminal.
    You don't want to limit access to users who are at one particular
    type of terminal even if all your Hosts happen to have one in
    common.  Therefore, you define a common intermediate
    representation (CIR) of the properties of terminals--or create a
    Network Virtual Terminal (NVT), where "virtual" is used by
    analogy to "virtual memory" in the sense of something that isn't
    necessarily really present physically but can be used as if it
    were.  Each Host adds one terminal to its set of supported types,
    the NVT--where adding means translating/mapping from the CIR to
    something acceptable to the rest of the programs on your system
    when receiving terminal-oriented traffic "from the net", and
    translating/mapping to the CIR from whatever your acceptable
    native representation was when sending terminal-oriented traffic
    "to the net".  (And the system to  which the terminal is
    physically attached does the same things.)







                                    9
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


         "Virtualizing" worked so well for the protocol in question
    ("Telnet", for TELetypewriter NETwork) that when it came time to
    design a File Transfer Protocol (FTP), it was employed again--in
    two ways, as it happens.  (It also worked so well that in some
    circles, "Telnet" is used as a generic term for "Virtual Terminal
    Protocol", just like "Kleenex" for "disposable handkerchief".)
    The second way in which FTP (another generic-specific) used
    Common Intermediate Representations is well-known: you can make
    your FTP protocol interpreters (PI's) use certain "virtual" file
    types in ARMS FTP's and in proposed ISORMS FTP's.  The first way
    a CIR was used deserved more publicity, though:  We decided to
    have a command-oriented FTP, in the sense of making it possible
    for users to cause files to be deleted from remote directories,
    for example, as well as simply getting a file added to a remote
    directory.  (We also wanted to be able to designate some files to
    be treated as input to the receiving Hosts' native "mail" system,
    if it had one.)  Therefore, we needed an agreed-upon
    representation of the commands--not only spelling the names, but
    also defining the character set, indicating the ends of lines,
    and so on.  In less time than it takes to write about, we
    realized we already had such a CIR: "Telnet".

         So we "used Telnet", or at any rate the NVT aspects of that
    protocol, as the "Presentation" protocol for the control aspects
    of FTP--but we didn't conclude from that that Telnet was a lower
    layer than FTP.  Rather, we applied the principles of modularity
    to make use of a mechanism for more than one purpose--and we
    didn't presume to know enough about the internals of everybody
    else's Host to dictate how the program(s) that conferred the FTP
    functionality interfaced with the program(s) that conferred the
    Telnet functionality.  That is, on some operating systems it
    makes sense to let FTP get at the NVT CIR by means of closed
    subroutine calls, on others through native IPC, and on still
    others by open subroutine calls (in the sense of replicating the
    code that does the NVT mapping within the FTP PI).  Such
    decisions are best left to the system programmers of the several
    Hosts.  Although the ISORM takes a similar view in principle, in
    practice many ISORM advocates take the model prescriptively
    rather than descriptively and construe it to require that PI's at
    a given level must communicate with each other via an "N-1
    entity" even within the same Host.  (Still other ISORMites
    construe the model as dictating "monolithic" layers--i.e., single
    protocols per level--but this view seems to be abating.)

         One other consideration about virtualizing bears mention:
    it's a good servant but a bad master.  That is, when you're
    dealing with the amount of traffic that traverses a
    terminal-oriented logical (or even virtual) connection, you don't
    worry much about how many CPU cycles you're "wasting" on mapping
    into and out of the NVT CIR; but





                                   10
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    when you're dealing with files that can be millions of bits long,
    you probably should worry--for those CPU cycles are in a fairly
    real sense the resources you're making sharable.  Therefore, when
    it comes to (generic) FTP's, even though we've seen it in one or
    two ISORM L6 proposals, having only a virtual file conceptual
    model is not wise.  You'd rather let one side or the other map
    directly between native representations where possible, to
    eliminate the overhead for going into and out of the CIR--for
    long enough files, anyway, and provided one side or the other is
    both willing and able to do the mapping to the intended
    recipient's native representation.

    Efficiency

         The last point leads nicely into an axiom that is rarely
    acknowledged explicitly, but does belong in the ARM list of
    axioms: Efficiency is a concern, in several ways.  In the first
    place, protocol mechanisms are meant to follow the design
    principle of Parsimony, or Least Mechanism; witness the argument
    immediately above about making FTP's be able to avoid the double
    mapping of a Virtual File approach when they can.  In the second
    place, witness the argument further above about leaving
    implementation decisions to implementers.  In the author's
    opinion, the worst mistake in the ISORM isn't defining seven (or
    more) layers, but decreeing that "N-entities" must communicate
    via "N-1 entities" in a fashion which supports the interpretation
    that it applies intra-Host as well as inter-Host.  If you picture
    the ISORM as a highrise apartment building, you are constrained
    to climb down the stairs and then back up to visit a neighbor
    whose apartment is on your own floor.  This might be good
    exercise, but CPU's don't need aerobics as far as we know.

