RFC599

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                                                           13 Dec 73

NIC 20854, RFC 599: Update on NETRJS


Network Working Group Robert T. Braden NIC #20854 UCLA/CCN RFC #599 December 13, 1973

                        UPDATE ON NETRJS

A. INTRODUCTION

In July 1971, CCN published RFC #189 defining NETRJS, a private protocol for remote job entry. NETRJS provides a Network interface to CCN's rje program called RJS (Remote Job Service).(3) As noted in an earlier RFC,(6) "RJS" is the proper name of a software package existing ony at CCN, not a generic term for rje.

For over two years now, CCN has provided rje service to the Network using NETRJS. We know of the following distinct implementations of NETRJS user porgrams:

  RAND             OS/MVT on 370/158 (originally on 360/65)
  UCLA-NMC         SEX on Sigma 7
  Illinois         ANTS on PDP-11
  Utah             Tenex on PDP-10
  MIT-DMCG         ITS on PDP-10
  Harvard          DEC system on PDP-10
  UCSB             OS/MVT on 360/75
  ISI,BBN,NIC,I4   Tenex on PDP-10

We apologize to anyone slighted by omission from this list. Writing a new user process for NETRJS has proved to be a modest and straightforward task.

During the month of October, 1973, CCN processed 1373 batch jobs via NETRJS. The complete statistics are:

    1,373          Jobs submitted
    1,105          Jobs "printed"
        0          Jobs "punched"




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   49,400          Cards "read"
  822,900          Lines "printed"
   18,907          Pages "printed"
    393.6          Connect hours

The average job submitted was 360 lines ("cards"), and returned 745 lines on 17.1 pages. These figures are fairly typical.

B. NEW ICP SOCKETS

At the request of the Socket Czar, Jon Postel, (see RFC #433) we intend to move the NETRJS ICP sockets from 11, 13, and 15 to 71, 73, and 75, respectively. At present, NETRJS is available from either socket subspace, so system programmers responsible for maintaining NETRJS user processes can switch over at their leisure. We plan to "decommit" sockets 11, 13, and 15 on July 1, 1974.

Those hosts which access NETRJS via socket 1 are unaffected.

C. NEW NETRJS

Last Fall, CCN installed a new implementation of its NETRJS server. An internal NETRJS rewrite was necessitated by other system changes and was timed to coincide with installation on September 5 of the "last release" of OS/360, Release 21.7. The new version of NETRJS contains a number of internal improvements over the original version written two years ago. There are also a few external differences, as follows:

  1. No More Squish
     The long-standing "squish" problem in NETRJS has been fixed.
     This problem arose because of the "squishiness" of Network data
     transfer, i.e. the variable delay between originator and
     receiver processes due to NCP buffering.  The result was that a
     short print output file could be "transmitted" by RJS,
     dequeued, and discarded at CCN before the first message had
     actually reached the remote host.  If the remote host crashed
     or the user tried to cancel (and save) the output stream, it
     was too late; the output was lost in the "squish".  We were
     careless about this in the first version.  Now NETRJS awaits
     the RFNM from the end-of-data mark before telling RJS to
     discard the job output.




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  2. Timeouts
     The new verson is a little tougher on timeouts, to free CCN
     resources when users are slow.
        a. Signon Timeout
           If the user, after connecting to NETRJS and receiving the
           READY message, fails to send a valid SIGNON command
           within 3 minutes, CCN will close the Telnet connections.
        b. Data Transfer Timeout
           (1)  CCN will abort the READER data transfer connection
           if the user site leaves the connection open without
           sending any bits for 5 minutes.
           (2)  CCN will abort the PRINTER or PUNCH data transfer
           connection if the user site stops accepting bits for 5
           minutes.
  3. New Messages
     The NETRJS messages to the remote terminal have been revised to
     better distinguish problems at CCN, at the user site, or in the
     Network.  See Reference 8 for a complete list.
  4. Subsystem Interrupt
     The user can send a Control-C to terminate his NETRJS session
     either before or after signon.  Continuation is not possible
     after the Control-C.
     This provides an escape for a user who for some reason can't
     signon or signoff or close his Telnet connection.  If the user
     entered via the RJS command in Socket 1, Control C will return
     him to the Server Telnet command level.

