[comp.mail.maps] UUCP map for README network

uucpmap@rutgers.rutgers.edu (06/05/87)

:	This is a shell archive.
:	Remove everything above this line and
:	run the following text with /bin/sh to create:
:	README
:	network
: This archive created: Fri Jun  5 06:42:25 1987
echo shar: extracting README
cat << 'SHAR_EOF' > README
# The UUCP map is posted to newsgroup comp.mail.maps.
#
# From rn, the map can be easily unpacked with a command such as
#	43-46w | (cd ~uucp/uumap ; sh)
# or you can use John Quarterman's script to automatically unpack the files.
# All files intended as pathalias input being with "d." and "u.", thus
#	pathalias Path.* uumap/[du].*
# is a useful command to run.  (You supply Path.* with local additions.)
# 
# The map is also available on a demand basis at a number of hosts who
# have volunteered to make their copy available to the general public ;
# details of this access are posted separately in file "network".
# 
# The files are organized by country, using the ISO 3166 3 letter country
# code for each country.  Each file has a name like u.iso.r1.r2.s, where
# "iso" is the country code, r1, r2, etc are regions and subregions
# (e.g. states in the USA, provinces in Canada, etc.) and s is a sequence
# number (usually 1, but sometimes 2, 3, and up may be provided to keep
# individual files down to a reasonable size, thus, u.usa.ca is separated
# into two regions: [135] for southern, [246] for northern.)  In a few
# cases where very large companies post their maps, separate files are used.
# For instance, *.b.* is the Bellcore file.
#
# The map contains two types of files: u.* and d.* files.  The d.* files
# are for domains registered in the UUCP Zone.  The u.* files are for
# UUCP hosts that do not have officially registered domains, but rather
# belong to the unofficial ".UUCP domain".  Membership in the UUCP Zone
# allows organizations and individuals to register official, unique,
# domain names, recognized by all major academic computing networks
# worldwide.  For more information about joining the UUCP Zone, send
# electronic mail to the UUCP Project at one of the addresses
#	uucp-query@stargate.com
#	{uiucdcs,cbosgd,cbatt}!stargate!uucp-query
#	cbosgd!stargate!uucp-query@seismo.css.gov
# or, if you cannot send electronic mail, telephone
#	+1 213 868 1134
# We strongly encourage you to send email if at all possible, since it
# cuts down on telephone tag and is much more efficient our volunteer
# workforce.
# 
# This map can be used to generate mail routes with pathalias.  Pathalias
# was posted to Usenet in January 1986 and will be posted again as needed
# The map is also useful to determine the person to contact when a problem
# arises, and to find someone for a new site to connect to.
# 
# Please check the entry for your host (and any neighbors for whom you know
# the information and have the time) for correctness and completeness.
# Please send corrections and additional information to uucpmap@cbosgd.UUCP
# or cbosgd!uucpmap or uucpmap@cbosgd.att.com.
# 
# This map is maintained by a group of volunteers, making up part of the UUCP
# Project.  These people devote many hours of their own time to helping out
# the UUCP community by keeping this map up to date.  The volunteers include:
#
# Jeff Janock - jeff@necntc.nec.com
#	USA: Conneticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
#	     Rhode Island, Vermont
#
#
# Nicholas (Nike) Horton - nike@harvard.harvard.edu
#	USA: Washington D.C., Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia,
#	     West Virginia
# 
#
# Rayan Zachariassen rayan@ai.toronto.edu
# 	CANADA: All provinces
# 
# 
#
# Bill Blue - bblue@crash.uucp
# 	USA: Arizona, California (Southern half)
# 
# 
#
# Erik Fair - nca-maps@ucbvax.berkeley.edu
# 	USA: California (Northern half)
# 
# 
# Karen Summers-Horton - ksh@stargate.com
# 	USA: Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming
# 
# 
# Doug McCallum - dougm@ico.isc.com
# 	USA: Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi,
# 	     Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah
# 
#
# Piet Beertema - Europe (piet@cwi.nl)
# 	Europe: all countries (unless