         Recalling that this paper is only secondarily about ARM
    "vs." ISORM, let's duly note that in the ARM there is a concern
    for efficiency from the perspective of participating Hosts'
    resources (e.g., CPU cycles and, it shouldn't be overlooked,
    "core") expended on interpreting protocols, and pass on to the
    final axiom without digressing to one or two proposed specific
    ISORM mechanisms which seem to be extremely inefficient.

    Equity

         The least known of the ARM axioms has to do with a concern
    over whether particular protocol mechanisms would entail undue
    perturbation of native mechanisms if implemented in particular
    Hosts.  That is, however reluctantly, the ARMS designers were
    willing to listen to claims that "you can't implement that in my
    system" when particular tactics were proposed and, however







                                   11
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    grudgingly, retreat from a mechanism that seemed perfectly
    natural on their home systems to one which didn't seriously
    discommode a colleague's home system.  A tacit design principle
    based on equity was employed.  The classic example had to do with
    "electronic mail", where a desire to avoid charging for incoming
    mail led some FTP designers to think that the optionally
    mandatory "login" commands of the protocol shouldn't be mandatory
    after all.  But the commands were needed by some operating
    systems to actuate not only accounting mechanisms but
    authentication mechanisms as well, and the process which
    "fielded" FTP connections was too privileged (and too busy) to
    contain the FTP PI as well.  So (to make a complex story
    cryptic), a common name and password were advertised for a "free"
    account for incoming mail, and the login commands remained
    mandatory (in the sense that any Host could require their
    issuance before it participated in FTP).

         Rather than attempt to clarify the example, let's get to its
    moral:  The point is that how well protocol mechanisms integrate
    with particular operating systems can be extremely subtle, so in
    order to be equitable to participating systems, you must either
    have your designers be sophisticated implementers or subject your
    designs to review by sophisticated implementers (and grant veto
    power to them in some sense).

         It is important to note that, in the author's view, the
    ISORM not only does not reflect application of the Principle of
    Equity, but it also fails to take any explicit cognizance of the
    necessity of properly integrating its protocol interpreters into
    continuing operating systems.  Probably motivated by Equity
    considerations, ARMS protocols, on the other hand, represent the
    result of intense implementation discussion and testing.

                              Articulation

         Given the foregoing discussion of its axioms, and a reminder
    that we find it impossible in light of the existence of dozens of
    definitions of so fundamental a notion as "process" to believe in
    rigorous definitions, the ARPANET Reference Model is not going to
    require much space to articulate.  Indeed, given further the
    observation that we believe reference models are supposed to be
    descriptive rather than prescriptive, the articulation of the ARM
    can be almost terse.

         In order to achieve efficient, equitable resource sharing
    among dissimilar operating systems, a layered set of interprocess
    communication oriented protocols is posited which typically
    employ common intermediate representations over logical
    connections.  Three






                                   12
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    layers are distinguished, each of which may contain a number of
    protocols.

         The Network Interface layer contains those protocols which
    are presented as interfaces by communications subnetwork
    processors ("CSNP"; e.g., packet switches, bus interface units,
    etc.)  The CSNP's are assumed to have their own protocol or
    protocols among themselves, which are not directly germane to the
    model.  In particular, no assumption is made that CSNP's of
    different types can be directly interfaced to one another; that
    is, "internetting" will be accomplished by Gateways, which are
    special purpose systems that attach to CSNP's as if they were
    Hosts (see also "Gateways" below). The most significant property
    of the Network Interface layer is that bits presented to it by an
    attached Host will probably be transported by the underlying
    CSNP's to an addressed Host (or Hosts) (i.e., "reliable" comm
    subnets are not posited--although they are, of course, allowed).
    A Network layer protocol interpreter ("module") is normally
    invoked by a Host-Host protocol PI, but may be invoked by a
    Process Level/Applications protocol PI, or even by a Host process
    interpreting no formal protocol whatsoever.

