A Brief History of the Internet
and Related Networks
Introduction
In 1973, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) initiated a research program to
investigate techniques and technologies for interlinking
packet networks of various kinds. The objective was to develop
communication protocols which would allow networked computers
to communicate transparently across multiple, linked packet
networks. This was called the Internetting project and the
system of networks which emerged from the research was known
as the "Internet." The system of protocols which was developed
over the course of this research effort became known as
the TCP/IP Protocol Suite, after the two initial protocols
developed: Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet
Protocol (IP).
In 1986, the U.S. National Science Foundation
(NSF) initiated the development of the NSFNET which, today,
provides a major backbone communication service for the
Internet. With its 45 megabit per second facilities, the
NSFNET carries on the order of 12 billion packets per month
between the networks it links. The National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) and the U.S. Department
of Energy contributed additional backbone facilities in
the form of the NSINET and ESNET respectively. In Europe,
major international backbones such as NORDUNET and others
provide connectivity to over one hundred thousand computers
on a large number of networks. Commercial network providers
in the U.S. and Europe are beginning to offer Internet backbone
and access support on a competitive basis to any interested
parties.
"Regional" support for the Internet is
provided by various consortium networks and "local" support
is provided through each of the research and educational
institutions. Within the United States, much of this support
has come from the federal and state governments, but a considerable
contribution has been made by industry. In Europe and elsewhere,
support arises from cooperative international efforts and
through national research organizations. During the course
of its evolution, particularly after 1989, the Internet
system began to integrate support for other protocol suites
into its basic networking fabric. The present emphasis in
the system is on multiprotocol interworking, and in particular,
with the integration of the Open Systems Interconnection
(OSI) protocols into the architecture.
Both public domain and commercial implementations
of the roughly 100 protocols of TCP/IP protocol suite became
available in the 1980's. During the early 1990's, OSI protocol
implementations also became available and, by the end of
1991, the Internet has grown to include some 5,000 networks
in over three dozen countries, serving over 700,000 host
computers used by over 4,000,000 people.
A great deal of support for the Internet
community has come from the U.S. Federal Government, since
the Internet was originally part of a federally-funded research
program and, subsequently, has become a major part of the
U.S. research infrastructure. During the late 1980's, however,
the population of Internet users and network constituents
expanded internationally and began to include commercial
facilities. Indeed, the bulk of the system today is made
up of private networking facilities in educational and research
institutions, businesses and in government organizations
across the globe.
The Coordinating Committee for Intercontinental
Networks (CCIRN), which was organized by the U.S. Federal
Networking Council (FNC) and the European Reseaux Associees
pour la Recherche Europeenne (RARE), plays an important
role in the coordination of plans for government- sponsored
research networking. CCIRN efforts have been a stimulus
for the support of international cooperation in the Internet
environment.
Internet Technical Evolution
Over its fifteen year history, the Internet
has functioned as a collaboration among cooperating parties.
Certain key functions have been critical for its operation,
not the least of which is the specification of the protocols
by which the components of the system operate. These were
originally developed in the DARPA research program mentioned
above, but in the last five or six years, this work has
been undertaken on a wider basis with support from Government
agencies in many countries, industry and the academic community.
The Internet Activities Board (IAB) was created in 1983
to guide the evolution of the TCP/IP Protocol Suite and
to provide research advice to the Internet community.
During the course of its existence, the
IAB has reorganized several times. It now has two primary
components: the Internet Engineering Task Force and the
Internet Research Task Force. The former has primary responsibility
for further evolution of the TCP/IP protocol suite, its
standardization with the concurrence of the IAB, and the
integration of other protocols into Internet operation (e.g.
the Open Systems Interconnection protocols). The Internet
Research Task Force continues to organize and explore advanced
concepts in networking under the guidance of the Internet
Activities Board and with support from various government
agencies.
A secretariat has been created to manage
the day-to-day function of the Internet Activities Board
and Internet Engineering Task Force. IETF meets three times
a year in plenary and its approximately 50 working groups
convene at intermediate times by electronic mail, teleconferencing
and at face-to-face meetings. The IAB meets quarterly face-to-face
or by videoconference and at intervening times by telephone,
electronic mail and computer-mediated conferences.
Two other functions are critical to IAB
operation: publication of documents describing the Internet
and the assignment and recording of various identifiers
needed for protocol operation. Throughout the development
of the Internet, its protocols and other aspects of its
operation have been documented first in a series of documents
called Internet Experiment Notes and, later, in a series
of documents called Requests for Comment (RFCs). The latter
were used initially to document the protocols of the first
packet switching network developed by DARPA, the ARPANET,
beginning in 1969, and have become the principal archive
of information about the Internet. At present, the publication
function is provided by an RFC editor.
The recording of identifiers is provided
by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) who has
delegated one part of this responsibility to an Internet
Registry which acts as a central repository for Internet
information and which provides central allocation of network
and autonomous system identifiers, in some cases to subsidiary
registries located in various countries. The Internet Registry
(IR) also provides central maintenance of the Domain Name
System (DNS) root database which points to subsidiary distributed
DNS servers replicated throughout the Internet. The DNS
distributed database is used, inter alia, to associate host
and network names with their Internet addresses and is critical
to the operation of the higher level TCP/IP protocols including
electronic mail.
There are a number of Network Information
Centers (NICs) located throughout the Internet to serve
its users with documentation, guidance, advice and assistance.
As the Internet continues to grow internationally, the need
for high quality NIC functions increases. Although the initial
community of users of the Internet were drawn from the ranks
of computer science and engineering, its users now comprise
a wide range of disciplines in the sciences, arts, letters,
business, military and government administration.
Related Networks
In 1980-81, two other networking projects,
BITNET and CSNET, were initiated. BITNET adopted the IBM
RSCS protocol suite and featured direct leased line connections
between participating sites. Most of the original BITNET
connections linked IBM mainframes in university data centers.
This rapidly changed as protocol implementations became
available for other machines. From the beginning, BITNET
has been multi-disciplinary in nature with users in all
academic areas. It has also provided a number of unique
services to its users (e.g., LISTSERV). Today, BITNET and
its parallel networks in other parts of the world (e.g.,
EARN in Europe) have several thousand participating sites.
In recent years, BITNET has established a backbone which
uses the TCP/IP protocols with RSCS-based applications running
above TCP.
CSNET was initially funded by the National
Science Foundation (NSF) to provide networking for university,
industry and government computer science research groups.
CSNET used the Phonenet MMDF protocol for telephone-based
electronic mail relaying and, in addition, pioneered the
first use of TCP/IP over X.25 using commercial public data
networks. The CSNET name server provided an early example
of a white pages directory service and this software is
still in use at numerous sites. At its peak, CSNET had approximately
200 participating sites and international connections to
approximately fifteen countries.
In 1987, BITNET and CSNET merged to form the Corporation for
Research and Educational Networking (CREN). In the Fall of
1991, CSNET service was discontinued having fulfilled its
important early role in the provision of academic networking
service. A key feature of CREN is that its operational costs
are fully met through dues paid by its member organizations.
(Source :
http://www.isoc.org/internet/history/cerf.shtml)
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