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rfc:rfc357

Network Working Group John Davidson Request for Comments: 357 University of Hawaii NIC: 10599 Will Crowther Categories: Remote Controlled Echoing, Satellite, TELNET BBN References: RFC's 346, 355, 358, 318 John McConnell

                                                                ILLIAC
                                                            Jon Postel
                                                                  UCLA
                                                         June 26, 1972
              An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links

I. Introduction

 As mentioned in RFC 346 ("Satellite Considerations" by Jon Postel)
 those interactive systems which provide echoing for full-duplex
 terminals over the ARPANET become more awkward to use as transmission
 delays increase.  The reason, of course, is that a character's round
 trip time is added to the inherent echo delay of the server with the
 result that the terminal echoing appears extremely sluggish.
 For a terminal separated from its server by a single satellite link,
 the delay will be such that even if echoing at the server were
 instantaneous, the latency between keying and printing of an input
 character will be nearly half a second.  If, in addition, the
 character is routed thru a portion of the surface net, the delay will
 be of course increase.  It is estimated that echo delays of at least
 one second will not be uncommon.
 This document describes a strategy which will eliminate the delay
 associated with simple echoing and allow the transmission delay to be
 hidden in the cost of computation only.  This scheme is proposed as
 an optional addition to existing User TELNETs; its use requires the
 explicit support of a cooperating server process.

II. Standard Echo Strategy

 Echoing for locally connected full-duplex terminals is normally
 provided at the server by a resident system task called the (e.g.)
 Terminal Handler.  The Terminal Handler echoes on a one-for-one or
 simple replacement basis and buffers all typed input on behalf of the
 user process.
 To let the user process operate most efficiently, the Terminal
 Handler should collect characters until a complete command or
 parameter (or whatever) has been typed.  Then, presumably, the
 process can do some significant computing.  Since the user process

Davidson [Page 1] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

 knows the syntax of the string it expects, it can specify to the
 Terminal Handler those characters which delimit completed parameters.
 Such characters are called 'Wakeup Characters' since the user process
 is awakened as they are echoed.
 Certain commands keyed by the user will require an output response
 from the process.  In order that the typed commands be followed by
 its response and be separated from succeeding commands, the Terminal
 Handler must suspend echoing of user type-ahead.  It can resume
 echoing (starting for type-ahead - with the unechoed characters in
 the buffer) as soon as the process has stated (implicitly or
 explicitly) that it has completed the output response.
 Characters which cause the Terminal Handler to suspend echoing are
 called 'break characters' They are specified by the user process
 based upon the syntax of the expected input.  Normally break
 characters are also wakeup characters.  As examples:
    1. A text editor may gobble up typed English sentences every time
       a period or question mark is echoed.  The two characters are
       wakeup characters only.  There is no need to suspend echoing.
    2. In some systems, an ESC character is used to invoke command
       recognition.  The user who types
             CO [ESC] ABC [ESC] XYZ
       should see as output
          COPY (FROM FILE) ABC (TO FILE) XYZ
       The ESC is both a break and a wakeup.  The printout should be
       the same no matter how fast the user types.
 The server must provide a means for each user process to communicate
 the following to the Terminal Handler:
    1. the set of wakeup characters,
    2. the set of break characters,
    3. which break characters should and which should not be echoed,
       (Some break characters - such as ESC in example 2 - should not
       be echoed).
    4. completion of an output response,
    5. whether or not to echo characters. (Not echoing is useful in
       "hide your input" applications.)

Davidson [Page 2] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

 As far as implementation, 1. and 2. could be communicated by allowing
 the user process to specify a 128-bit (for an ASCII device) table
 with 1's set for each wakeup character, and another table with 1's
 set for each break character.  This approach becomes fairly expensive
 in terms of core memory as the number of terminals becomes large; the
 system must store these bit tables itself since in most cases the
 user process will not be in core while echoing is being done by the
 Terminal Handler.
 To reduce the storage requirements, the system can make known to all
 its programmers a limited number, say 4, of supported break
 characters for his process from, for example:
    a. alphanumeric characters,
    b. punctuation characters,
    c. echoable control characters (including the bell and CR, etc.),
       or
    d. non-echoable control characters (Control-C, etc.),
 by specifying in a system call which break set(s) should be used.
 This requires no more than 4 bits of system storage per terminal, and
 a single table to identify the set(s) to which each of the 128
 possible ASCII characters belongs.
 For the user process to communicate (3) to the Terminal Handler
 (which break characters should and which should not have echoed), the
 process can specify another 4 bit field with 1's set for those break
 classes whose members should be echoed.  For the 4 classes above,
 only 3 bits would be required since members of class (d) are defined
 to be non-echoable.
 To communicate the completion of an output response (4), the user
 process could issue an explicit system call; or, the Terminal Handler
 could assume completion when the user process requests input of the
 first character following the break.
 "Hide your input" (5) would be communicated by a system call which
 specifies either:
   (a) "break on every character and don't echo any break characters",
       or, for example
   (b) "don't echo anything and break on punctuation, or any control
       character" for an alphanumeric password,
 depending on the syntax of the expression to be hidden.