         The Host-Host layer contains those protocols which confer
    interprocess communication functionality.  In the current
    "internet" version of the ARM, the most significant property of
    such protocols is the ability to direct such IPC to processes on
    Hosts attached to "proximate networks" (i.e., to CSNP's of
    various autonomous communications subnetworks) other than that of
    the Host at hand, in addition to those on a given proximate net.
    (You can, by the way, get into some marvelous technicoaesthetic
    arguments over whether there should be a separate Internet layer;
    for present purposes, we assume that the Principle of Parsimony
    dominates.)  Another significant property of Host-Host protocols,
    although not a required one, is the ability to do such IPC over
    logical connections. Reliability, flow control, and the ability
    to deal with "out-of-band signals" are other properties of
    Host-Host protocols which may be present.  (See also "TCP/IP
    Design Goals and Constraints", below.) A Host-Host PI is normally
    invoked by a Process Level/Applications PI, but may also be
    invoked by a Host process interpreting no formal protocol
    whatsoever.  Also, a Host need not support more than a single,
    possibly notional, process (that is, the code running in an
    "intelligent terminal" might not be viewed by its user--or even
    its creator--as a formal "process", but it stands as a de facto
    one).

         The Process Level/Applications layer contains those
    protocols which perform specific resource sharing and remote
    access functions such as allowing users to log in/on to foreign
    Hosts, transferring files, exchanging messages, and the like.
    Protocols in this layer




                                   13
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    will often employ common intermediate representations, or
    "virtual- izations", to perform their functions, but this is not
    a necessary condition.  They are also at liberty to use the
    functions performed by other protocols within the same layer,
    invoked in whatever fashion is appropriate within a given
    operating system context.

         Orthogonal to the layering, but consistent with it, is the
    notion that a "Host-Front End" protocol (H-FP), or "Host-Outboard
    Processing Environment" protocol, may be employed to offload
    Network and Host-Host layer PI's from Hosts, to Outboard
    Processing Environments (e.g., to "Network Front Ends", or to
    BIU's, where the actual PI's reside, to be invoked by the H-FP as
    a distributed processing mechanism), as well as portions of
    Process Level/Applications protocols' functionality.  The most
    significant property of an H-FP attached Host is that it be
    functionally identical to a Host with inboard PI's in operation,
    when viewed from another Host. (That is, Hosts which outboard
    PI's will be attached to in a flexible fashion via an explicit
    protocol, rather than in a rigid fashion via the emulation of
    devices already known to the operating system in question.)

         Whether inboard or outboard of the Host, it is explicitly
    assumed that PI's will be appropriately integrated into the
    containing operating systems.  The Network and Host-Host layers
    are, that is, effectively system programs (although this
    observation should not be construed as implying that any of their
    PI's must of necessity be implemented in a particular operating
    system's "hard-core supervisor" or equivalent) and their PI's
    must be able to behave as such.

                              Visualization

         Figures 1 and 2 (adapted from [6]) present, respectively, an
    abstract rendition of the ARPANET Reference Model and a
    particular version of a protocol suite designed to that model.
    Just as one learns in Geometry that one cannot "prove" anything
    from the figures in the text, they are intended only to
    supplement the prose description above.  (At least they bear no
    resemblance to highrise apartment houses.)

                   TCP/IP Design Goals and Constraints

         The foregoing description of the ARM, in the interests of
    conciseness, deferred detailed discussion of two rather relevant
    topics:  just what TCP and IP (the Transmission Control Protocol
    and the Internet Protocol) are "about", and just what role
    Gateways are







                                   14
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    expected to play in the model.  We turn to those topics now,
    under separate headings.

         As has been stated, with the success of the ARPANET [7] as
    both a proof-of-concept of intercomputer resource sharing via a
    packet-switched communications subnetwork and a (still)
    functional resource sharing network, a number of other bodies,
    research and commercial, developed "their own networks."  Often
    just the communications subnetwork was intended, with the goal
    being to achieve remote access to attached Hosts rather than
    resource sharing among them, but nonetheless new networks
    abounded.  Hosts attached to the original ARPANET or to DoD nets
    meant to be transferences of ARPANET technology should, it was
    perceived in the research community, be able to do resource
    sharing (i.e., interpret common high level protocols) with Hosts
    attached to these other networks. Thus, the first discernible
    goal of what was to become TCP/IP was to develop a protocol to
    achieve "internetting".

