mrose@CHEETAH.NYSER.NET (Marshall Rose) (12/20/89)
...just in time for the holiday season! Back in July, NYSERNet started a White Pages Pilot Project using X.500 over TCP/IP as the underlying technology. At the three month mark last October, we hit nearly 100K entries at approximately 30 sites, about half of these were NYSERNet sites. During the last three months, we (NYSERNet and University College London) have spent a lot of effort making the software more robust, performant, and usable, based on our initial experiences. Well, as we enter the next three months, I'd like to extend an invitation to Internet sites in the US and CA to join our pilot. Here are the details: 1. You will need to run your own Directory Service Agent (DSA). This should run on just about any 4BSD-derived platform, although the recommended platform is a Sun-3 or Sun-4. You will need 30MB free disk for sources and executables. In addition, for each person you intend to have registered, the DSA will require approximately 1K of primary memory. (Yes, the DSA keeps entries resident in core, does its own memory management, etc., etc., there are obscure technical reasons for this.) I'm the first to admit that the memory requirement is "noteworthy", but just think of it as the price of admission. 2. The machine you run your DSA on will have to be on the Internet (direct IP access) and your organization must reside in the United States or Canada. The Canadian DMD (Directory Management Domain) is still being set-up at the University of Toronto, but should be operational before year's end. If there is an IP-connected site in Mexico, contact me: I'd like to get c=MX up and running sometime. It would be nice to offer White Pages over dial-up or something, but no dice. Think of the IP-connectivity requirement as another price of admission. 3. You will need to be able to devote time to installing the software and maintaining it. You will also need to check on your DSA regularly (i.e., once each morning) just to see that things are fine. In addition, if users at your site need help, you will be the first point of contact. This really isn't such a drain, considering that if you're the PostMaster at this site, you perform the exact same functions already. So, after comitting all this what do you get? Well, if you want a "hype" answer: - you get to join a large distributed information service which is administered by different organizations; - you get to take part in the first production-quality field test of the OSI Directory (X.500); - you get to take part in the first large scale production application of OSI technology on top of the TCP/IP suite of protocols; and, - you get to add this experience to your resume, which will look quite good. But, if you want the real answer: You get to offer an exciting new service to your users. White Pages is just one of many applications you can host on top of the OSI Directory. By getting the Directory installed at your site, you are bootstrapping yourself to support the next generation of applications which need Directory Service, e.g., MHS (X.400). Besides, it's fun to run the White Pages software to track people down, display their photos, find out their favorite drink, etc. For more information, use anonymous FTP to host nisc.nyser.net, and retrieve the file pilot/src/pilot-ps.tar.Z in BINARY mode. This contains a compressed tar image of several postscript files containing four documents: an introduction, an Admin Guide, a User Manual, and a presentation. Print these. The Admin Guide says how to get the software. /mtr ps: if you can't use FTP, then you don't have IP-connectivity (and can't participate anyway). Be kind to the WPP manager and don't send messages asking for these documents. Wait until the next release of the ISODE (next month), which will contain them, and you can print them yourself. Thanks! /mtr