Davidson [Page 3] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

III. Definitions

 Several new terms need to be defined, some of which are direct
 extensions of the terms used in the "standard echo strategy"
 description.  There is no reason to insist that the four buffers
 presented all be implemented as individual constructs; they are
 logically separated for clarity in the discussions which follow.
 Remote Controlled Echoing (RCE)
    This is the name for the echo strategy described in this document.
    Echoing will be controlled by the (remote) server but performed by
    the User TELNET.
 Input Buffer
    This is a logical buffer used by a User TELNET to hold characters
    in sequence as they are received from the terminal keyboard (after
    they have been converted to NVT characters).
 Transmission Buffer
    This is a logical buffer used by a User TELNET to hold NVT
    characters which have been typed but have not yet been transmitted
    to the server.
 Output Buffer
    This is a logical buffer used by a User TELNET to hold the NVT
    characters received from the server.
 Print Buffer
    This is a logical buffer residing in the User TELNET from which
    characters will be sent in sequence to the terminal printer. (The
    output buffer contains NVT characters which may have to be
    converted to characters employed by the actual terminal.)
 Break Classes
    The 128 possible (7-bit) ASCII characters employed by the Network
    Virtual Terminal can be partitioned into several quasi-equivalence
    classes (for example alphabetic, numeric, punctuation characters,
    etc.). These classes can be defined so that each character is a
    member of at least one class, although it may belong to more than
    one.

Davidson [Page 4] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

    A server process may indicate to a User TELNET that certain of
    these classes (or all, or none) are to be considered break
    classes.  That is, a break class is an equivalence class which is
    of special significance to the server process.  In terms of the
    discussion of section II, the Server recognized 4 equivalence
    classes any combination of which might be designated as break
    class by a particular process.
    The RCE implementation will have more than 4 equivalence classes
    (perhaps as many as 8) to provide more flexibility in the choice
    of break character sets.
 Break Action
    Two break actions are possible:
    (1) a break character encountered in the input buffer IS moved to
        the print buffer at the appropriate time, or
    (2) a break character encountered in the input buffer IS NOT moved
        to the print buffer.
    The server process will specify which break action should be
    followed. (The two actions correspond to echoing or not echoing
    the break character.)

IV. Description

 (This description is written in terms of the TIP which, of course,
 embodies a User TELNET.)
 Remote Controlled Echoing is an attempt to remove the echo
 responsibility from the Terminal Handler and push it off into the
 TIP; wakeup processing is still handled at the server.  The process'
 interface (system calls, etc.) to the server's Terminal Handler need
 not change, but the (abbreviated) Terminal Handler (actually a Server
 TELNET) must find a way to relay the process' echo requirements to
 the TIP.  It does this with TELNET commands and control information.
 System calls and echo parameters (break classes, etc.) peculiar to a
 particular serving Host must be interpreted by the Server Telnet
 commands.
 Character Flow
    Refer to figure 1.  A character received from a full-duplex
    terminal will be converted to its NVT equivalent and placed in
    both the transmission AND the input buffers.  The TIP's
    transmission strategy determines when it will be removed from the
    transmission buffer; the server's RCE control commands dictate