         At roughly the same time--actually probably chronologically
    prior, but not logically prior--the research community came to
    understand that the original ARPANET Host-Host Protocol or AH-HP
    (often miscalled NCP because it was the most visible component of
    the Network Control Program of the early literature) was somewhat
    flawed, particularly in the area of "robustness."  The comm
    subnet was not only relied upon to deliver messages accurately
    and in order, but it was even expected to manage the transfer of
    bits from Hosts to and from its nodal processors over a hardware
    interface and "link protocol" that did no error checking.  So,
    although the ARPANET-as-subnet has proven to be quite good in
    managing those sorts of things, surely if internetting were to be
    achieved over subnets potentially much less robust than the
    ARPANET subnet, the second discernible goal must be the
    reliability of the Host-to-Host protocol.  That is, irrespective
    of the properties of the communications subnetworks involved in
    internetting, TCP is to furnish its users--whether they be
    processes interpreting formal protocols or simply processes
    communicating in an ad hoc fashion--with the ability to
    communicate as if their respective containing Hosts were attached
    to the best comm subnet possible (e.g., a hardwired connection).

         The mechanizations considered to achieve reliability and
    even those for internetting were alien enough to AH-HP's style,
    though, and the efficiency of several of AH-HP's native
    mechanisms (particularly Flow Control and the notion of a Control
    Link) had been questioned often enough, that a good Host-Host
    protocol could not be a simple extension of AH-HP.  Thus, along
    with the desire for reliability came a necessity to furnish a
    good Host-Host protocol, a






                                   15
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    design goal easy to overlook.  This is a rather subtle issue in
    that it brings into play a wealth of prior art.  For present
    purposes, in practical terms it means that the "good" ideas
    (according to the technical intuition of the designers) of
    AH-HP--such as sockets, logical connections, Well-Known Sockets,
    and in general the interprocess communication premise--are
    retained in TCP without much discussion, while the "bad" ideas
    are equally tacitly jettisoned in favor of ones deemed either
    more appropriate in their own right or more consistent with the
    other two goals.

         It could be argued that other goals are discernible, but the
    three cited--which may be restated and compressed as a desire to
    offer a good Host-Host protocol to achieve reliable
    internetting--are challenging enough, when thought about hard for
    a few years, to justify a document of even more than this one's
    length.  What of the implied and/or accepted design constraints,
    though?

         The first discernible design constraint borders on the
    obvious: Just as the original ARPANET popularized
    packet-switching (and, unfortunately to a lesser extent, resource
    sharing), its literature popularized the notion of "Layering."
    Mechanistically, layering is easy to describe:  the control
    information of a given protocol must be treated strictly as data
    by the next "lower" protocol (with processes "at the top," and
    the/a transmission medium "at the bottom"), as discussed earlier.
    Philosophically, the notion is sufficiently subtle that even
    today researchers of good will still argue over what "proper"
    layering implies, also as discussed earlier.  For present
    purposes, however, it suffices to observe the following:
    Layering is a useful concept.  The precise set of functions
    offered by a given layer is open to debate, as is the precise
    number of layers necessary for a complete protocol suite to
    achieve resource sharing.  (Most researchers from the ARPANET
    "world" tend to think of only three layers--the process,
    applications, or user level; the Host-Host level; and the network
    level--though if pressed they acknowledge that "the IMPs must
    have a protocol too."  Adherents of the International Standards
    Organization's "Open System Interconnection" program--which
    appears to be how they spell resource sharing--claim that seven
    is the right number of levels--though if pressed they acknowledge
    that "one or two of them have sublevels."  And adherents of the
    Consultative Committee for International Telephony and Telegraphy
    don't seem particularly concerned with resource sharing to begin
    with.)  At any rate, TCP and IP are constrained to operate in a
    (or possibly in more than one) layered protocol hierarchy.
    Indeed, although it is not the sole reason, this fact is the
    primary rationale for separating the internetting mechanization
    into a discrete protocol (the Internet Protocol: IP).  In other
    words, although designed




                                   16
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    "for" the ARM, TCP and IP are actually so layered as to be useful
    even outside the ARM.

         It should be noted that as a direct consequence of the
    Layering constraint, TCP must be capable of operating "above" a
    functionally- equivalent protocol other than IP (e.g., an
    interface protocol directly into a proximate comm subnet, if
    internetting is not being done), and IP must be capable of
    supporting user protocols other than TCP (e.g., a non-reliable
    "Real-Time" protocol).

