Network Working Group                                 RFC Editor, et al.
Request for Comments: 2555                                       USC/ISI
Category: Informational                                     7 April 1999


                           30 Years of RFCs

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction.................................................. 2
  2.  Reflections................................................... 2
  3.  The First Pebble: Publication of RFC 1........................ 3
  4.  RFCs - The Great Conversation................................. 5
  5.  Reflecting on 30 years of RFCs................................ 9
  6.  Favorite RFCs -- The First 30 Years...........................14
  7.  Security Considerations.......................................15
  8.  Acknowledgments...............................................15
  9.  Authors' Addresses............................................15
  10. APPENDIX - RFC 1..............................................17
  11. Full Copyright Statement......................................18





















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1. Introduction - Robert Braden

  Thirty years ago today, the first Request for Comments document,
  RFC 1, was published at UCLA (ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc1.txt).
  This was the first of a series that currently contains more than 2500
  documents on computer networking, collected, archived, and edited by
  Jon Postel for 28 years.  Jon has left us, but this 30th anniversary
  tribute to the RFC series is assembled in grateful admiration for his
  massive contribution.

  The rest of this document contains a brief recollection from the
  present RFC Editor Joyce K. Reynolds, followed by recollections from
  three pioneers: Steve Crocker who wrote RFC 1, Vint Cerf whose long-
  range vision continues to guide us, and Jake Feinler who played a key
  role in the middle years of the RFC series.

2. Reflections - Joyce K. Reynolds

  A very long time ago when I was dabbling in IP network number and
  protocol parameter assignments with Jon Postel, gateways were still
  "dumb", the Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP) was in its infancy and
  TOPS-20 was in its heyday.  I was aware of the Request for Comments
  (RFCs) document series, with Jon as the RFC Editor.  I really didn't
  know much of the innerworkings of what the task entailed.  It was
  Jon's job and he quietly went about publishing documents for the
  ARPANET community.

  Meanwhile, Jon and I would have meetings in his office to go over our
  specific tasks of the day.  One day, I began to notice that a pile of
  folders sitting to one side of his desk seemed to be growing.  A few
  weeks later the pile had turned into two stacks of folders.  I asked
  him what they were.  Apparently, they contained documents for RFC
  publication.  Jon was trying to keep up with the increasing quantity
  of submissions for RFC publication.

  I mentioned to him one day that he should learn to let go of some of
  his work load and task it on to other people.  He listened intently,
  but didn't comment.  The very next day, Jon wheeled a computer stand
  into my office which was stacked with those documents from his desk
  intended for RFC publication.  He had a big Cheshire cat grin on his
  face and stated, "I'm letting go!", and walked away.

  At the top of the stack was a big red three ring notebook.  Inside
  contained the "NLS Textbook", which was prepared at ISI by Jon, Lynne
  Sims and Linda Sato for use on ISI's TENEX and TOPS-20 systems.  Upon
  reading its contents, I learned that the NLS system was designed to
  help people work with information on a computer.  It included a wide
  range of tools, from a simple set of commands for writing, reading



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  and printing documents to sophisticated methods for retrieving and
  communication information.  NLS was the system Jon used to write,
  edit and create the RFCs.  Thus began my indoctrination to the RFC
  publication series.

  Operating systems and computers have changed over the years, but
  Jon's perseverance about the consistency of the RFC style and quality
  of the documents remained true.  Unfortunately, Jon did not live to
  see the 30th Anniversary of this series that he unfailingly nurtured.
  Yet, the spirit of the RFC publication series continues as we
  approach the new millennium.  Jon would be proud.

3. The First Pebble: Publication of RFC 1 - Steve Crocker

  RFC 1, "Host Software", issued thirty years ago on April 7, 1969
  outlined some thoughts and initial experiments.  It was a modest and
  entirely forgettable memo, but it has significance because it was
  part of a broad initiative whose impact is still with us today.

  At the time RFC 1 was written, the ARPANET was still under design.
  Bolt, Beranek and Newman had won the all-important contract to build
  and operate the Interface Message Processors or "IMPs", the
  forerunners of the modern routers.  They were each the size of a
  refrigerator and cost about $100,000 in 1969 dollars.

