You can look at the map (
http://akdesign.dyndns.org:8080/map
<http://akdesign.dyndns.org:8080/map>). Physicallly closest may not be the best
answer -- closest to the rest of the net is also interesting -- but both of those should
be visible on the map. You can turn off Level 1 nodes and links to see the area routing
backbone only, that's probably the best resource to answer your question.
paul
On Nov 5, 2021, at 5:04 AM, Brian Hechinger <wonko
at 4amlunch.net> wrote:
Yeah, I'm ready to fire up PyDECnet in preparation of getting a couple simh instances
going. Who'd going to be my closest router?
-brian
On 27/10/21 17:04, Johnny Billquist wrote:
> I'd probably point at someone in the UK. Let me know if we should start sorting
this out.
>
> Johnny
>
> On 2021-10-27 17:05, Brian Hechinger wrote:
>>
>>>> ...
>>>> For the others, Paul pretty much summed it up. In addition, it should
probably be mentioned that Multinet over TCP or UDP is possible inside VMS and RSX (as
well as with PyDECnet). DDCMP over TCP or UDP is possible with PyDECnet (actually, I could
probably add that in RSX as well), while GRE is mainly for Cisco, but I think PyDECnet
also can do that one?
>>>>
>>>> So choices are somewhat dependent on what system/software you are using.
>>> Yes, PyDECnet supports: real Ethernet, Ethernet bridging over UDP, GRE,
Multinet over TCP (and UDP but don't), DDCMP over TCP, UDP, simulated async
connections including Telnet, real async connections, and sync connections via my DDCMP
framer device. In other words, most of the datalinks DECnet has ever supported. Missing
are 802.5 token ring, HDLC, X.25, and PCL, I think that's about it. Some day I'll
think about 802.5 support not so much for that but because it would enable DECnet over
WiFi.
>>
>>
>> I was intending on running PyDECnet. I'm in southern Portugal. Not sure
who's closest to me.
>>
>>
>> -brian
>>
>