One other improvement will reduce user frustration: NETRJS now returns an INVALID SIGNON message if the user enters anything but a valid SIGNON command after initially connecting to the NETRJS server.






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D. CLARIFICATIONS AND AMENDMENTS TO NETRJS PROTOCOL

Over the past two years, system programmers writing NETRJS user processes have pointed out areas of the protocol which were poorly defined in RFC #189. In addition a few minor changes have been made, largely as the result of implementation accidents.

  1.  The jobname header of a print file does not have an ASA
      carriage control byte.  However, it will be encoded in the
      format (compressed or truncated) selected by a particular
      VRBT.
  2.  The punch connection sends 81 byte records, the first byte
      being a blank carriage control character.  This is contrary to
      RFC #189 and is illogical; it was an implementation bug which
      we kept for compatibility.
  3.  Page 3 of RFC #189 defined fixed values for the user's data
      transfer sockets relative to his Telnet sockets.  In fact,
      NETRJS does not enforce these user data transfer sockets but
      will accept RFC's for any user sockets.
  4.  RFC #189 specified a choice of two character mappings for the
      virtual remote batch terminal:  EBCDIC and ASCII (-68).  An
      ASCII-63 mapping was later added for the convenience of users
      with Model 33-like keyboards (RAND, actually).  The ASCII-63
      mapping is selected by doing an ICP to socket 75 or by
      entering "TTYRJS" in CN's Telnet Server.  figure 1 shows the
      actual ASCII-63 mapping in use today.  This supercedes the
      earlier version of the mapping, shown in RFC 338.
  5.  The ASCII-68 mapping specified in RFC 189 was also changed to
      provide unique mappings for all ASCII characters.  The present
      ASCII-68 mapping used by both NETRJS and TSO at CCN is shown
      in Figure 1.

E. RJS TERMINAL OPTIONS

When a new NETRJS virtual terminal is defined, certain options are available; these options are listed below. If the user does not specify otherwise, CCN will use truncated data format and turn all other options on.

  1. Truncated/Compressed Data Format
     As explained in RFC 189, a virtual remote batch terminal under
     RJS may use either the turncated data format (default) or the



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     compressed format for printer and punch output.  With the
     truncated format, CCN merely removes trailing blanks from each
     output line; if compressed format is specified, CCN will also
     encode strings of inbedded blanks or other repeated characters.
     CCN will accept either format in the card reader stream,
     regardless of the terminal option.  See Reference 9 for
     discussion of the virtues of compression.
  2. Automatic Coldstart Job Resubmission
     If "R" (Restart) is specified in the accounting field on the
     JOB card and if this option is chosen, RJS will automatically
     resubmit the job from the beginning if the CCN operating system
     should be "coldstarted" before all output from the job is
     returned.  Otherwise, the job will be lost and must be
     resubmitted from the remote terminal in case of a coldstart.
  3. Automatic Output RESTART
     With this option, transmission of printer output which is
     interrupted by a broken connection always starts over at the
     beginning.  Without this option, the output is backspaced
     approximately one page when restarted, unless the user forces
     the output to start over from the beginning with a RESTART
     command when the printer connection is re-opened and before
     printing begins.
  4. Password Protection
     This option allows a password to be supplied when a terminal is
     signed on, preventing unauthorized use of the terminal ID.
  5. Suppression of Punch Separator and Large Letters.
     This option suppresses both separator cards which RJS normally
     puts in front of each punched output deck, and separator pages
     on printed output containing the job name in large block
     letters.  These separators are an operational aid when the
     ouptut is directed to a real printer or punch, but generally
     undesirable for an ARPA user who is saving the output in a file
     for on-line examination.






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F. WARNING ON TENEX NETRJS USER PROCESS (6)

The Tenex implementation of NETRJS user program is a command normally called "RJS". This program has some pitfalls of which users should be aware.

  1.  For strictly historical reasons, the commonly-available
      version of the Tenex RJS command uses Socket 15, and
      therefore, the ASCII-63 translation.  We hope to propagate
      soon a version which uses the ASCII-68 mapping via Socket 73,
      and stamp out the earlier version.
  2.  The Tenex RJS command fails to recognize the US character
      sometimes used instead of CR LF as end-of-line.  As noted in
      RFC 571, the Tenex user FTP program has the same problem.
  3.  The Tenex RJS command truncates without warning card images
      exceeding 80 characters in length.