         Resisting the temptation to attempt to do justice to the
    complexities of Layering, we move on to a second design
    constraint, which also borders on the obvious:  Only minimal
    assumptions can be made about the properties of the various
    communications subnetworks in play.  (The "network" composed of
    the concatenation of such subnets is sometimes called "a
    catenet," though more often--and less picturesquely--merely "an
    internet.")  After all, the main goal is to let processes on
    Hosts attached to, essentially, "any old (or new) net"
    communicate, and to limit that communication to processes on
    Hosts attached to comm subnets that, say, do positive
    acknowledgments of message delivery would be remiss. [8]

         Given this constraint, by the way, it is quite natural to
    see the more clearly Host-to-Host functions vested in TCP and the
    more clearly Host-to-catenet functions vested in IP.  It is,
    however, a misconception to believe that IP was designed in the
    expectation that comm subnets "should" present only the "lowest
    common denominator" of functionality; rather, IP furnishes TCP
    with what amounts to an abstraction (some would say a
    virtualization--in the ARPANET Telnet Protocol sense of
    virtualizing as meaning mapping from/to a common intermediate
    representation to/from a given native representation) of the
    properties of "any" comm subnet including, it should be noted,
    even one which presents an X.25 interface.  That is, IP allows
    for the application to a given transmission of whatever generic
    properties its proximate subnet offers equivalents for; its
    design neither depends upon nor ignores the presence of any
    property other than the ability to try to get some packet of bits
    to some destination, which surely is an irreducible minimum for
    the functionality of anything one would be willing to call a
    network.

         Finally, we take note of a design constraint rarely
    enunciated in the literature, but still a potent factor in the
    design process: Probably again stemming from the popularity of
    the original ARPANET, as manifested in the number of types of
    Hosts (i.e., operating systems) attached to it, minimal
    assumptions are made about the nature or even the "power" of the
    Hosts which could implement TCP/IP.  Clearly, some notion of
    process is necessary if there is to



                                   17
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    be interprocess communication, but even here the entire Host
    might constitute a single process from the perspective of the
    catenet. Less clearly, but rather importantly, Hosts must either
    "be able to tell time" or at least be able to "fake" that
    ability; this is in order to achieve the reliability goal, which
    leads to a necessity for Hosts to retransmit messages (which may
    have gotten lost or damaged in the catenet), which in turn leads
    to a necessity to know when to retransmit.  It should be noted,
    however, that this does not preclude a (presumably quite modestly
    endowed) Host's simply going into a controlled loop between
    transmissions and retransmitting after enough megapasses through
    the loop have been made--if, of course, the acknowledgment of
    receipt of the transmission in question has not already arrived
    "in the meantime."

         To conclude with a formulation somewhere between the concise
    and the terse, TCP/IP are to constitute a means for processes on
    Hosts about which minimal assumptions are made to do reliable
    interprocess communication in a layered protocol suite over a
    catenet consisting of communications subnetworks about which
    minimal assumptions are made.  Though it nearly goes without
    saying, we would probably be remiss not to conclude by observing
    that that's a lot harder to do than to say.

                                Gateways

         One other aspect of the ARPANET Reference Model bears
    separate mention.  Even though it is an exceedingly fine point as
    to whether it's actually "part" of the Model or merely a sine qua
    non contextual assumption, the role of Gateways is of
    considerable importance to the functioning of the Internet
    Protocol, IP.

         As noted, the defining characteristic of a Gateway is that
    it attaches to two or more proximate comm subnets as if it were a
    Host. That is, from "the network's" point of view, Gateways are
    not distinguished from Hosts; rather, "normal" traffic will go to
    them, addressed according to the proximate net's interface
    protocol. However, the most important property of Gateways is
    that they interpret a full version of IP which deals with
    internet routing (Host IP interpreters are permitted to take a
    static view of routing, sending datagrams which are destined for
    Hosts not directly attached to the proximate net to a known
    Gateway, or Gateways, addressed on the proximate net), as well of
    course, as with fragmentation of datagrams which, although of
    permissible size on one of their proximate nets, are too large
    for the next proximate net (which contains either the target Host
    or still another Gateway).







                                   18
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


         Aside from their role in routing, another property of
    Gateways is also of significance:  Gateways do not deal with
    protocols above IP.  That is, it is an explicit assumption of the
    ARM that the catenet will be "protocol compatible", in the sense
    that no attempt will be made to translate or map between
    dissimilar Host-Host protocols (e.g., TCP and AH-HP) or
    dissimilar Process-level protocols (e.g., ARPANET FTP and EDN
    FTP) at the Gateways.  The justifications for this position are
    somewhat complex; the interested reader is encouraged to see
    Reference [10].  For present purposes, however, it should suffice
    to note that the case against translating/mapping Gateways is a
    sound one, and that, as with the ARMS protocols, the great
    practical virtue of what are sometimes called "IP Gateways" is
    that they are in place and running.

