Johnny,
Congrats on achieving One Thousand HECnet nodes!
Your email got me interested in when I first started using your TCP/IP stack for
RSX11M+. It looks like that happened around March of 2013. Our first conversations were in
2011 around Datatrieve-11 and its call interface. In those early days, we also talked
about recovering/fixing APL-11 (which you did a few years ago). We also talked about the
Saturn software for which I am still trying to get the sources.
It is amazing how far you’ve taken the TCP/IP and HECnet network! Thanks for all the
many, many hours of work (and hopefully some fun for you) you’ve given us!!
Thanks!!!
Mark
On Mar 8, 2023, at 2:47 PM, Johnny Billquist
<bqt(a)softjar.se> wrote:
I have been planning for a long time to post a small reflection when I reached 1000 nodes
registered in the hecnet nodename database.
This happened tonight. I think it is a pretty cool thing. There are now 1000 nodenames
registered in this small hobby DECnet. I guess you could say it's actually not that
small.
However, I know that rather few machines are actually online, and it might even be that
the majority of nodes registered have never been online. My guess is that maybe 5% of the
registered machines are usually online. But I do not have any hard data to back this up.
HECnet started out about 20 years ago from a desire I had to hook up a PDP-11 I had at
home, to some machines at my university, using DECnet. At the time, I didn't have any
TCP/IP for RSX, and the only way to get any kind of networking was to try and come up with
some way of getting DECnet up.
My first implementation basically just forwarded a serial port communication between two
Unix machines. And on each end I then hooked that serial port into a PDP-11 running RSX,
and used DDCMP for the actual DECnet link.
This worked, but was obviously not that fast, as the serial ports were limited to 9600
bps.
After a year or so, I figured I could instead write a small program that would forward
ethernet packets. Using UDP I basically had the same property as a local ethernet, but it
could be located somewhere pretty far away. From a DECnet point of view, it would appear
as if they were on the same ethernet segment, while in reality they were nowhere near. As
DECnet have pretty long timeouts on things, it turned out this worked without a hitch, and
I could achieve much better throughput.
Not long after that, the first other users were hooked up to HECnet as well. This was
maybe around 2003 or so.
Another data point is that there are 113 different persons that have one or more
nodenames registered.
Happy milestone, everyone, and thanks for being around.
Johnny
--
Johnny Billquist || "I'm on a bus
|| on a psychedelic trip
email: bqt(a)softjar.se || Reading murder books
pdp is alive! || tryin' to stay hip" - B. Idol
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