G. REFERENCES ON NETRJS

1. "Interim NETRJS Specifications", R. T. Braden. RFC #189: NIC

  #7133, July 15, 1971.
  This is the basic system programmer's definition document, and is
  really the final specification.  The proposed changes mentioned on
  the first page of RFC #189 were never implemented, since the DTP
  then in vogue became obsolete.

2. "NETRJS Remote Operator Commands", R. T. Braden. NIC #7182,

  August 9, 1971
  This document together with References 3 and 8 define the remote
  operator (i.e. user) command language for NETRJS, and form the
  basic user documentation for NETRJS at CCN.

3. "Implementation of a Remote Job Service", V. Martin and T. W.

  Springer.  NIC #7183, July, 1971.

4. "Remote Job Entry to CCN via UCLA Sigma 7; A scenario", UCLA/CCN.

  NIC #7748, November 15, 1971.
  This document described the first NETRJS user implementation
  available on a server host.  This program is no longer of general
  interest.




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5. "Using Network Remote Job Entry", E. F. Harslem. RFC #307: NIC

  #9258, February 24, 1972.
  This document is out of date, but describes generally the Tenex
  NETRJS user process "RJS".

6. "EBCDIC/ASCII Mapping for Network RJS", R. T. Braden. RFC #338:

   NIC #9931, May 17, 1972.
  The ASCII-63 mapping described here is no longer correct, but
  CCN's standard ASCII-68/EBCDIC mapping is described correctly.

7. "NETRJT--Remote Job Service Protocol for TIP's", R. T. Braden.

  RFC #283: NIC 38165, December 20, 1971.
  This was an attempt to define an rje protocol to handle TIPs.
  Although NETRJT was never implemented, many of its features are
  incorporated in the current Network standard RJE protocol.

8. "CCN NETRJS Server Messages to Remote User", R. T. Braden. NIC

  #20268, November 26, 1973.

9. "FTP Data Compression", R. T. Braden. RFC #468: NIC #14742,

  March 8, 1973.















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FIGURE 1. NETRJS CHARACTER MAPPINGS AT UCLA-CCN

The character set of the VRBT (VIRTUAL Remote Batch Terminal) is determined by the initial connection to RJS, as follows:

  VRBT Character Set  |  ICP Socket    OR    Server Telnet Command
  ----------------------------------------------------------------
     EBCDIC           |      71         |          RJS
     ASCII-68         |      73         |          ARJS
     ASCII-63(tty)    |      75         |          TTYRJS

These mappings are as follows:

  ASCII-68 Mapping:
     Corresponding graphics are mapped one-to-one.
     Unmatched graphics are mapped as in the table below.
     ASCII-68 controls are mapped one-to-one onto the matching
     EBCDIC controls, with DC4(ASCII) mapped onto TM(EBCDIC).
  ASCII-63 Mapping:
     Corresponding graphics are mapped one-to-one.
     ASCII codes X'61' - X'7A' (the ASCII-68 lower case letters are
     mapped onto EBCDIC lower case.
     Unmatched graphics are mapped as shown in the table below.
     ASCII-63 controls X'00' - X'1F' are mapped as for ASCII-68.
     ASCII codes X'60' and X'7B' - X'7E' are mapped as shown in the
     following table.









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            EBCDIC       |    ASCII-68 VRBT    |    ASCII-63 VRBT
     ---------------------------------------------------------------
     vertical bar  X'4F' | vertical bar  X'7C' | open bracket  X'5B'
     not sign      X'5F' | tilde         X'7E' | close bracket X'5D'
     cent sign     X'4A' | back slash    X'5C' | back slash    X'5C'
     underscore    X'6D' | underscore    X'5F' | left arrow    X'5F'
     .             X'71' | up arrow      X'5E' | up arrow      X'5E'
     open bracket  X'AD' | open bracket  X'5B' | .             X'7C'
     close bracket X'BD' | close bracket X'5D' | .             X'7E'
     .             X'8B' | open brace    X'7B' | .             X'7B'
     .             X'9B' | close brace   X'7D' | .             X'7D'
     .             X'79' | accent        X'60' | .             X'60'
     Note : this page is available on-line as HELP RJSCHARS in CCN's
     Telnet Server (Socket 1).  The on-line version is set up to be
     typed out on an ASCII-68 terminal.



















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