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rfc:rfc565

Network Working Group D. Cantor Request for Comments: 565 Computer Corporation of America NIC: 18777 28 August 1973

          Storing Network Survey Data at the Datacomputer
 In November, 1972, Computer Corporation of America (CCA) and the
 Programming Technology Division of the Dynamics Modeling System (DMS)
 at M.I.T.'s Project MAC began planning to transmit to CCA's
 datacomputer [1] information about the behavior of ARPA network hosts
 collected by DMS's program SURVEY [2].  The information was to be
 stored at the datacomputer and retrieved by an interactive program
 that would address the datacomputer from DMS's PDP-10.
 One goal of this joint project was to enable DMS to retain all of the
 information that SURVEY collects: SURVEY had been running since late
 1971, saving only a short daily summary of its findings and
 discarding potentially useful details.  A second goal was to discover
 and remove shortcomings in the interface between CCA's datacomputer
 and a program running at a remote host.
 The project was completed last month, and the programs described in
 this document have been operating successfully with the datacomputer
 since July 10.
 Part 1, below, describes SURVEY's output.  Part 2 describes a program
 that retrieves portions of that output from the datacomputer.

Part 1: The Survey Database

 Every twenty minutes, DMS's program SURVEY wakes up and performs the
 initial connection protocol from the PDP-10 at DMS to the logger
 socket (socket 1) of each 28 network hosts.
 SURVEY records a date time, host, status,and response time for each
 host.  A host may be in one of these states:
    undetermined or not surveyed
    disconnect from the network or dead
    network control program not responding
    ICP to logger aborted by the host
    ICP to logger timed out by SURVEY after 20 seconds

Cantor [Page 1] RFC 565 Storing Network Survey Data 28 August 1973

    logger available and responding within 20 seconds
 SURVEY records response times responding in tenths of seconds.
 When the data for all 28 hosts has been assembled, SURVEY transmits
 that data to CCA's datacomputer.  If for some reason the datacomputer
 cannot accept the information, it is held at DMS and sent another
 time.
 The datacomputer's survey database is inverted by host, status,
 month, and year.  That is to say that the datacomputer maintains
 several indices to records of one attempt to establish a full duplex
 connection to one host's logger: it maintains one such index for each
 host, one for each status, one for each month, and one for each year.
 The datacomputer can select records that are specified in boolean
 expressions by performing boolean operations on the inversion, and
 without consulting the data itself.  The inversion thus facilitates
 rapid interaction between the survey retrieval program described
 below and the survey database at the datacomputer.
 SURVEY expresses the record of each attempt to access one host in 17
 ASCII characters.  The record of one survey then occupies 17 * 28 =
 476 characters, and each day the datacomputer receives 3 * 24 * 476 =
 34,272 characters from DMS.

Part 2: Retrieving Survey Data

 A Program called SURRET, written at DMS in the language MUDDLE,
 allows one to selectively retrieve material from the survey data base
 stored at the datacomputer [3].  Its user may specify values, groups
 of values, or, where appropriate, upper and lower bounds for values
 of each of five fields: host name, date, time, response time, and
 host status.  In addition, one may request that all five fields or
 any subset of the five be retrieved.  A sample interaction with
 SURRET is reproduced below.
  <HOST (CASE-10)>$
  "OK"
  <DATE (AUG 5 73)>$
  "OK"
  <TIME (BETWEEN 2000 2400)>$
  "OK"
  <REQ ((TIME STATUS RESTIME))>$
  ;J205 10-08-73 1557:20 RHRUN: SUCCESSFUL COMPILATION
  .1241 10-08-73 1557:21 OCSOP: (DEFAULT) OUTPUT PORT OPENED