Davidson [Page 5] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

    when it will be removed from the input buffer.
    A character received from the server will be placed in the output
    buffer.
    Of the three labeled paths DISCARD, ECHO and OUTPUT, exactly one
    is enabled at all times.  RCE commands dictate which one.  Thus
    characters may
       (DISCARD:) be removed in sequence from the input buffer and
                  discarded,
       (ECHO:)    be removed in sequence from the input buffer and
                  placed in the print buffer, of
       (OUTPUT:)  be removed in sequence from the output buffer and
                  placed in the print buffer.
    From the print buffer they will be converted from NVT characters
    and be immediately send to the terminal's printer.
                            +----------------------+
                            | Terminal Keyboard    |
                            +----------------------+
                                         |
                                     Convert to NVT characters
    To       +-------------------+       |
 Server <----|Transmission Buffer|       |
             +-------------------+       |      +-----From Server
                      ^                  |      |
                      |------------------+      |
                      V                         V
              +-----------------+       +-----------------+
              | Input Buffer    |       |  Output Buffer  |
              +-----------------+       +-----------------+
                  |        |                    |
          DISCARD |        +--ECHO---+      +---+ OUTPUT
                  |                  |      |
                  V                  V      V
                 To          +----------------------+
            Oblivion         |     Print Buffer     |
                             +----------------------+
                                        |
                                    Convert from
                                   NVT Characters
                                        |
                                        V
                               To Terminal Printer
               Figure 1.  Character Flow within the TIP

Davidson [Page 6] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

 Commands: Server to Host
    The following are the proposed TELNET commands sent by the server
    process to the TIP.  Commands (2) thru (5) should not be sent if
    RCE is not being used.
      (1) Use Remote Controlled Echoing.  The server asks the TIP to
          employ the echo strategy described in this document.  The
          TIP can respond either YES (I will use it) or NO. (It is
          suggested that the response YES also be "Use RCE" to
          eliminate race conditions.)
      (2) Set Break Action.  This is actually 2 commands.  The server
          can set the break action to echo or not echo a break
          character.
      (3) Set Break Classes.  This command specifies those equivalence
          classes which are to be considered break classes.  It will
          be a two (8-bit) byte command.
          Note: The envisioned implementation requires the TIP to have
          a table with one entry per ASCII character.  Each entry is
          formatted with one bit position for each equivalence class,
          and a bit is set or reset according as the given character
          is or is not a member of that class.  The server sends a
          "Set Break Classes" command (1st byte) followed by a
          formatted control word (2nd byte) to the TIP with bit
          positions set for those equivalence classes which represent
          break classes for the server process.
          When a (virtual) character is taken from the input buffer
          the TIP does a table look-up indexed by the character.  If a
          simple ANDing of the table entry with the terminal's control
          word yields a non-zero result, a break was received.
          (Receipt of a break character enables the OUTPUT path.)
      (4) Move to Break (MTB).  This command directs the TIP to move
          characters in sequence from the input buffer to the print
          buffer until a break character is encountered.  The break
          character will be moved or discarded depending on the
          previously-specified break action.  (Essentially, MTB
          enables the ECHO path.)
      (5) Delete to Break (DTB).  This command directs the TIP to move
          characters in sequence from the input buffer and discard
          them until a break character is encountered.  The break
          character will also be discarded.  This provides a
          convenient mechanism for hiding a user's input.  (DTB

Davidson [Page 7] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

          enables the DISCARD path.)
 Commands: User to Server
          The USER may send (via TIP) a request to the server process
          requesting that it "Use Remote Controlled Echoing" to which
          the server must respond "YES" or "NO".
 General Operation
    Very simply, the Remote Controlled Echoing strategy works as
    follows: The Server TELNET will tell the TIP to (essentially)
       (1) echo a message,
       (2) print the process' response to that message,
       (3) echo the next message
       (4) print the response to that message
                    . . .
    etc., to effect an orderly listing of inputs and responses much as
    would be imposed when using a half-duplex device.
    The actual interaction depends on the control commands.  When a
    terminal-serving process is invoked on behalf of a TIP user, the
    Server TELNET will send the "Use RCE" command; the TIP will
    respond "YES".  Then the Server TELNET will send the "Set Break
    Action" and "Set Break Classes" commands to properly reflect the
    break strategy requested by the terminal-serving process.  Lastly
    the Server TELNET will send an MTB command.  This enables the ECHO
    path.
    The TIP removes characters from the input buffer and places them
    in the print buffer.  When it encounters a break character, it
    performs the break action specified, and enables the OUTPUT path.
    Characters are then moved in sequence from the output buffer to
    the print buffer.  When an MTB (or, DTB) is encountered, it is
    discarded and the ECHO (DISCARD) path is enabled.
    Etcetera.
    The Server TELNET may change the break action or break classes
    after an interaction, but should normally do so prior to sending
    the MTB or DTB commands.  It should only send an MTB (DTB) after
    all process output from the previous message has been sent.

