There have been lots of positive comments, and
obviously some people
 have even tested using the software.
 Of course, a bug was also found. A really weird corner case with
 severely loading the network stack and having a socket in listen state
 programatically could trigger a corruption of kernel memory.
 So I've cut a new release with the bug fixed.
 While I'm at it I also realize that I forgot to mention that included in
 the distribution is also a simple IRC client as well as a simple IRC
 robot.
 I've also taken a little time to slightly improve the documentation, and
 the documentation is now also available directly by ftp from
 Madame.Update.UU.SE, so you do not need to get the whole distribution
 and unpack it to just read something.
 So - same as before. Disk image and tape image are available at
 Madame.Update.UU.SE. Use anonymous ftp.
 Disk image is also available at
 ftp://ftp.update.uu.se/pub/pdp11/rsx/tcpip.
 The disk image is a virtual RL02 disk. Can be used with any emulator, or
 also directly inside RSX if you have virtual devices available.
 Happy hacking.
       Johnny
 On 2015-01-14 00:40, Johnny Billquist wrote:
  Well, it's been a long time project, but
I'm happy to finally announce a
 more public initial release of TCP/IP for RSX-11M-PLUS.
 This is the result of over 20 years of development. Needless to say,
 I've been doing a lot of things over the years, and this code have been
 through four reimplementations over the years.
 What I now release is something that I believe is a nice and useful
 piece of software. I am aware of the fact that most people do not use
 these machines any longer, but if someone actually wants to talk to me
 about support for this or other RSX software, let me know.
 Also, feel free to spread this information to anyone who might be
 interested, anywhere.
 So - what is in this release?
 It is a complete implementation of ARP, IP, UDP, and TCP for
 RSX-11M-PLUS. It has been tested on RSX-11M-PLUS V4.6, but should work
 on any V4 release. There might be some small tweaks or fixes required,
 but nothing major.
 It do require a system with split I/D-space, or else at least the TCP
 part will not fit.
 For Unibus machines, it should be possible to run without any additional
 software except what is in a base RSX distribution.
 For Q-bus machines, DECnet is required for ethernet networking.
 The TCP/IP stack can co-exist with DECnet.
 Some utilities also utilize RMS for file access.
 A bunch of tools, utilities and libraries are also included. These
 include:
 . IFCONFIG network configuration tool.
 . NETSTAT network information tool.
 . PING
 . TRACEROUTE
 . DNS client
 . FTP daemon
 . FTP client
 . HTTP server
 . TELNET client (rudimentary)
 . TFTP client
 . TFTP server
 . INET server that can do SINK, ECHO, DAYTIME, QUOTE, and IDENT
 . NTP client
 . LPR client that sits in the queue manager (rudimentary)
 . FORTRAN-77 library
 . BASIC+2 library
 . PDP-11 C library
 The implementation fulfills most of the requirements put forth in RFC
 1122. There are a few limitations because of restrictions in the PDP-11,
 but none of them should really cause any problems.
 Documentation is still on the thin side, but example configs are also
 provided, along with installation scripts.
 A bunch of test programs and example programs are also included, as well
 as the sources of all tools and libraries.
 The TCP/IP stack itself only comes in binary form.
 All tools are also included precompiled in the distribution, so an
 installation only have to build the stack itself for your system, and
 then you should be ready to go.
 The API only have a slight resemblance to the Unix sockets API. However,
 if someone sits down to write code to use TCP/IP under RSX, I'm sure
 they will discover that it is extremely easy to use the libraries, or
 the basic functions.
 The TCP/IP implementation is mostly written as device drivers. This also
 have some other interesting implications, such as it is possible to
 access TCP as a normal file. You can, for instance do something similar
 to the Unix netcat command by issuing the MCR command:
   > PIP TI:=TC:"foo.com";4711
 which would open a connection to 
foo.com, on port 4711, and any data
 sent from that machine will be shown on the terminal.
 The resources used by TCP/IP are modest. A memory area (size selectable
 at generation/startup) is used internally. The amount of memory in the
 private pool limits the amount of data that can be buffered. Normal pool
 is used in a small quantity for each TCP port that is open.
 People are welcome to play around with this, and make improvements.
 Contributions of code is most welcome.
 There are still lots of things to do. The programs marked as rudimentary
 should be rewritten.
 The most obvious thing still missing is a telnet daemon, which probably
 is my next step.
 However, the reason for now announcing the release is that it can
 finally be distributed natively from an RSX host.
 The main locations to download the TCP/IP for RSX are:
 Madame.Update.UU.SE (anonymous ftp).
 This is one of my development systems for this software. It runs under
 E11, and if things are down, I blame E11. :-)
 When connected, you are already in the right directory. There is both an
 RL02 disk image there, which can be downloaded by anyone. If you happen
 to have an RSX system which you are conneting from, you can also try
 getting the BQTCP.TAP tape image. Such an image will not transport
 cleanly to a non-RSX system, however. Sorry.
 ftp.Update.UU.SE (anonymous ftp) - /pub/pdp11/rsx/tcpip
 The disk image is normally duplicated to ftp.update.uu.se as well, so
 the same file can be found there.
 I hope some people will find this useful/amusing. :-)
       Johnny Billquist