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DECnet is a suite of network protocols created by
Digital Equipment Corporation, originally released in
1975 in order to connect two PDP-11
minicomputers. It evolved into one of the first
peer-to-peer network architectures, thus transforming DEC into a networking powerhouse in the
1980s.
Initially built with four layers, it later (1992) evolved into a seven layer
Open Systems Interconnection compliant networking protocol, around the time when open systems (
POSIX compliant, i.e.
Unix-like) were grabbing marketshare from the proprietary OSes like VAX/VMS and AlphaVMS.
DECnet was built right into the DEC flagship operating system
OpenVMS since its inception.Digital ported it to its own
Ultrix variant of
Unix, as well as
Apple Macintosh computers and PCs running both DOS and Windows under the name
DEC Pathworks, transforming these systems into DECnet end-nodes in a network of
VAX machines. More recently, an open-source version has been developed for the Linux OS: see Linux-DECnet on Sourceforge.
Brief overview of the evolution of DECnet
DECnet refers to a specific set of hardware and software networking products which implement the
DIGITAL Network Architecture (DNA). The DIGITAL Network Architecture is essentially a set of documents which define the network architecture in general, state the specifications for each layer of the architecture, and describe the protocol stack which operate within each layer. Although packet sniffer tend to categorize all protocols from DIGITAL as "DECnet", strictly speaking, non-routed DIGITAL protocols such as LAT, SCS, AMDS, LAST/LAD are not DECnet protocols and are not part of the DIGITAL Network Architecture.
To trace the evolution of DECnet is to trace the development of DNA. The beginnings of DNA were in the early 1970s. DIGITAL published its first DNA specification at about the same time that
IBM announced its Systems Network Architecture (SNA). Since that time, development of DNA has evolved through the following phases:
Phase I (
1974)Support limited to 2
PDP-11s running the RSX-11 operating system only, with communication over point-to-point (
DDCMP) links between nodes.
Phase II (
1976)Support for networks of up to 32 nodes with multiple, different implementations which could interoperate with each other. Implementations expanded to included RSTS/E, TOPS-10 and
TOPS-20 with communications between processors still limited to point-to-point links only. Introduction of file transfer (FAL), remote file access (DAP), task-to-task programming interfaces and network management features.
Phase III (
1980).Support for networks of up to 255 nodes over point-to point and multi-drop links. Introduction of adaptive routing capability, downline loading (MOP), record access, a network management architecture, and gateways to other types of networks including IBM’s SNA and ITU-T Recommendation
X.25.
{],
IBM token ring,
HDLC, Fiber distributed data interface, ...|----- align="left"! Physical| Ethernet,
IBM token ring, Fiber distributed data interface, ...|}
Phase IV and
Phase IV+ (1982).Phase IV was released initially to RSX-11 and OpenVMS systems, later TOPS-20, TOPS-10,
ULTRIX,
VAXELN, and RSTS/E gained support. Support for networks of up to 64,449 nodes (63 areas of 1023 nodes), datalink capabilities expanded beyond DDCMP to include Ethernet local area network support as the datalink of choice, expanded adaptive routing capability to include hierarchical routing (areas, level 1 and level 2 routers), VMScluster support (cluster alias) and host services (CTERM). CTERM allowed a user on one computer to log into another computer remotely, performing the same function that Telnet does in the TCP/IP protocol stack. Digital also released a product called the PATHWORKS client, and more commonly known as the PATHWORKS 32 client, that implemented much of DECnet Phase IV for DOS, and 16 and 32 bit Microsoft Windows platforms (all the way through to Windows Server 2003).
Phase IV implemented an 8 layer architecture similar to the
OSI model (7 layer) model especially at the lower levels
(see diagram). Since the OSI standards were not yet fully developed at the time, many of the Phase IV protocols remained proprietary.
The Ethernet implementation was unusual in that the software changed the physical address of the Ethernet interface on the network to AA-00-04-00-xx-yy where xx-yy reflected the DECnet network address of the host. This allowed router-less LAN operation because the LAN address could be deduced from the DECnet address. This precluded connecting two NICs from the same DECnet node onto the same LAN segment, however.
