TCP and IP bake offs
From Computer History Wiki
The so-called TCP and IP bake offs were a series of early interoperability tests of initial implementations of the TCP and IP protocols.
Implementation demonstration
Four prototype implementations of TCP/IP were tested for mutual interoperability at an 'implementation demonstration' held as part of a internet meeting held at ARPA (the testing, in the afternoon, was actually performed at DCEC) on 4 December, 1978. This was likely the very earliest attempt to get different TCP implementations to connect to each other. They were:
- Terminal Interface Unit for the LSI-11 from SRI in MACRO-11
- UNIX Sixth Edition for the PDP-11 from BBN in C
- OS/MVT for the IBM 360 from UCLA
- Multics for the Heneywell 68/80 from the LCS
ISI bake off
6 prototype implementations of TCP/IP were tested at a 'TCP Bake Off' held at ISI on 27-28 January, 1979. They were the four above, and:
- UNIX Sixth Edition from BBN in Macro-11 (itself a port of the TIU implementation, above)
- TENEX for the PDP-10 from BBN
External links
- Internet Meeting Notes - 4 December 1978 (IEN-70)
- TCP Meeting Notes - 29 January 1979 (IEN-777)
- TCP Meeting Notes - 18&19 September 1978 (IEN 69) - has entries for the implementations listed above
- TCP Implementation Status (IEN 98) - additional information on the implementations listed above
- Another TCP Reference Implementation - one participant's notes/recollections
- TCP and IP Bake Off (RFC-1025)