                       "Architectural" Highlights

         As was implied earlier, one of the problems with viewing a
    reference model prescriptively rather than descriptively is that
    the articulation of the model must be more precise than appears
    to be humanly possible.  That the ISORM, in striving for
    superhuman precision, fails to achieve it is not grounds for
    censure.  However, by reaching a degree of apparent precision
    that has enticed at least some of its readers to attempt to use
    it in a prescriptive fashion, the ISORM has introduced a number
    of ambiguities which have been attributed as well to the ARM by
    relative laymen in intercomputer networking whose initial
    exposure to the field was the ISORM. Therefore, we conclude this
    not-very-rigorous paper with a highly informal treatment of
    various points of confusion stemming from attempting to apply the
    ISORM to the ARM.

         (It should be noted, by the way, that one of the most
    striking ambiguities about the ISORM is just what role X.25 plays
    in it:  We have been informed by a few ISORMites that X.25 "is"
    Levels 1-3, and we accepted that as factual until we were told
    during the review process of the present paper that "that's not
    what we believe in the U.K."  What follows, then, is predicated
    on the assumption that the earlier reports were probably but not
    definitely accurate--and if it turns out to be in time to help
    prevent ISO from embracing X.25 exclusively by pointing out some
    of the problems entailed, so much the better.)

    "Customized Parking Garages"

         The typical picture of the ISORM shows what looks like two
    highrises with what looks like two parking garages between them.
    (That is, seven layers of protocol per "Data Terminal Equipment",
    three layers per "Data Circuit Terminating Equipment".)  The
    problem





                                   19
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    is that only one "style" of parking garage--i.e., one which
    presents an X.25 interface--is commonly understood to be
    available to stand beside an ISORM DTE by those who believe that
    ISO has adopted X.25 as its L1-3.  In the ARM, on the other hand,
    no constraints are levied on the Communications Subnetwork
    Processors.  Thus, satellite communications, "Packet Radios",
    "Ethernets" and the like are all accommodated by the ARM.

         Also, the sort of Outboard Processing Environment mentioned
    earlier in which networking protocols are interpreted on behalf
    of the Host in a distributed processing fashion is quite
    comfortably accommodated by the ARM.  This is not to say that one
    couldn't develop an OPE for/to the ISORM, but rather that doing
    so does not appear to us to be natural to it, for at least two
    reasons:  1. The Session Level associates sockets with processes,
    hence it belongs "inboard".  The Presentation Level involves
    considerable bit-diddling, hence it belongs "outboard".  The
    Presentation Level is, unfortunately, above the Session Level.
    This seems to indicate that outboard processing wasn't taken into
    account by the formulators of the ISORM.  2. Although some
    ISORMites have claimed that "X.25 can be used as a Host-Front End
    Protocol", it doesn't look like one to us, even if the ability to
    do end-to-end things via what is nominally the Network interface
    is somewhat suggestive. (Those who believe that you need a
    protocol as strong as TCP below X.25 to support the virtual
    circuit illusion might argue that you've actually outboarded the
    Host-Host layer, but both the X.25 spec and the ISORM appeal to
    protocols above X.25 for full L II functionality.)  Perhaps, with
    sufficient ingenuity, one might use X.25 to convey an H-FP, but
    it seems clear it isn't meant to be one in and of itself.

    "Plenty of Roads"

         Based upon several pictures presented at conferences and in
    articles, DCE's in the X.25-based ISORM appear to many to be
    required to present X.25 interfaces to each other as well as to
    their DTE's.  Metaphorically, the parking garages have single
    bridges between them.  In the ARM, the CSNP-CSNP protocol is
    explicitly outside the model, thus there can be as many "roads"
    as needed between the ARM equivalent to ISORM parking garages.
    This also allays fears about the ability to take advantage of
    alternate routing in X.25 subnets or in X.75 internets (because
    both X.25 and X.75 are "hop-by-hop" oriented, and would not seem
    to allow for alternate routing without revision).











                                   20
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    "Multiple Apartments Per Floor"

         As noted, the ISORM's strictures on inter-entity
    communication within each "highrise" are equivalent to having to
    climb downstairs and then back up to visit another apartment on
    your own floor.  The ARM explicitly expects PI's within a layer
    to interface directly with one another when appropriate,
    metaphorically giving the effect of multiple apartments on each
    floor off a common hallway.  (Also, for those who believe the
    ISORM implies only one protocol/apartment per layer/story, again
    the ARM is more flexible.)