  The network was scheduled to be deployed among the research sites
  supported by ARPA's Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO).
  The first four nodes were to be at UCLA, SRI, University of
  California, Santa Barbara and University of Utah.  The first
  installation, at UCLA, was set for September 1, 1969.

  Although there had been considerable planning of the topology, leased
  lines, modems and IMPs, there was little organization or planning
  regarding network applications.  It was assumed the research sites
  would figure it out.  This turned out to be a brilliant management
  decision at ARPA.

  Previously, in the summer of 1968, a handful of graduate students and
  staff members from the four sites were called together to discuss the
  forthcoming network.  There was only a basic outline.  BBN had not
  yet won the contract, and there was no technical specification for
  the network's operation.  At the first meeting, we scheduled future
  meetings at each of the other laboratories, thus setting the stage
  for today's thrice yearly movable feast.  Over the next couple of
  years, the group grew substantially and we found ourselves with
  overflow crowds of fifty to a hundred people at Network Working Group
  meetings.  Compared to modern IETF meetings all over the world with
  attendance in excess of 1,000 people and several dozen active working



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  groups, the early Network Working Groups were small and tame, but
  they seemed large and only barely manageable at the time.  One
  tradition that doesn't seem to have changed at all is the spirit of
  unrestrained participation in working group meetings.

  Our initial group met a handful of times in the summer and fall of
  1968 and winter 1969.  Our earliest meetings were unhampered by
  knowledge of what the network would look like or how it would
  interact with the hosts.  Depending on your point of view, this
  either allowed us or forced us to think about broader and grander
  topics.  We recognized we would eventually have to get around to
  dealing with message formats and other specific details of low-level
  protocols, but our first thoughts focused on what applications the
  network might support.  In our view, the 50 kilobit per second
  communication lines being used for the ARPANET seemed slow, and we
  worried that it might be hard to provide high-quality interactive
  service across the network.  I wish we had not been so accurate!

  When BBN issued its Host-IMP specification in spring 1969, our
  freedom to wander over broad and grand topics ended.  Before then,
  however, we tried to consider the most general designs and the most
  exciting applications.  One thought that captured our imagination was
  the idea of downloading a small interpretative program at the
  beginning of a session.  The downloaded program could then control
  the interactions and make efficient use of the narrow bandwidth
  between the user's local machine and the back-end system the user was
  interacting with. Jeff Rulifson at SRI was the prime mover of this
  line of thinking, and he took a crack at designing a Decode-Encode
  Language (DEL) [RFC 5].  Michel Elie, visiting at UCLA from France,
  worked on this idea further and published Proposal for a Network
  Interchange Language (NIL) [RFC 51].  The emergence of Java and
  ActiveX in the last few years finally brings those early ideas to
  fruition, and we're not done yet.  I think we will continue to see
  striking advances in combining communication and computing.

  I have already suggested that the early RFCs and the associated
  Network Working Group laid the foundation for the Internet
  Engineering Task Force.  Two all-important aspects of the early work
  deserve mention, although they're completely evident to anyone who
  participates in the process today.  First, the technical direction we
  chose from the beginning was an open architecture based on multiple
  layers of protocol.  We were frankly too scared to imagine that we
  could define an all-inclusive set of protocols that would serve
  indefinitely.  We envisioned a continual process of evolution and
  addition, and obviously this is what's happened.






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  The RFCs themselves also represented a certain sense of fear.  After
  several months of meetings, we felt obliged to write down our
  thoughts.  We parceled out the work and wrote the initial batch of
  memos.  In addition to participating in the technical design, I took
  on the administrative function of setting up a simple scheme for
  numbering and distributing the notes.  Mindful that our group was
  informal, junior and unchartered, I wanted to emphasize these notes
  were the beginning of a dialog and not an assertion of control.