The initial implementations released were for Virtual Memory System and RSX-11, later this expanded to virtually every
operating system DIGITAL ever shipped with the notable exception of
RT-11. DECnet stacks are found on Linux, SunOS and other platforms, and Cisco and other network vendors offer products that can cooperate with and operate within DECnet networks. Full DECnet Phase IV specifications are available.
At the same time that DECnet Phase IV was released, the company also released a proprietary protocol called
Local Area Transport for serial terminal access via
Terminal servers. LAT is entirely separate from DECnet, though many DECserver LAT terminal servers did use MOP for the server image download and related bootstrap processing.
Enhancements made to DECnet Phase IV eventually became known as DECnet Phase IV+, although systems running this protocol remained completely interoperable with DECnet Phase IV systems.
Phase V and
Phase V+ (1987).Support for very large (architecturally unlimited) networks, a new network management model, local or distributed name service, improved performance over Phase IV. Move from a proprietary network to an Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) by integration of ISO standards to provide multi-vendor connectivity andcompatibility with DNA Phase IV, the last two features resulted in a hybrid network architecture (DNA and OSI) with separate “towers” sharing an integrated transport layer. Transparent transport level links to TCP/IP were added via the
Internet Engineering Task Force Request for Comments 1006 (OSI over IP) and RFC 1859 (NSP over IP) standards
(see diagram).
It was later renamed
DECnet/OSI to emphasize its OSI interconnectibility, and subsequently
DECnet-Plus as TCP/IP protocols were incorporated.
Availability
The design of the DECnet protocols was done entirely by Digital Equipment Corporation. But starting with DECnet Phase II, the protocol specifications were published. They were open standards in the sense that anyone could freely implement them. And indeed several implementations were developed outside DEC, including one for Linux.
Hobbyist DECnet networks
- HECnet The first hobbyist DECnet network.
- Italian Retro DECnet is a hobbyist DECnet network.
References
- Carl Malamud, Analyzing DECnet/OSI Phase V. Van Hostrand Reinhold, 1991. ISBN 0-442-00375-7.
- James Martin, Joe Leben, DECnet Phase V: An OSI Implementation. Digital Press, 1992. ISBN 1-55580-769-0.
- DECnet-Plus manuals for OpenVMS are available at http://www.hp.com/go/openvms/doc/
- DECnet Phase IV OpenVMS manuals for DECnet Phase IV; these Phase IV manuals are archived on OpenVMS Freeware V5.0 distribution, at http://www.hp.com/go/openvms/freeware and other sites.
- DECnet Phase IV architecture manuals (including DDCMP, MOP, NICE, NSP, DAP, CTERM, routing); at http://ftp.digital.com/pub/DEC/DECnet/PhaseIV/ and other sites.
DECnet from FOLDOC
DECnet. A proprietary network protocol designed by Digital Equipment Corporation. The functionality of each Phase of the implementation, such as Phase IV and Phase V, is different.
DECnet for Linux
DECnet for Linux. A project to provide DECnet phase IV connectivity for Linux
DECnet for Linux - Kernel Patch
DECnet for Linux. A project to provide DECnet phase IV connectivity for Linux The Kernel Patch
DECnet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DECnet is a suite of network protocols created by Digital Equipment Corporation, originally released in 1975 in order to connect two PDP-11 minicomputers.
SourceForge.net: linux-decnet » home
A project to provide DECnet phase IV connectivity for Linux
Dreamtime Homepage
Dreamtime Homepage. Below are a few links: Photos; Event photo links like from RIPE meetings. Mailing lists hosted here. Digital Multia/UDB details. DECNet for Linux software ftp ...
DECNET
Acronym Finder: DECNET stands for Digital Equipment Corporation Network ... Suggest new definition. This definition appears very rarely and is found in the following Acronym Finder ...
DECnet
To view the documents indexed under a topic, click on the term. For more specific and related terms, click on Related Topics.
Internetworking Technology Handbook - DECnet ...
Table Of Contents. Chapter Goals. DECnet. Introduction. DECnet Phase IV Digital Network Architecture. Phase IV DNA Layers. Phase IV DECnet Addressing. DECnet/OSI Digital Network ...
DECnet Protocols Suite - RP | MOP | NSP | SCP | DAP | CTERM | LAT ...
DECnet protocols ... Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) developed the DECnet protocol to allow high-speed communication between DEC ...