    "Elevators"

         The ISORM is widely construed as requiring each layer to be
    traversed on every transmission (although there are rumors of the
    forthcoming introduction of "null layers"), giving the effect of
    having to climb all seven stories' worth of stairs every time you
    enter the highrise.  In the ARM, only Layer I, the Network
    Interface layer, must be traversed; protocols in Layers II and/or
    III need not come into play, giving the effect of being able to
    take an elevator rather than climb the stairs.

    "Straight Clotheslines"

         Because they appear to have to go down to L3 for their
    initiation, the ISORM's Session and Transport connections are, to
    us, metaphorically tangled clotheslines; the ARM's logical
    connections are straight (and go from the second floor to the
    second floor without needing a pole that gets in the way of the
    folks on the third floor--if that doesn't make a weak metaphor
    totally feeble.)

    "Townhouse Styles Available"

         Should ISORM Level 6 and 7 protocols eventuate which are
    desirable, the "two-story townhouse style apartments" they
    represent can be erected on an ARM L I - L II (Network Interface
    and Host-Host Layers) "foundation".  With some clever carpentry,
    even ISORM L5 might be cobbled in.

    "Manned Customs Sheds"

         Although it's straining the architectural metaphor quite
    hard, one of the unfortunate implications of the ISORM's failure
    to address operating system integration issues is that the notion
    of "Expedited Data" exchanges between "peer entities" might only
    amount to an SST flight to a foreign land where there's no one on
    duty at






                                   21
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    the Customs Shed (and the door to the rest of the airport is
    locked from the other side).  By clearly designating the
    Host-Host (L II) mechanism(s) which are to be used by Layer III
    (Process-Level/ Applications) protocols to convey "out-of-band
    signals", the ARM gives the effect of keeping the Customs Sheds
    manned at all times. (It should be noted, by the way, that we
    acknowledge the difficulty of addressing system integration
    issues without biasing the discussion toward particular systems;
    we feel, however, that not trying to do so is far worse than
    trying and failing to avoid all parochialism.)

    "Ready For Immediate Occupancy"

         The ARM protocol suite has been implemented on a number of
    different operating systems.  The ISORM protocol suite
    "officially" offers at most (and not in the U.K., it should be
    recalled) only the highly constraining functionality of X.25 as
    L1-L3; L4-L7 are still in the design and agreement processes,
    after which they must presumably be subjected to stringent
    checkout in multiple implementations before becoming useful
    standards.  The metaphorical highrises, then, are years away from
    being fit for occupancy, even if one is willing to accept the
    taste of the interior decorators who seem to insist on building
    in numerous features of dubious utility and making you take fully
    furnished apartments whether you like it or not; the ARM
    buildings, on the other hand, offer stoves and refrigerators, but
    there's plenty of room for your own furniture-- and they're ready
    for immediate occupancy.

                               Conclusion

         The architectural metaphor might have been overly extended
    as it was, but it could have been drawn out even further to point
    up more issues on which the ARM appears to us to be superior to
    the ISORM, if our primary concern were which is "better".  In
    fairness, the one issue it omitted which many would take to be in
    the ISORM's favor is that "vendor support" of interpreters of the
    ISORM protocols will eventually amount to a desirable
    "prefabrication", while the building of the ARM PI's is believed
    to be labor-intensive.  That would indeed be a good point, if it
    were well-founded. Unfortunately for its proponents, however,
    close scrutiny of the vendor support idea suggests that it is
    largely illusory (vide [11]), especially in light of the amount
    of time it will take for the international standardization
    process to run its course, and the likelihood that specification
    ambiguities and optional features will handicap interoperability.
    Rather than extend the present paper even further, then, it seems
    fair to conclude that with the possible exception of "vendor
    support" (with which exception we take






                                   22
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


    exception, for it should be noted that a number of vendors are
    already offering support for TCP/IP), the ARPANET Reference Model
    and the protocols designed in conformance with it are at least
    worthy of consideration by anybody who's planning to do real
    inter- computer networking in the next several years--especially
    if they have operating systems with counterparts on the present
    ARPANET, so that most if not all of the labor intensive part has
    been taken care of already--irrespective of one's views on how
    good the ISORM protocols eventually will be.

                             Acknowledgments

         Although it has seldom been more germane to observe that
    "any remaining shortcomings are the author's responsibility",
    this paper has benefited tremendously from the close scrutiny and
    constructive comments of several distinguished members of both
    the research community and the (DoD) Protocol Standards Technical
    Panel.  The author is not only extremely grateful to, but is also
    extremely pleased to acknowledge his indebtedness to the
    following individuals (cited in alphabetical order):  Mr. Trevor
    Benjamin, Royal Signals and Radar Establishment (U.K.); Mr.
    Edward Cain, Chairman of the PSTP; Dr. Vinton Cerf, DARPA/IPTO
    (at the time this was written); Dr. David Clark, M.I.T.
    Laboratory for Computer Science (formerly Project MAC); and Dr.
    Jonathan Postel, U.S.C. Information Sciences Institute.
    Posterity may or may not thank them for their role in turning an
    act of personal catharsis into a fair semblance of a "real"
    paper, but the author emphatically does.