  It's now been thirty years since the first RFCs were issued.  At the
  time, I believed the notes were temporary and the entire series would
  die off in a year or so once the network was running.  Thanks to the
  spectacular efforts of the entire community and the perseverance and
  dedication of Jon Postel, Joyce Reynolds and their crew, the humble
  series of Requests for Comments evolved and thrived.  It became the
  mainstay for sharing technical designs in the Internet community and
  the archetype for other communities as well.  Like the Sorcerer's
  Apprentice, we succeeded beyond our wildest dreams and our worst
  fears.

4. RFCs - The Great Conversation - Vint Cerf

  A long time ago, in a network far, far away...

  Considering the movement of planet Earth around the Sun and the Sun
  around the Milky Way galaxy, that first network IS far away in the
  relativistic sense. It takes 200 million years for the Sun to make
  its way around the galaxy, so thirty years is only an eyeblink on the
  galactic clock. But what a marvelous thirty years it has been! The
  RFCs document the odyssey of the ARPANET and, later, the Internet, as
  its creators and netizens explore, discover, build, re-build, argue
  and resolve questions of design, concepts and applications of
  computer networking.

  It has been ultimately fascinating to watch the transformation of the
  RFCs themselves from their earliest, tentative dialog form to today's
  much more structured character. The growth of applications such as
  email, bulletin boards and the world wide web have had much to do
  with that transformation, but so has the scale and impact of the
  Internet on our social and economic fabric. As the Internet has taken
  on greater economic importance, the standards documented in the RFCs
  have become more important and the RFCs more formal. The dialog has
  moved to other venues as technology has changed and the working
  styles have adapted.







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  Hiding in the history of the RFCs is the history of human
  institutions for achieving cooperative work. And also hiding in that
  history are some heroes that haven't been acknowledged.  On this
  thirtieth anniversary, I am grateful for the opportunity to
  acknowledge some of them. It would be possible to fill a book with
  such names - mostly of the authors of the RFCs, but as this must be a
  brief contribution, I want to mention four of them in particular:
  Steve Crocker, Jon Postel, Joyce K. Reynolds and Bob Braden.

  Steve Crocker is a modest man and would likely never make the
  observation that while the contents of RFC 1 might have been entirely
  forgettable, the act of writing RFC 1 was indicative of the brave and
  ultimately clear-visioned leadership that he brought to a journey
  into the unknown. There were no guides in those days - computer
  networking was new and few historical milestones prepared us for what
  lay ahead. Steve's ability to accommodate a diversity of views, to
  synthesize them into coherence and, like Tom Sawyer, to persuade
  others that they wanted to devote their time to working on the
  problems that lay in the path of progress can be found in the early
  RFCs and in the Network Working Group meetings that Steve led.

  In the later work on Internet, I did my best to emulate the framework
  that Steve invented: the International Network Working Group (INWG)
  and its INWG Notes, the Internet Working Group and its Internet
  Experiment Notes (IENs) were brazen knock-offs of Steve's
  organizational vision and style.

  It is doubtful that the RFCs would be the quality body of material
  they are today were it not for Jonathan Postel's devotion to them
  from the start. Somehow, Jon knew, even thirty years ago that it
  might be important to document what was done and why, to say nothing
  of trying to capture the debate for the benefit of future networkers
  wondering how we'd reached some of the conclusions we did (and
  probably shake their heads...).

  Jon was the network's Boswell, but it was his devotion to quality and
  his remarkable mix of technical and editing skills that permeate many
  of the more monumental RFCs that dealt with what we now consider the
  TCP/IP standards. Many bad design decisions were re-worked thanks to
  Jon's stubborn determination that we all get it "right" - as the
  editor, he simply would not let something go out that didn't meet his
  personal quality filter. There were times when we moaned and
  complained, hollered and harangued, but in the end, most of the time,
  Jon was right and we knew it.







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  Joyce K. Reynolds was at Jon's side for much of the time that Jon was
  the RFC editor and as has been observed, they functioned in unison
  like a matched pair of superconducting electrons - and
  superconductors they were of the RFC series. For all practical
  purposes, it was impossible to tell which of the two had edited any
  particular RFC. Joyce's passion for quality has matched Jon's and
  continues to this day. And she has the same subtle, puckish sense of
  humor that emerged at unexpected moments in Jon's stewardship. One
  example that affected me personally was Joyce's assignment of number
  2468 to the RFC written to remember Jon.  I never would have thought
  of that, and it was done so subtly that it didn't even ring a bell
  until someone sent me an email asking whether this was a coincidence.
  In analog to classical mystery stories, the editor did it.