Davidson [Page 8] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

 Why Does This Work?
    The RCE strategy described above produces the correct result at
    the user's terminal because it is in essence the same scheme used
    by the Terminal Handler which normally provides the echoing at the
    serving site.  Initially, the characters are echoed as they are
    typed; then a break character is keyed, echoing is suspended.  If
    the process produces any output response, it is printed before
    echoing of subsequent input.
    Echoing of the next command begins, if there is type-ahead, with
    the characters in the input buffer, and even if the input buffer
    is emptied immediate echoing of keyed input from the terminal is
    provided since the ECHO path remains enabled up to a break.
 An Example
    (In the following, we assume all break characters are also wakeup
    characters and (carelessly) treat the two interchangeably.)
    Suppose a TIP user attempts to login to a remote server with the
    properly formatted message
          LOG NAME PASSWORD [CR]
    and that the Server TELNET has requested the use of RCE.
    Presuming that the break (and wakeup) characters sets are
    appropriately defined to include space and CR (and that the break
    action specifies they should be echoed), the primary sequence of
    RCE commands which will drive the TIP to produce the correct
    printout at the user's terminal is:
       (1) MTB (to print "LOG "), and since the space is a break
          character,
       (2) MTB (to print "NAME "),
       (3) DTB (to delete "PASSWORD [CR]" (See section VI, number
          11)), and perhaps a message followed by
       (4) MTB (to reenable the echo path).
    We investigate in some detail how interaction at the
    process/Server TELNET interface causes these commands to be send
    to the TIP.
    When the EXEC is invoked, it issues a system call to set its break
    classes.  The Server TELNET interprets the system call in terms of
    the classes supported by RCE, and sends the appropriate two-byte
    "Set Break Classes" (SBC) command to the TIP.  A space is among
    the characters of the break set.

Davidson [Page 9] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

    The EXEC asks for input, so the Server TELNET send MTB ((1)
    above).  We presume the EXEC blocks until some input is available.
    The EXEC is awakened when the first space arrives; it recognizes
    the LOG command to be a call upon the LOGIN subsystem which it
    (promptly!) invokes.
    The LOGIN process issues a system call to set its break classes
    (this time both space and CR are included, and, as before, the
    Server TELNET forwards the command as an SBC).  Then it asks for
    input (so the Server TELNET sends MTB ((2) above)), and blocks
    until the second space arrives.
    When the LOGIN process has verified the existence of a user with
    name NAME, it issues a system call to suppress printing of the
    next parameter (the password).  In compliance, the Server TELNET
    sends DTB ((3) above).
    Once the password has been examined and verified, a message like
          [CR][LF] LOGIN COMPLETED [CR][LF]
    can be sent, followed by a request for input.  The Server TELNET
    thus forwards an MTB ((4) above) and the sequence is completed.
 Another example
    Suppose in the above example the user had typed
          LOG NAME[CR]
    When the LOGIN process regained control, it would have noted that
    the break was a CR instead of a space.  It then could have issued
          [LF]password =
    which the Server TELNET would follow (when LOGIN requests print
    suppression) with DTB.  When the TIP had finished its output, the
    DISCARD path would be enabled and the user's terminal would have
    printed:
          LOG NAME[CR]
          password =
                     ^
    with the cursor positioned just after the =.  The TIP will hide
    the characters of the password.

Davidson [Page 10] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

 Another Example
    Suppose a user were using a text editor, TEXT, to create a source
    file of English sentences.  The TEXT subprocess might allow only
    non-formatting control characters (e.g., "Control-C") as break
    characters.  The RCE strategy would allow the user to receive
    immediate echoing for all his input until he typed such a control
    character.