otherwise noted)
# 
# 
# Gene Spafford - spaf@ics.gatech.edu
# 	USA: Florida, Georgia
# 
# 
# Bill Welch - zaiaz32!uucpmap@zaiaz.UUCP
# 	USA: Alabama, South Carolina
# 
# 
# Tim Thompson - tgt@stargate.com
# 	USA: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, North Carolina,
#	North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Wisconsin
#
#
# Hokey - hokey@plus5.com
# 	USA: Missouri
# 
#
# David Herron - david@ukma.UUCP
# 	USA: Kentucky
# 
#
# Steve Miller, Brian Richter - steve@cs.d.umn.edu,brianr@rosevax.rosemount.com
# 	USA: Minnesota
# 
#
# Kathy Andrews, Larry Auton - attmap@ihnp4.att.com, lda@clyde.att.com
# 	ATT: all logical regions
# 
#
# Torben Nielson, Bob Cunningham - torben@uhmanoa.UUCP, bob@uhmanoa.UUCP
# 	USA: Hawaii
# 
#
# Haesoon Cho - nmc@sorak.kaist.ac.kr
# 	Korea: all regions
# 
#
# Tohru Asami - asami@kddspeech.uucp
# 	Japan: all regions
# 
#
# Robert Elz, Dave Davey - map-coord@munnari.UUCP
# 	Australia: all regions
# 
#
# Jim Hand - hand@pyuxp.UUCP
# 	Bell Communicates Research (Bellcore): all sections
# 
#
# Paul Graham - pjg@unrvax.unr.edu
#	USA: Nevada
#
#
# Benny Somali - somali@indovax.uucp
#	Indonesia: all regions
#
#
# Mel Pleasant - pleasant@rutgers.edu
# 	Singapore: all regions
# 	New Zealand: all regions
# 
# 
# Please note that the purpose of this map is to make routers within
# UUCP work.  The eventual direction is to make the map smaller (through
# the use of domains), not larger.  As such, sites with lots of local
# machines connected together are encouraged to create a few gateway
# machines and to make arrangements that these gateways can forward
# mail to your local users.  We would prefer not to have information
# listing the machines on your local area networks, and certainly not
# your personal computers and workstations.  If you need such information
# for local mail delivery, create a supplement in pathalias form which
# you do not publish, but which you combine with the published data
# when you run pathalias.  We also do not want information about machines
# which are not on UUCP, that is, which are not reachable with the !
# notation from the main UUCP cluster.
#
# If you don't have pathalias, it has been posted to mod.sources most
# recently in January 1986.  If you
# don't have access to a mod.sources archive, contact the mod.sources
# moderator (currently Rich $alz, cbosgd!mirror!sources-request.)
# 
# The remainder of this file describes the format of the UUCP map data.
# It was written July 9, 1985 by Erik E. Fair <ucbvax!fair>, and
# last updated July 12, 1985 by Mark Horton <stargate!mark>.
# 
# The entire map is intended to be processed by pathalias, a program that
# generates UUCP routes from this data.  All lines beginning in `#' are
# comment lines to pathalias, however the UUCP Project has defined a set
# of these comment lines to have specific format so that a complete
# database could be built.
# 
# The generic form of these lines is
# 
# #<field id letter><tab><field data>
# 
# Each host has an entry in the following format.  The entry should begin
# with the #N line, end with a blank line after the pathalias data, and
# not contain any other blank lines, since there are ed, sed, and awk
# scripts that use expressions like /^#N $1/,/^$/ for the purpose of
# separating the map out into files, each containing one site entry.
# 
# #N	UUCP name of site
# #S	manufacturer machine model; operating system & version
# #O	organization name
# #C	contact person's name
# #E	contact person's electronic mail address
# #T	contact person's telephone number
# #P	organization's address
# #L	latitude / longitude
# #R	remarks
# #U	netnews neighbors
# #W	who last edited the entry ; date edited
# #
# sitename	.domain
# sitename	remote1(FREQUENCY), remote2(FREQUENCY),
# 	remote3(FREQUENCY)
# 
# Example of a completed entry:
# 
# #N	ucbvax
# #S	DEC VAX-11/750; 4.3 BSD UNIX
# #O	University of California at Berkeley
# #C	Robert W. Henry
# #E	ucbvax!postmaster
# #T	+1 415 642 1024
# #P	573 Evans Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720
# #L	37 52 29 N / 122 13 44 W
# #R	This is also UCB-VAX.BERKELEY.EDU [10.2.0.78] on the internet
# #U	decvax ibmpa ucsfcgl ucbtopaz ucbcad
# #W	ucbvax!fair (Erik E. Fair); Sat Jun 22 03:35:16 PDT 1985
# #
# ucbvax	.ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU
# ucbvax	decvax(DAILY/4), ihnp4(DAILY/2),
# 	sun(POLLED)
# 
# Specific Field Descriptions
# 
# #N	system name
# 
# Your system's UUCP name should go here. Either the uname(1) command
# from System III or System V UNIX; or the uuname(1) command from Version
# 7 UNIX will tell you what UUCP is using for the local UUCP name.
# 
# One of the goals of the UUCP Project is to keep duplicate UUCP host
# names from appearing because there exist mailers in the world which
# assume that the UUCP name space contains no duplicates (and attempts
# UUCP path optimization on that basis), and it's just plain confusing to
# have two different sites with the same name.
# 
# At present, the most severe restriction on UUCP names is that the name
# must be unique somewhere in the first six characters, because of a poor
# software design decision made by AT&T for the System V release of UNIX.
# 
# This does not mean that your site name has to be six characters or less
# in length. Just unique within that length.
# 
# With regard to choosing system names, HARRIS'S LAMENT:
# 
# 	``All the good ones are taken.''
# 
# #S	machine type; operating system
# 
# This is a quick description of your equipment. Machine type should
# be manufacturer and model, and after a semi-colon(;), the operating
# system name and version number (if you have it). Some examples:
# 
# 	DEC PDP-11/70; 2.9 BSD UNIX
# 	DEC PDP-11/45; ULTRIX-11
# 	DEC VAX-11/780; VMS 4.0
# 	SUN 2/150; 4.2 BSD UNIX
# 	Pyramid 90x; OSx 2.1
# 	CoData 3300; Version 7 UniPlus+
# 	Callan Unistar 200; System V UniPlus+
# 	IBM PC/XT; Coherent
# 	Intel 386; XENIX 3.0
# 	CRDS Universe 68; UNOS
# 
# #O	organization name
# 
# This should be the full name of your organization, squeezed to fit
# inside 80 columns as necessary. Don't be afraid to abbreviate where the
# abbreviation would be clear to the entire world (say a famous
# institution like MIT or CERN), but beware of duplication (In USC the C
# could be either California or Carolina).
# 
# #C	contact person
# 
# This should be the full name (or names, separated by commas) of the
# person responsible for handling queries from the outside world about
# your machine.
# 
# #E	contact person's electronic address
# 
# This should be just a machine name, and a user name, like
# `ucbvax!fair'. It should not be a full path, since we will be able to
# generate a path to the given address from the data you're giving us.
# There is no problem with the machine name not being the same as the #N
# field (i.e. the contact `lives' on another machine at your site).
# 
# Also, it's a good idea to give a generic address or alias (if your mail
# system is capable of providing aliases) like `usenet' or `postmaster',
# so that if the contact person leaves the institution or is re-assigned
# to other duties, he doesn't keep getting mail about the system. In a
# perfect world, people would send notice to the UUCP Project, but in
# practice, they don't, so the data does get out of date. If you give a
# generic address you can easily change it to point at the appropriate
# person.
# 
# Multiple electronic addresses should be separated by commas, and all of
# them should be specified in the manner described above.
# 
# #T	contact person's telephone number
# 
# Format: +<country code><space><area code><space><prefix><space><number>
# 
# Example:
# 
# #T	+1 415 642 1024
# 
# This is the international format for the representation of phone
# numbers. The country code for the United States of America (and Canada)
# is 1. Other country codes should be listed in your telephone book.
# 
# If you must list an extension (i.e. what to ask the receptionist for,
# if not the name of the contact person), list it after the main phone
# number with an `x' in front of it to distinguish it from the rest of
# the phone number.
# 
# Example:
# 
# #T	+1 415 549 3854 x37
# 
# Multiple phone numbers should be separated by commas, and all of them
# should be completely specified as described above to prevent confusion.