  Another unsung hero in the RFC saga is Bob Braden - another man whose
  modesty belies contributions of long-standing and monumental
  proportions. It is my speculation that much of the quality of the
  RFCs can be traced to consultations among the USC/ISI team, including
  Jon, Joyce and Bob among others. Of course, RFC 1122 and 1123 stand
  as two enormous contributions to the clarity of the Internet
  standards. For that task alone, Bob deserves tremendous appreciation,
  but he has led the End-to-End Research Group for many years out of
  which has come some of the most important RFCs that refine our
  understanding of optimal implementation of the protocols, especially
  TCP.

  When the RFCs were first produced, they had an almost 19th century
  character to them - letters exchanged in public debating the merits
  of various design choices for protocols in the ARPANET. As email and
  bulletin boards emerged from the fertile fabric of the network, the
  far-flung participants in this historic dialog began to make
  increasing use of the online medium to carry out the discussion -
  reducing the need for documenting the debate in the RFCs and, in some
  respects, leaving historians somewhat impoverished in the process.
  RFCs slowly became conclusions rather than debates.

  Jon permitted publication of items other than purely technical
  documents in this series. Hence one finds poetry, humor (especially
  the April 1 RFCs which are as funny today as they were when they were
  published), and reprints of valuable reference material mixed into
  the documents prepared by the network working groups.

  In the early 1970s, the Advanced Research Projects Agency was
  conducting several parallel research programs into packet switching
  technology, after the stunning success of this idea in the ARPANET.
  Among these were the Packet Radio Network, the Atlantic Packet
  Satellite Network and the Internet projects. These each spawned note
  series akin to but parallel to the RFCs. PRNET Notes, ARPA Satellite



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  System Notes (bearing the obvious and unfortunate acronym...),
  Internet Experiment Notes (IENs), and so on. After the Internet
  protocols were mandated to be used on the ARPANET and other DARPA-
  sponsored networks in January 1983 (SATNET actually converted before
  that), Internet- related notes were merged into the RFC series. For a
  time, after the Internet project seemed destined to bear fruit, IENs
  were published in parallel with RFCs. A few voices, Danny Cohen's in
  particular (who was then at USC/ISI with Jon Postel) suggested that
  separate series were a mistake and that it would be a lot easier to
  maintain and to search a single series. Hindsight seems to have
  proven Danny right as the RFC series, with its dedicated editors,
  seems to have borne the test of time far better than its more
  ephemeral counterparts.

  As the organizations associated with Internet continued to evolve,
  one sees the RFCs adapting to changed circumstances. Perhaps the most
  powerful influence can be seen from the evolution of the Internet
  Engineering Task Force from just one of several task forces whose
  chairpersons formed the Internet Activities Board to the dominant,
  global Internet Standards development organization, managed by its
  Internet Engineering Steering Group and operating under the auspices
  of the Internet Society. The process of producing "standards-track"
  RFCs is now far more rigorous than it once was, carries far more
  impact on a burgeoning industry, and has spawned its own, relatively
  informal "Internet Drafts" series of short-lived documents forming
  the working set of the IETF working groups.

  The dialogue that once characterized the early RFCs has given way to
  thrice-annual face-to-face meetings of the IETF and enormous
  quantities of email, as well as a growing amount of group-interactive
  work through chat rooms, shared white boards and even more elaborate
  multicast conferences. The parallelism and the increasing quantity of
  transient dialogue surrounding the evolution of the Internet has made
  the task of technology historians considerably more difficult,
  although one can sense a counter-balancing through the phenomenal
  amount of information accumulating in the World Wide Web. Even casual
  searches often turn up some surprising and sometimes embarrassing old
  memoranda - a number of which were once paper but which have been
  rendered into bits by some enterprising volunteer.