V. Discussion

 The Remote Controlled Echoing Strategy is designed to provide echoing
 for a full-duplex terminal as if it were locally connected to its
 server.  The effect of the long transmission delays will only be
 evident as an increase in the processing performed at a break.  Only
 in the most interactive systems will such a delay be consistently
 noticeable.  For example if a user invokes a long FORTRAN
 compilation, the fact that its start is delayed for half a second
 will not normally be evident.
 Furthermore, users who are able to type several messages ahead may
 only notice a processing delay as a result of the first break-
 interaction; both transmission and processing of successive messages
 may occur during the printing of "echoes" and responses to previous
 messages.
 Transmission considerations:
    In the standard echoing scheme, characters are buffered at the
    same server as they are keyed.  But the user process does not see
    them until a wakeup character has been typed.  This means a TIP
    using RCE could buffer characters in the transmission buffer until
    a wakeup occurs and then send off the whole bunch.  Unfortunately
    we have chosen, for simplicity, to keep all knowledge of wakeup
    characters at the serving site.  This means that the TIP may
    buffer beyond a wakeup (if it is not also a break) and delay the
    process from doing some useful work.  However, since in this case
    no output is expected from the process, no noticeable delay is
    visible to the user, except that the next break interaction may
    take a little longer.
    If the TIP chooses to buffer input before transmission, it will
    transmit AT LEAST at every break character.  The SERVER should be
    able to instruct the TIP to transmit more often if it is
    appropriate.

Davidson [Page 11] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

 An Example:
    Conversational output LINKING is an example where transmission
    strategy is separate from the break and wakeup strategies.
    Transmission should occur on every character so that the character
    can be promptly printed at each linked terminal, but no break or
    wakeup need occur until a special escape character is typed (this
    reawakens the EXEC, for example).
    Conversational output linking also introduces another funny:
 Unsolicited Output:
    What happens when the ECHO (or DISCARD) path is enabled, but the
    input buffer is empty (i.e. immediate echoing is occurring) and
    something arrives in the output buffer? This "something" cannot be
    a response to a previously keyed command, or the ECHO path would
    be disabled. (This proof is left to the reader!) It is most likely
    a system message like
       [CR][LF]SYSTEM WILL GO DOWN IN 5 MINUTES[CR][LF]
    or, a character arriving from another linked terminal.
    Since such output does not fit neatly into our RCE scheme, the
    following kludge is proposed.  Unsolicited output should cause the
    OUTPUT path to be enabled.  The occurrence of either an MTB (DTB)
    Or Empty Output Buffer will reenable the ECHO (DISCARD) path.

IV. Orthogonal Issues

 Several other mechanisms may reasonably be incorporated within this
 proposed addition to TELNET.  The problems which need some further
 discussion include:
       1)  Some means should be provided for the server to clear the
           input, transmission, print and output buffers.
       2)  Some means should be provided for the user to immediately
           clear the output buffer (i.e. suppress printing of lengthy
           output).
       3)  The server may want to ask about the number of characters
           remaining to be printed.
       4)  A special tag character may be required to note where
           clearing of the input buffer occurred.
       5)  The TIP's transmission strategy should be specifiable by
           the server; perhaps a "Set Wakeup Classes" command should
           be implemented.

Davidson [Page 12] RFC 357 An Echoing Strategy For Satellite Links June 1972

       6)  The server should be able to cause the TIP to break on the
           n-th input character regardless of whatever a break
           character has been encountered.
       7)  Should the TIP or the server be responsible for properly
           echoing a formatting control character such as a TAB?
       8)  The proper equivalence classes of ASCII characters have to
           be finalized.
       9)  How should a CR be echoed?
       10) Should one-for-one echo replacement (e.g. "$" for ESC) or
           multi-character substitution (e.g. "^A" for Control-A) be
           provided by the TIP?
       11) The proposed DTB command directs the TIP to also discard
           the delimiting break character.  Should the break character
           discard rather be dependent on setting the Break Action to
           "don't echo" before sending the DTB?
 Several of these issues will be addressed in RFC 358.

VII. Conclusion

 This document has presented a proposed optional addition to the User
 TELNET.  The next step is to perform some simulations and to
 incorporate RCE into an experimental version of TELNET.
 No recommendation is made that the current TELNET be discarded.  For
 example RCE should not be used for those half-duplex devices which
 perform their own "echoing".  If RCE is adopted as an alternate means
 of echoing, changes to those TELNETs choosing not to implement it
 should be minimal.  Switching from RCE to the current echo mechanism
 is an immediate result of either user or server sending a "You Echo"
 (or "I'll Echo").
 Much of the machinery required to implement RCE already exists at the
 interface between the server process and its Terminal Handler or
 Server TELNET.  This means that no server process need be changed,
 but that the process' means of specifying break classes, break
 actions and echoing conventions must be interpreted by the Terminal
 Handler and reissued to the TIP in terms of the corresponding RCE
 commands.
       [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]
     [ into the online RFC archives by Erik J. Verbruggen 12/97 ]

Davidson [Page 13]

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