    Notes and References

    [1]  It almost goes without saying that the subtheme is certainly
         not intended to be a definitive statement of the relative
         merits of the two approaches, although, as will be seen, the
         ARM comes out ahead, in our view.  But then, the reader
         might well say, what else should I expect from a paper
         written by one of the developers of the ARM?  To attempt to
         dispel thoughts of prejudgment, the author would observe
         that although he is indeed an Old Network Boy of the
         ARPANET, he was not a member of the TCP/IP (the keystone of
         the current ARM) design team, and that he began looking into
         ARM "vs." ISORM from the position of "a plague on both your
         houses".  That he has concluded that the differences between
         TCP/IP-based ARM intercomputer networking and X.25-based
         ISORM intercomputer networking are like day and night may be
         taken as indicative of something, but that he also holds
         that the day is at least partly cloudy and the night is not
         altogether moonless should at least meliorate fears of
         prejudice.  That is, of course the






                                   23
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


         ISORM has its merits and the ARM its demerits neither of
         which are dealt with here.  But "A Perspective" really means
         "My Perspective", and the author really is more concerned in
         this context with exposition of the ARM than with twitting
         the ISORM, even if he couldn't resist including the
         comparisons subtheme because of the one-sidedness of the
         ISORM publicity he has perceived of late.

    [2]  Source material for this section was primarily drawn from
         the author's personal experience as a member the NWG and
         from numerous conversations with Dr. Jonathan B. Postel,
         long-time Chairman of the NWG and participant in the design
         meetings prior to the author's involvement.  (See also
         Acknowledgments.)

    [3]  Padlipsky, M. A. "The Elements of Networking Style", M81-41,
         The MITRE Corporation, Bedford, MA, October 1981

    [4]  Yes, the notion of using "protocols" might well count as an
         axiom in its own right, but, no, we're not going to pretend
         to be that rigorous.

    [5]  That is, about three tenths of the possible span of
         "Session" functionality, which has to do with making up for
         the lack of Well-Known Sockets, isn't subsumed by the ARM
         Process-Level protocols, but the rest is, or could be.

    [6]  Davidson, J., et al., "The ARPANET Telnet Protocol: Its
         Purpose, Principles, Implementation, and Impact on Host
         Operating System Design,"  Proc Fifth Data Communications
         Symposium, ACM/IEEE, Snowbird, Utah, September, 1977.

    [7]  See Proceedings of the 1970 SJCC, "Resource Sharing Computer
         Networks" session, and Proceedings of the 1972 SJCC, "The
         ARPA Network" session for the standard open literature
         references to the early ARPANET.  Other source material for
         this chapter is drawn from the author's personal
         conversations with TCP/IP's principal developers; see also
         Acknowledgments.

    [8]  A strong case can be made for desiring that the comm subnets
         make a "datagram" (or "connectionless") mode of interface
         available, based upon the desire to support such
         functionality as Packetized Speech, broadcast addressing,
         and mobile subscribers, among other things.  For a more
         complete description of this point of view, see [9].  For
         present








                                   24
    RFC 871                                            September 1982


         purposes, we do not cite the presentation of a datagram mode
         interface as a design constraint because it is
         possible--albeit undesirable--to operate IP "on top of" a
         comm subnet which does not present such an interface.

    [9]  Cerf, V. G. and R. E. Lyons, "Military Requirements for
         Packet-Switched Networks and for Their Protocol
         Standardization" Proc EASCON 1982.

    [10] Padlipsky, M. A., "Gateways, Architectures and Heffalumps",
         M82-51, The MITRE Corporation, Bedford, MA, September 1982.

    [11] ---------- "The Illusion of Vendor Support", M82-49, The
         MITRE Corporation, Bedford, MA, September 1982.

    NOTE:  Figure 1: ARM in the Abstract, and Figure 2: ARMS,
    Somewhat Particularized, may be obtained by writing to:  Mike
    Padlipsky, MITRE Corporation, P.O. Box 208, Bedford,
    Massachusetts 01730, or sending computer mail to
    Padlipsky@USC-ISIA.



































                                   25