  The RFCs, begun so tentatively thirty years ago, and persistently
  edited and maintained by Jon Postel and his colleagues at USC/ISI,
  tell a remarkable story of exploration, achievement, and dedication
  by a growing mass of internauts who will not sleep until the Internet
  truly is for everyone. It is in that spirit that this remembrance is
  offered, and in particular, in memory of our much loved colleague,
  Jon Postel, without whose personal commitment to this archive, the
  story might have been vastly different and not nearly as remarkable.



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5. Reflecting on 30 years of RFCs - Jake Feinler

  By now we know that the first RFC was published on April 7, 1969 by
  Steve Crocker.  It was entitled "Host Software".  The second RFC was
  published on April 9, 1969 by Bill Duvall of SRI International (then
  called Stanford Research Institute or SRI), and it too was entitled
  "Host Software".  RFC 2 was a response to suggestions made in RFC 1-
  -and so the dialog began.

  Steve proposed 2 experiments in RFC 1:

  "1)  SRI is currently modifying their on-line retrieval system which
  will be the major software component of the Network Documentation
  Center [or The SRI NIC as it soon came to be known] so that it can be
  modified with Model 35 teletypes.  The control of the teletypes will
  be written in DEL [Decode-Encode Language].  All sites will write DEL
  compilers and use NLS [SRI Doug Engelbart's oNLine System] through
  the DEL program".

  "2)  SRI will write a DEL front end for full NLS, graphics included.
  UCLA and UTAH will use NLS with graphics".

  RFC 2, issued 2 days later, proposed detailed procedures for
  connecting to the NLS documentation system across the network.  Steve
  may think RFC 1 was an "entirely forgettable" document; however, as
  an information person, I beg to differ with him.  The concepts
  presented in this first dialog were mind boggling, and eventually led
  to the kind of network interchange we are all using on the web today.
  (Fortunately, we have graduated beyond DEL and Model 35 teletypes!)

  RFC 1 was, I believe, a paper document.  RFC 2 was produced online
  via the SRI NLS system and was entered into the online SRI NLS
  Journal.  However, it was probably mailed to each recipient via snail
  mail by the NIC, as email and the File Transfer Protocol (FTP) had
  not yet been invented.

  RFC 3, again by Steve Crocker, was entitled, "Documentation
  Conventions;" and we see that already the need for a few ground rules
  was surfacing. More ground-breaking concepts were introduced in this
  RFC.  It stated that:

  "The Network Working Group (NWG) is concerned with the HOST software,
  the strategies for using the network, and the initial experiments
  with the network.  Documentation of the NWG's effort is through notes
  such as this.  Notes may be produced at any site by anybody and
  included in this series".





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  It goes on to say:

  "The content of a NWG note may be any thought, suggestion,
  etc.related to the Host software or other aspect of the network.
  Notes are encouraged to be timely rather than polished.
  Philosophical positions without examples or other specifics, specific
  suggestions or implementation techniques without introductory or
  background explanation, and explicit questions without any attempted
  answers are all acceptable.  The minimum length for a NWG note is one
  sentence".

  "These standards (or lack of them) are stated explicitly for two
  reasons.  First, there is a tendency to view a written statement as
  discussion of considerably less than authoritative ideas.  Second,
  there is a natural hesitancy to publish something unpolished, and we
  hope to ease this inhibition".

  Steve asked that this RFC be sent to a distribution list consisting
  of:

       Bob Kahn, BBN
       Larry Roberts, ARPA
       Steve Carr, UCLA
       Jeff Rulifson, UTAH
       Ron Stoughton, UCSB
       Steve Crocker, UCLA

  Thus by the time the third RFC was published, many of the concepts of
  how to do business in this new networking environment had been
  established--there would be a working group of implementers (NWG)
  actually discussing and trying things out; ideas were to be free-
  wheeling; communications would be informal; documents would be
  deposited (online when possible) at the NIC and distributed freely to
  members of the working group; and anyone with something to contribute
  could come to the party.  With this one document a swath was
  instantly cut through miles of red tape and pedantic process.  Was
  this radical for the times or what!  And we were only up to RFC 3!

