Unix and Telebit modems
Henry L. Hall
hlh at awsum.UUCP
Sat May 10 09:25:12 AEST 1986
In article <510 at brl-smoke.ARPA>, lauren at rand-unix.arpa writes:
> ..... Protocols (like for running above real X.25/TCP links) designed
> to run on top of "conventional" error-free links generally perform badly
> in these sorts of situations, both due to modem characteristics and flow
> control problems. That is, when the underlying communications path
> isn't already totally error-corrected and flow-controlled from computer
> to computer, not just from modem to modem, there's trouble with those
> sorts of protocols. In other words, protocols designed to run over
> X.25 or TCP links will not perform well when they're not actually being
> run over X.25/TCP-type computer to computer error corrected and
> flow-controlled links. Factors such as system loading, type of
> serial port hardware, and a variety of other issues all enter the picture.
A comment I'd like to make would be, why not use an intelligent controller
which can ease the load on a computer by quite a considerable amount. There
are several intelligent controller manufacturers which do have a TCP / X.25
interface which can handle a high speed RS-232 interface on the modem side,
and which interface directly to a computer system's bus. System loading
and system bus loading can possibly be a factor (a system can't get the data
off the card quickly enough) but might be solved by having a large enough
packet buffer memory.
Helpful commentary welcomed. Thanks.
--
Henry L. Hall
Communication Machinery Corp., East Coast
{allegra, cbosgd, decvax, gatech, ihnp4, ll-xn, philabs, utzoo} !linus!awsum!hlh
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