Date: Sun, 03 Jul 2005 01:02:47 -0000 From: Andre Oppermann <andre@freebsd.org> To: Dag-Erling =?iso-8859-1?Q?Sm=F8rgrav?= <des@des.no> Cc: freebsd-net@freebsd.org, freebsd-arch@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Removing T/TCP and replacing it with something simpler Message-ID: <417925D8.C426261E@freebsd.org> References: <4177C8AD.6060706@freebsd.org> <xzpk6tjx8vb.fsf@dwp.des.no>
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Dag-Erling Smørgrav wrote: > > Andre Oppermann <andre@freebsd.org> writes: > > o T/TCP only available on FreeBSD. No other Operating System or TCP/IP > > stack implements it to my knowledge. Certainly no OS that is common. > > AFAIK, both Linux and Windows support it, at least on the server side > (i.e. they can receive T/TCP connections even if they can't initiate > them). Any fully TCP compliant stack should be able to accept T/TCP connection attempts. However if it didn't implement T/TCP itself it would simply do the standard 3WSH. So yes, you can use T/TCP from the client side towards any TCP server but you don't get any benefit from it. Neither Windows or Linux implement it. Windows during the NT4 days had a bug in the TCP stack that allowed something like T/TCP but it wasn't T/TCP and didn't work with T/TCP compliant clients. > > o T/TCP requires different API calls than TCP to use it (UDP like). > > Only on the client side, I believe. Yes, on the client side. sendto() instead of connect()+write(). > > o T/TCP is not supported by any common network application. > > Prior to libfetch, fetch(1) used it by default. Only if T/TCP was enabled on the machine (net.inet.tcp.rfc1644). > > Thus after the removal of T/TCP for the reasons above I want to provide > > a work-alike replacement for T/TCP's functionality: > > Unlike your proposal, T/TCP is described in Internet RFCs (1379 and > 1644) and well-known by the Internet community. Well known for its gaping security holes and left unimplemented on any other OS except FreeBSD. -- Andre _______________________________________________ freebsd-net@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-net To unsubscribe, send any mail to "freebsd-net-unsubscribe@freebsd.org"
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