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Revision as of 22:04, 16 July 2007 by 81.187.162.109 (talk) (Additional detail)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)The Coloured Book protocols were a set of X.25 protocols used on SERCnet and JANET between 1980 and 1992. After 1992, Internet standards were adopted on JANET instead; they were operated simultaneously for a while, but eventually X.25 support faded away.
The standards were:
- The Pink Book defined protocols for transport over Ethernet. The protocol was basically X.25 level 3 running over LLC2.
- The Orange Book defined protocols for transport over the local network, based on the Cambridge Ring.
- The Yellow Book defined the Yellow Book Transport Service (YBTS) protocol, which was mainly run over X.25. It was developed by the Data Communications Protocols Unit of the Department of Industry in the late 1970s.
- The Green Book defined the TS29 protocol to connect terminals together, modelled Triple-X PAD (and similar in functionality to telnet), but running over YBTS.
- The Fawn Book defined the Simple Screen Management Protocol (SSMP)
- The Blue Book defined protocols for file transfer, similar to FTP, running over YBTS.
- The Grey Book defined protocols for email transfer (not file transfer as is sometimes claimed), running over Blue Book FTP.
- The Red Book defined the Job Transfer and Manipulation Protocol (JTMP), a mechanism for jobs to be transferred from one computer to another, and for the output to be returned to the originating (or another) computer, running over Blue Book FTP.
One famous quirk of Coloured Book was that components of hostnames were backwards compared to the Internet standard. For example, an address might be acc@UK.AC.HATFIELD.STAR
instead of acc@star.hatfield.ac.uk.
For more information, see JANET NRS.
It should be noted that the Yellow Book Transport Service was somewhat misnamed, as it does not fulfill the Transport role in the OSI 7-layer model. It really occupies the top of the Network layer, making up for X.25's lack of NSAP addressing at the time (which didn't appear until the X.25(1980) revision, and wasn't available in implementations for some years afterwards). YBTS used Source routing addressing between YBTS nodes—there was no global addressing scheme at that time.
References
- A Dictionary of Computing. Oxford University Press, 2004, s.v. "coloured book"