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Network Working Group John M. McQuillan Request for Comments #394 Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc. NIC 11856 27 September 1972 Categories: B.1 Updates: RFC #381 Obsoletes: TWO PROPOSED CHANGES TO THE IMP-HOST PROTOCOL --------------------------------------------- This note describes two changes to the IMP-Host communication protocol described in BBN Report 1822 and revised in RFC 381. The first deals with the IMP-to-Host interface and the 30-second timeout mechanism on each IMP transmission to the Host. The second deals with the Host-to-IMP interface and proposes a new timeout mechanism. These changes are independent; in statement and in implementation. We invite comments on each proposal. If no adverse comments are received, they will be installed in the network on Tuesday, October 10 (if serious adverse comments are received, action will be delayed until early November). 1) Declaring an unresponsive Host as dead to the network ----------------------------------------------------- Currently, a Host is given 30 seconds to accept each packet of a regular message and is also given 30 seconds to accept non- regular messages. If the Host is unresponsive for this period of time, the IMP takes the following actions: a) All messages held for the Host are discarded. b) The source Host for each discarded messages is sent a type 9, subtype 0 message (Incomplete Transmission - Destination Host Tardy). c) The IMP ready line is dropped and raised again. d) The Host is sent 3 type 4 messages (NOP). e) The Host is sent a type 10 message (IMP-Host Interface Reset). We propose that in addition the IMP declare the Host dead to the network. Upon receipt of the next bit from the Host, the IMP will declare the Host alive and begin the 30-second delay while the information that the Host is now alive is propagated throughout the network. [Page 1] RFC #394 John M. McQuillan This change is an attempt to alleviate some problems that are caused by Hosts whose ready lines are up when they are not able to accept bits from the IMP. Several Hosts fall into this category. There are some Hosts whose ready lines are wired to be on all the time. It is annoying, in terminal use and in running survey programs, to have to wait for 30 seconds to find out that a Host is not responding. Other Hosts sometimes go into "break- point mode" for system debugging for several minutes at a time. The NCP software is not running, and messages accumulate in the network and are thrown away. It seems preferable to declare such Hosts to be dead until they send a message* to the IMP, and then any source Host attempting to communicate can be notified at once that the destination Host is dead. 2) Timing out Host-to-IMP messages in 15 seconds --------------------------------------------- When the IMP receives a message from a Host, it must acquire several internal resources in order to process the message. It must assign it a message number, make an entry in an internal table, and so on. If any of these IMP resources is not available, the IMP simply waits until it does become available. It cannot take any more messages from the Host, and so the interface is stopped. This condition is usually momentary, but under unusual circumstances the IMP may not be able to process a message it has begun to accept for many seconds. This situation creates an especially difficult problem for Hosts with half-duplex interfaces. If the IMP takes 30 seconds to process a message, then the IMP-to- Host timeout outlined in 1) takes effect, and the Host loses all messages sent to it in the last 30 seconds. (It should be noted that the half-duplex interface may be the cause of a deadly embrace, e.g. the reason that the IMP cannot acquire the necessary resources to process a given message may be that the Host in question has several messages on its queue and they are tying up storage, message __________________