  Many more RFCs followed and the SRI NLS Journal became the
  bibliographic search service of the ARPANET.  It differed from other
  search services of the time in one important respect:  when you got a
  "hit" searching the journal online, not only did you get a citation
  telling you such things as the author and title; you got an
  associated little string of text called a "link".  If you used a
  command called "jump to link",  voila!  you got the full text of the
  document.  You did not have to go to the library, or send an order
  off to an issuing agency to get a copy of the document, as was the
  custom with other search services of the time.  The whole document



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  itself was right there immediately!

  Also, any document submitted to the journal could not be changed.
  New versions could be submitted, and these superceded old versions,
  but again the new versions could not be changed.  Each document was
  given a unique identifying number, so it was easy to track.  These
  features were useful in a fast-moving environment.  Documents often
  went through several drafts before they were finally issued as an RFC
  or other official document, and being able to track versions was very
  useful.

  The SRI NLS Journal was revolutionary for the time; however, access
  to it online presented several operational problems.  Host computers
  were small and crowded, and the network was growing by leaps and
  bounds; so connections had to be timed out and broken to give
  everyone a chance at access.  Also, the rest of the world was still a
  paper world (and there were no scanners or laser printers, folks!),
  so the NIC still did a brisk business sending out paper documents to
  requestors.

  By 1972 when I became Principal Investigator for the NIC project, the
  ARPANET was growing rapidly, and more and more hosts were being
  attached to it.  Each host was required to have a technical contact
  known as the Technical Liaison, and most of the Liaison were also
  members of the NWG.  Each Liaison was sent a set of documents by the
  NIC called "functional documents" which included the Protocol
  Handbook (first issued by BBN and later published by the NIC.)  The
  content of the Protocol Handbook was made up of key RFCs and a
  document called "BBN 1822" which specified the Host-to-Imp protocol.

  The NWG informed the NIC as to which documents should be included in
  the handbook; and the NIC assembled, published, and distributed the
  book. Alex McKenzie of BBN helped the NIC with the first version of
  the handbook, but soon a young fellow, newly out of grad school,
  named Jon Postel joined the NWG and became the NIC's contact and
  ARPA's spokesperson for what should be issued in the Protocol
  Handbook.

  No one who is familiar with the RFCs can think of them without
  thinking of Dr. Jonathan Postel.  He was "Mister RFC" to most of us.
  Jon worked at SRI in the seventies and had the office next to mine.
  We were both members of Doug Engelbart's Augmentation Research
  Center.  Not only was Jon a brilliant computer scientist, he also
  cared deeply about the process of disseminating information and
  establishing a methodology for working in a networking environment.
  We often had conversations way into the wee hours talking about ways
  to do this "right".  The network owes Jon a debt of gratitude for his
  dedication to the perpetuation of the RFCs.  His work, along with



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  that of his staff, the NWG, the IETF, the various NICs, and CNRI to
  keep this set of documents viable over the years was, and continues
  to be, a labor of love.

  Jon left SRI in 1976 to join USC-ISI, but by that time the die was
  cast, and the RFCs, NWG, Liaison, and the NIC were part of the
  network's way of doing business. However, the SRI NLS Journal system
  was becoming too big for its host computer and could not handle the
  number of users trying to access it.  Email and FTP had been
  implemented by now, so the NIC developed methodology for delivering
  information to users via distributed information servers across the
  network.  A user could request an RFC by email from his host computer
  and have it automatically delivered to his mailbox.  Users could also
  purchase hardcopy subscriptions to the RFCs and copies of the
  Protocol Handbook, if they did not have network access.

  The NIC worked with Jon, ARPA, DCA, NSF, other NICs, and other
  agencies to have secondary reference sets of RFCs easily accessible
  to implementers throughout the world.  The RFCs were also shared
  freely with official standards bodies, manufacturers and vendors,
  other working groups, and universities.  None of the RFCs were ever
  restricted or classified.  This was no mean feat when you consider
  that they were being funded by DoD during the height of the Cold War.

