Hi,
I'm looking for the source code to "Network Unix" as described here:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc681
and/or its later development described here:
https://archive.org/details/networkunixsyste243kell
Actually, I'd be happy with finding the source code to any version of this Network Unix. This version of Unix had fairly wide use in the Arpanet community and was in use at several universities and organizations (e.g.: Rand, BBN, etc.)
Would anybody here know of a surviving copy?
Many thanks in advance,
Paul
Hi Diomidis,
Thanks for that link. This is exactly what I'm trying to ascertain, and I'm finding conflicting evidence.
- The socket API was in a state of flux between October '81 and March '82 (when 4.1a was supposedly cut). By March '82 it was mostly there, but not until later in the year did it fully stabilize.
- The BBN stack did not use the sockets API as late as January '82
- What I currently fathom from the SCCS files is that the socket API implementation was hard coded to use the nascent Berkeley stack.
- But the BBN code was likely in the 4.x BSD source tree, outside of SCCS (Berkeley started out with the BBN code, but it morphed quite quickly and drastically)
- In 1985 the BBN code finally enters SCCS (marked 'deprecated'); this code was integrated with the sockets API, and much developed from its 1982 form
Either the below link is correct (and I think I may have contributed to its view in a private mail to Kirk), or there were two different distributions (4.1a BSD with Berkeley network code and 4BSD with BBN network code). The two may have merged into one in peoples' memories: 35 years is a long time. Finding the actual kernel source for the 4.1a distribution could provide clarity on this point.
Perhaps Bill Joy could shed some light on the issue, but I don't have contact details. Having actual source removes all doubt.
Paul
On 1 Dec 2016, at 10:51 , Diomidis Spinellis wrote:
> The best description I could find is the following:
>
> http://minnie.tuhs.org/pipermail/tuhs/2016-September/007417.html
>
> > The 4.1a distribution had the initial socket interface with a
> > prerelease of the BBN TCP/IP under it. There was wide distribution
> > of 4.1a. The 4.1b distribution had the fast filesystem added and
> > a more mature socket interface (notably the listen/accept model
> > added by Sam Leffler).
>
> Diomidis
>
> On 01/12/2016 10:30, Paul Ruizendaal wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm trying to find out exactly what was in the 4.1a BSD distribution, as far as the kernel is concerned. The image in the CSRG archive comes from a tape that had a hard read error and does not include any kernel sources. Some of the kernel files were already covered by SCCS around that time, but not everything. My main focus is to understand tcp/ip networking in 4.1a and whether the kernel could be built with either the Berkeley or the BBN network stack.
>>
>> Does anybody know where I could find a full set of kernel sources for the 4.1a BSD kernel?
>>
>> Many thanks in advance!
>>
>> Paul
>>
>
Hi,
I'm trying to find out exactly what was in the 4.1a BSD distribution, as far as the kernel is concerned. The image in the CSRG archive comes from a tape that had a hard read error and does not include any kernel sources. Some of the kernel files were already covered by SCCS around that time, but not everything. My main focus is to understand tcp/ip networking in 4.1a and whether the kernel could be built with either the Berkeley or the BBN network stack.
Does anybody know where I could find a full set of kernel sources for the 4.1a BSD kernel?
Many thanks in advance!
Paul