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📄 rfc1175.txt

📁 著名的RFC文档,其中有一些文档是已经翻译成中文的的.
💻 TXT
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Network Working Group                                          K. BowersRequest for Comments: 1175                                          CNRIFYI: 3                                                         T. LaQuey                                                                 U Texas                                                             J. Reynolds                                                                     ISI                                                             K. Roubicek                                                                   BBNST                                                                M. Stahl                                                                     SRI                                                                 A. Yuan                                                                   MITRE                                                             August 1990                        FYI on Where to Start -             A Bibliography of Internetworking InformationStatus of this Memo   This FYI RFC is a bibliography of information about TCP/IP   internetworking, prepared by the User Services Working Group (USWG)   of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).  This memo provides   information for the Internet community.  It does not specify any   standard.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   The intent of this bibliography is to offer a representative   collection of resources of information that will help the reader   become familiar with the concepts of internetworking.  It is meant to   be a starting place for further research.  There are references to   other sources of information for those users wishing to pursue, in   greater depth, the issues and complexities of the current networking   environment.User Documents Working Group                                    [Page i]RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990                           Table of Contents   INTRODUCTION ...................................................    2   Background and Purpose .........................................    2   Scope ..........................................................    2   Organization of Document .......................................    2   Obtaining Files By Anonymous FTP ...............................    3   Submitting Entries to the Bibliography .........................    4   ARTICLES .......................................................    6      BIBLIOGRAPHIES ..............................................    9      BOOKS .......................................................   11      CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS ...................................   16      GLOSSARIES ..................................................   18      GUIDES ......................................................   19      MULTIMEDIA ..................................................   23      NEWSLETTERS .................................................   24      REPORTS AND PAPERS ..........................................   27      REQUEST FOR COMMENTS (RFC) ..................................   31      The Request for Comments Document Series ....................   31   Key Basic Beige RFC Abstracts ..................................   32      APPENDIX A ..................................................   39      APPENDIX B ..................................................   40User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 1]RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 19901.  Introduction1a. Background and Purpose   On 1 June 1989, several members of the IETF User Services Working   Group convened an interim working group session at the JVNC   Supercomputer Center in Princeton, NJ.  The purpose of the meeting   was to form a distinct working group that would assemble a   bibliography of useful information about the Internet for end users   and for those who help end users.  The first official meeting of the   User Documents Working Group was held at the Stanford IETF in July   1989.  The goal of the working group was to prepare a bibliography of   on-line and hard copy documents, reference materials, and multimedia   training tools that address general networking information and "how   to use the Internet".  The target audience was beginner level and   intermediate level end users.1b. Scope   This bibliography is the result of volunteer work provided by members   of the User Documents Working Group.  The intent of this effort is to   present a representative collection of materials that will help the   reader become familiar with the concepts of internetworking and will   form the basis for future study.  This is, quite simply, a good place   to start.  References to other sources of information within this   collection of materials will be useful to readers who wish to pursue,   in greater depth, the issues and complexities of the current   networking environment.  Please send comments to us-wg@nnsc.nsf.net.1c. Organization of Document   This version of the bibliography is divided into 10 distinct   categories of material, and each category is presented in a separate   section:           2  ARTICLES           3  BIBLIOGRAPHIES           4  BOOKS           5  CONFERENCES AND WORKSHOPS           6  GLOSSARIES           7  GUIDES           8  MULTIMEDIA           9  NEWSLETTERS           10 REPORTS AND PAPERS           11 REQUESTS FOR COMMENTS (RFCs)   Within each section, material is arranged in alphabetical order by   author or authoring organization with the exception of Section 11:User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 2]RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990   REQUESTS FOR COMMENTS (RFCs).  