  Many of us worked very hard in the early days to establish the RFCs
  as the official set of technical notes for the development of the
  Internet.  This was not an easy job.  There were suggestions for many
  parallel efforts and splinter groups.  There were naysayers all along
  the way because this was a new way of doing things, and the ARPANET
  was "coloring outside the lines" so to speak.  Jon, as Editor-in-
  Chief was criticized because the RFCs were not issued by an
  "official" standards body, and the NIC was criticized because it was
  not an "official" document issuing agency.  We both strived to marry
  the new way of doing business with the old, and fortunately were
  usually supported by our government sponsors, who themselves were
  breaking new ground.

  Many RFCs were the end result of months of heated discussion and
  implementation.  Authoring one of them was not for the faint of
  heart.  Feelings often ran high as to what was the "right" way to go.
  Heated arguments sometimes ensued.  Usually they were confined to
  substance, but sometimes they got personal.  Jon would often step in
  and arbitrate.  Eventually the NWG or the Sponsors had to say, "It's
  a wrap.  Issue a final RFC".  Jon, as Editor-in-Chief of the RFCs,
  often took merciless flak from those who wanted to continue
  discussing and implementing, or those whose ideas were left on the
  cutting room floor.  Somehow he always managed to get past these
  controversies with style and grace and move on.  We owe him and



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  others, who served on the NWG or authored RFCs, an extreme debt of
  gratitude for their contributions and dedication.

  At no time was the controversy worse than it was when DoD adopted
  TCP/IP as its official host-to-host protocols for communications
  networks.  In March 1982, a military directive was issued by the
  Under Secretary of Defense, Richard DeLauer.  It simply stated that
  the use of TCP and IP was mandatory for DoD communications networks.
  Bear in mind that a military directive is not something you discuss -
  the time for discussion is long over when one is issued.  Rather a
  military directive is something you DO.  The ARPANET and its
  successor, the Defense Data Network, were military networks, so the
  gauntlet was down and the race was on to prove whether the new
  technology could do the job on a real operational network.  You have
  no idea what chaos and controversy that little 2-page directive
  caused on the network.  (But that's a story for another time.)
  However, that directive, along with RFCs 791 and 793 (IP and TCP)
  gave the RFCs as a group of technical documents stature and
  recognition throughout the world.  (And yes, TCP/IP certainly did do
  the job!)

  Jon and I were both government contractors, so of course followed the
  directions of our contracting officers.  He was mainly under contract
  to ARPA, whereas the NIC was mainly under contract to DCA.  BBN was
  another key contractor.  For the most part we all worked as a team.
  However, there was frequent turnover in military personnel assigned
  to both the ARPANET and the DDN, and we all collaborated to try to
  get all the new participants informed as to what was available to
  them when they joined the network.  We also tried to foster
  collaboration rather than duplication of effort, when it was
  appropriate.  The NWG (or IETF as it is now known) and the RFCs
  became the main vehicles for interagency collaboration as the DoD
  protocols began to be used on other government, academic, and
  commercial networks.

  I left SRI and the NIC project in 1989.  At that time there were
  about 30,000 hosts on what was becoming known as the Internet, and
  just over a 1000 RFCs had been issued.  Today there are millions of
  hosts on the Internet, and we are well past the 3000 mark for RFCs.
  It was great fun to be a part of what turned out to be a
  technological revolution.   It is heartwarming to see that the RFCs
  are still being issued by the IETF, and that they are still largely
  based on ideas that have been discussed and implemented; that the
  concepts of online working groups and distributed information servers
  are a way of life; that those little "links" (officially known as
  hypertext) have revolutionized the delivery of documents; and that
  the government, academia, and business are now all playing the same
  game for fun and profit.  (Oh yes, I'm happy to see that Steve's idea



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  for integrated text and graphics has finally come to fruition,
  although that work took a little longer than 2 days.)

6. Favorite RFCs -- The First 30 Years - Celeste Anderson

  Five years ago, Jon Postel and I had wanted to publish a 25th RFC
  anniversary book, but, alas, we were both too busy working on other
  projects.  We determined then that we should commemorate the
  thirtieth anniversary by collecting together thirty "RFC Editors'
  Choice" RFCs based on original ideas expressed throughout the first
  30 years of their existence.