Cantor [Page 2] RFC 565 Storing Network Survey Data 28 August 1973

 TIME           STATUS             R.T.(1/10 SEC)
 2004    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        019
 2024    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        024
 2044    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        021
 2104    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        016
 2124    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        046
 2144    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        018
 2204    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        017
 2224    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        017
 2244    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        023
 2304    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        015
 2324    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        016
 2344    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        015
 "END OF DATCOMPUTER OUTPUT"
 The angle brackets, the material they enclose, and '$' (ESC or
 altmode) were typed by a person using SURRET.  The remainder was
 typed by the system.  The phrases in quotation marks are,
 effectively, SURRET prompts.  The status messages beginning with ';'
 and '.' were generated by the datacomputer.  The column headings and
 table were formatted by SURRET using figures retrieved from the
 datacomputer.
 SURRET generates datalanguage, sends it to the datacomputer, and
 processes systems diagnostics and data sent to it from the
 datacomputer.  The datalanguage generated for the foregoing SURRET
 request was:
 FOR |SURVEY.LOGTRY, SURVEY.LOGTRY WITH
   ((YEAR EQ '73' AND MONTH EQ '08' AND DAY EQ '05')
   AND (HRMIN GE '2000' AND HRMIN LE '2400')
   AND (HOST EQ '013'))
 HRMIN=HRMIN ;  STATUS=STATUS  ;  RESTIME=RESTIME  ;
 END;
 The field names in the datalanguage were entered with file
 descriptors before the first data was loaded.
 One can ask SURRET to retrieve new data by changing the values of any
 number of fields and issuing a new REQ (request).  The command
 <state> displays current values for the five prospective retrieval
 criteria.  Thus:
  <HOST (USC-44)>$
  "OK"
  <STATE>$
  !HOST: (USC-44)STATUS: () RESTIME: () DATE: (AUG 5 73)
    TIME: (BETWEEN 2000 2400)!

Cantor [Page 3] RFC 565 Storing Network Survey Data 28 August 1973

  <REQ ((TIME STATUS RESTIME))>$
  ;J205 10-08-73 1610:08 RHRUN: SUCCESSFUL COMPILATION
  .1241 10-08-73 1610:09 OCSOP: (DEFAULT) OUTPUT PORT OPENED
 TIME           STATUS             R.T.(1/10 SEC)
 2004    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        020
 2024    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        008
 2044    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        008
 2104    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        009
 2124    LOGGER NOT RESPONDING (LNR)   000
 2144    LOGGER NOT AVAILABLE(DEAD)    000
 2204    NCP NOT RESPONDING (NNR)      000
 2224    LOGGER NOT RESPONDING (LNR)   000
 2244    LOGGER NOT AVAILABLE (DEAD)   000
 2304    LOGGER NOT AVAILABLE (DEAD    000
 2324    NCP NOT RESPONDING (NNR)      000
 2344    LOGGER RESPONDING (UP)        007
 "END OF DATCOMPUTER OUTPUT"
 We might have retrieved all of the foregoing output with:
       <HOST (CASE-10 OR USC-44)>
    Moreover,
       <HOST (CASE-10 CCA OR USC-44)>
 would cause SURRET to access the database twice, once for information
 about Case-10, and then a second time for information about the
 remaining two hosts.
 Detailed Survey data from July 10, 1973 forward is available either
 directly from the datacomputer or through SURRET.  Persons who wish
 to use the datacomputer directly may obtain the pertinent documents
 through the NIC or by contacting Dale Stern at CCA (617-491-3670).

Endnotes

 [1] An overview of the data computer is given in Thomas Marill, The
 Datacomputer, 18 Oct '71, 7pp. (NIC 7979).  A detailed study of the
 programming language for addressing the datacomputer is found in
 Computer Corporation of America, Datacomputer Project Working Paper
 No. 3, Datalanguage, 29 Oct '71, 78 pp. (NIC 8208).  The current
 status of the language is reviewed in Richard Winter, Specifications
 for Datalanguage, Version 0/9, 6 Jun '73, 36 pp. (NIC 16446).  A
 user's manual for version 0/9, will be released by CCA in September,
 1973.

Cantor [Page 4] RFC 565 Storing Network Survey Data 28 August 1973

 [2] SURVEY is described in Abhay Bhushan, A Report on the Survey
 Project, 22 June '73 (NIC 17375).
 [3] A detailed discussion of SURRET is found in Safwan Bengelloun,
 MUDDLE Survey Data Retrieval Programs, an internal DMS memo of 14
 June, '73.  Our purpose here is to describe enough of the program's
 syntax and structure to show how it interacts with the datacomputer.
       [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]
          [ into the online RFC archives by Via Genie 08/00]

Cantor [Page 5]

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