The RFCs are ordered numerically.  All   entries contain fairly standard bibliographic information and provide   a short abstract with information on how to obtain the particular   material addressed.   For brand new network users, unsure of what to read first, we suggest   reading Ed Krol's, "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Internet" (listed   in the Guide section).  For general information on an introduction to   Internet protocols, two documents are quite useful: Charles   Hedrick's, "Introduction to the Internet Protocols", and Doug Comer's   textbook, "Internetworking with TCP/IP: Principles, Protocols, and   Architecture".  Two excellent guides to existing networks are Tracy   L.  LaQuey's, "Users' Directory of Computer Networks" and John S.   Quarterman's "The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems   Worldwide".  We strongly encourage the reader to scan the   bibliography in its entirety as some items may be more applicable to   personal needs or site requirements.  (Please note that in many   instances the abstracts are excerpts, provided verbatim, from the   material described.)1d. Obtaining Files By Anonymous FTP   Much of the material referenced in this bibliography is available   on-line and can be obtained by using the File Transfer Protocol   (FTP).  Directions on how to obtain on-line files by anonymous FTP   action follow.  In this example, the host used is nic.ddn.mil.   Files may be obtained with the FTP program in conjunction with an   ANONYMOUS login.  Versions of the FTP program may vary from system to   system, so the commands shown in this example may need to be modified   to work on your system.       % ftp nic.ddn.mil  <== Use the FTP program to                                       connect to nic.ddn.mil       Connected to nic.ddn.mil       220 NIC.DDN.MIL FTP Server 5Z(47)-6 at Fri 23-Jun-89 09:38-PDT   The system should respond with a message to indicate that a   connection has been made.  Users on a Unix system will probably be   prompted for a login name.  Type in "anonymous" as in the example   below:       Name (nic.ddn.mil:kbowers): anonymous       331 ANONYMOUS user ok, send real ident as password.       Password:      <== Type in <guest> at the password prompt   Other systems may require the use of a "login" or "user" command to   send the username to the server computer.  Users unsure of theUser Documents Working Group                                    [Page 3]RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990   command should contact a local site representative for the specific   commands.   After the username and password are sent to the system, a message to   indicate that the login has been made successfully should appear:       230 User ANONYMOUS logged in at Fri 23-Jun-89 09:39-PDT, job 17.   The user then connects to the directory in which the document to be   retrieved resides. This is done with the cd command:       ftp> cd RFC:       331 Default name accepted. Send password to connect to it.   The user should now be connected to the RFC: directory.  The "dir" or   "ls" command will list the files available in this directory.       ftp> dir       200 Port 4.124 at host 192.33.33.51 accepted.       150 List started.       *** At this point a list of the files in the directory           should appear **       226 Transfer completed.   The "get" command will get any file in the directory.       ftp> get RFC821.TXT       200 Port 4.125 at host 192.33.33.51 accepted.       150 ASCII retrieve of TS<RFC>RFC.821.TXT.1 (49 pages) started.       226 Transfer completed. 124482 (8) bytes transferred.       local: RFC.821.TXT remote: RFC.821.TXT       124482 bytes received in 55 seconds (2.2 Kbytes/s)   The "quit" command leaves the FTP program.       ftp> quit       221 QUIT command received. Goodbye.1e. Submitting Entries to the Bibliography   This is the first version of the "Where to Start" bibliography.   Comments and suggested entries are welcome and should be sent by   electronic mail to us-wg@nnsc.nsf.net.User Documents Working Group                                    [Page 4]RFC 1175                   FYI - Bibliography                August 1990   To submit an entry for consideration, please provide the following   specific details as appropriate:   Author or authoring organization:   Editor (if author is unavailable):   Title:   Journal (example: Time Magazine):   Volume:   Number:   Number of pages:   Specific pages within which the article is contained:   Publisher or publishing organization:   City of Publication:   Date of document:   Material category (Choose only one: article; bibliography; book;                      conference/ workshop; glossary; guide;                      multimedia; newsletter; on-line file;                      report/paper; RFC):   Abstract: (Please provide a one paragraph abstract describing              the thrust of the document/reference material/              multimedia training tool.  Within the abstract              include information on how one can obtain the              material described.  See the entries in this              bibliography for examples.)

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