  Jon's untimely death in October 1998 prevented us from completing
  this goal.  We did, however, start to put online some of the early
  RFCs, including RFC 1.  We weren't sure whether we were going to try
  to make them look as close to the typewritten originals as possible,
  or to make a few adjustments and format them according to the latest
  RFC style.  Those of you who still have your copies of RFC 1 will
  note the concessions we made to NROFF the online version.  The hand-
  drawn diagrams of the early RFCs also present interesting challenges
  for conversion into ASCII format.

  There are still opportunities to assist the RFC Editor to put many of
  the early RFCs online.  Check the URL:
  http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc-online.html for more information on this
  project.

  In memory of Jon, we are compiling a book for publication next year
  of "Favorite RFCs -- The First 30 Years".

  We have set up a web interface at

          http://www.rfc-editor.org/voterfc.html

  for tabulating votes and recording the responses.  We will accept
  email as well.  Please send your email responses to: [email protected].
  We prefer votes accompanied by explanations for the vote choice.

  We reserve the right to add to the list several RFCs that Jon Postel
  had already selected for the collection.  Voting closes December 31,
  1999.










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7. Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this commemorative RFC.

8. Acknowledgments

  Thank you to all the authors who contributed to this RFC on short
  notice.  Thanks also to Fred Baker and Eve Schooler who goaded us
  into action.  A special acknowledgment to Eitetsu Baumgardner, a
  student at USC, who NROFFed this document and who assisted in the
  formatting of RFCs 1, 54, and 62, converting hand-drawn diagrams into
  ASCII format.

9. Authors' Addresses

  Robert Braden
  USC/Information Sciences Institute
  4676 Admiralty Way #1001
  Marina del Rey, CA 90292

  Phone:  +1 310-822-1511
  Fax:    +1 310 823 6714
  EMail:  [email protected]


  Joyce K. Reynolds
  USC/Information Sciences Institute
  4676 Admiralty Way #1001
  Marina del Rey, CA 90292

  Phone:  +1 310-822-1511
  Fax:    +1 310-823-6714
  EMail:  [email protected]


  Steve Crocker
  Steve Crocker Associates, LLC
  5110 Edgemoor Lane
  Bethesda, MD 20814

  Phone:   +1 301-654-4569
  Fax:     +1 202-478-0458
  EMail:   [email protected]








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  Vint Cerf
  MCI

  EMail: [email protected]


  Jake Feinler
  SRI Network Information Center
  1972-1989

  EMail: [email protected]


  Celeste Anderson
  USC/Information Sciences Institute
  4676 Admiralty Way #1001
  Marina del Rey, CA 90292

  Phone:  +1 310-822-1511
  Fax:    +1 310-823-6714
  EMail:  [email protected]






























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10. APPENDIX - RFC 1

  The cover page said at the top:

    "Network Working Group
     Request for Comments"

  and then came an internal UCLA distribution list:

    V. Cerf, S. Crocker, M. Elie, G. Estrin, G. Fultz, A. Gomez,
    D. Karas, L. Kleinrock, J. Postel, M. Wingfield, R. Braden,
    and W. Kehl.

  followed by an "Off Campus" distribution list:

    A. Bhushan (MIT), S. Carr (Utah), G. Cole (SDC), W. English (SRI),
    K. Fry (Mitre), J. Heafner (Rand), R. Kahn (BBN), L. Roberts (ARPA),
    P. Rovner (MIT), and R. Stoughton (UCSB).

  The following title page had

    "Network Working Group
     Request for Comments: 1"

  at the top, and then:

              HOST SOFTWARE

              STEVE CROCKER
              7 APRIL 1969





















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11. Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished
  to others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise
  explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied,
  published and distributed, in whole or in part, without
  restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice
  and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative
  works.  However, this document itself may not be modified in any
  way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to the
  Internet Society or other Internet organizations, except as needed
  for the purpose of developing Internet standards in which case the
  procedures for copyrights defined in the Internet Standards
  process must be followed, or as required to translate it into
  languages other than English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not
  be revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on
  an "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
  ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR
  IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF
  THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
  WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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