# 
# #P      organization's address
# 
# This field should be one line filled with whatever else anyone would
# need after the contact person's name, and your organization's name
# (given in other fields above), to mail you something by paper mail.
# 
# #L      latitude and longitude
# 
# This should be in the following format:
# 
# #L	DD MM [SS] "N"|"S" / DDD MM [SS] "E"|"W" ["city"]
# 
# Two fields, with optional third.
# 
# First number is Latitude in degrees (NN), minutes (MM), and seconds (SS),
# and a N or S to indicate North or South of the Equator.
# 
# A Slash Separator.
# 
# Second number is Longitude in degrees (DDD), minutes (MM), and seconds (SS),
# and a E or W to indicate East or West of the Prime Meridian in Greenwich,
# England.
# 
# Seconds are optional, but it is worth noting that the more accurate you
# are, the more accurate maps we can make of the network (including
# blow-ups of various high density areas, like New Jersey, or the San
# Francisco Bay Area).
# 
# If you give the coordinates for your city (i.e. without fudging for
# where you are relative to that), add the word `city' at the end of the
# end of the specification, to indicate that. If you know where you are
# relative to a given coordinate for which you have longitude and
# latitude data, then the following fudge factors can be useful:
# 
# 1 degree	=	69.2 miles	=	111 kilometers
# 1 minute	=	1.15 miles	=	1.86 kilometers
# 1 second	=	102 feet	=	30.9 meters
#
# For LONGITUDE, multiply the above numbers by the cosine of your
# latitude.  For instance, at latitude 35 degrees, a degree of
# longitude is 69.2*0.819 = 56.7 miles; at latitude 40 degrees,
# it is 69.2*0.766 = 53.0 miles.  If you don't see why the measure
# of longitude depends on your latitude, just think of a globe, with
# all those N-S meridians of longitude converging on the poles.
# You don't do this cosine multiplication for LATITUDE.
#
# Here is a short cosine table in case you don't have a trig calculator
# handy.  (But you can always write a short program in C.  The cosine
# function in bc(1) doesn't seem to work as documented.)
# deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos
#  0  1.000  5  0.996 10  0.985 15  0.966 20  0.940 25  0.906
# 30  0.866 35  0.819 40  0.766 45  0.707 50  0.643 55  0.574
# 60  0.500 65  0.423 70  0.342 75  0.259 80  0.174 85  0.087
# 
# The Prime Meridian is through Greenwich, England, and longitudes run
# from 180 degrees West of Greenwich to 180 East.  Latitudes run from
# 90 degrees North of the Equator to 90 degrees South.
# 
# #R      remarks
# 
# This is for one line of comment. As noted before, all lines beginning
# with a `#' character are comment lines, so if you need more than one
# line to tell us something about your site, do so between the end of the
# map data (the #?\t fields) and the pathalias data.
# 
# #U	netnews neighbors
# 
# The USENET is the network that moves netnews around, specifically,
# mod.announce. If you send mod.announce to any of your UUCP neighbors,
# list their names here, delimited by spaces. Example:
# 
# #U	ihnp4 decvax mcvax seismo
# 
# Since some places have lots of USENET neighbors, continuation lines
# should be just another #U and more site names.
# 
# #W      who last edited the entry and when
# 
# This field should contain an email address, a name in parentheses,
# followed by a semi-colon, and the output of the date program.
# Example:
# 
# #W	ucbvax!fair (Erik E. Fair); Sat Jun 22 03:35:16 PDT 1985
# 
# The same rules for email address that apply in the contact's email
# address apply here also. (i.e. only one system name, and user name).
# It is intended that this field be used for automatic ageing of the
# map entries so that we can do more automated checking and updating
# of the entire map. See getdate(3) from the netnews source for other
# acceptable date formats.
# 
# PATHALIAS DATA (or, documenting your UUCP connections & frequency of use)
# 
# The DEMAND, DAILY, etc., entries represent imaginary connect costs (see
# below) used by pathalias to calculate lowest cost paths.  The cost
# breakdown is:
# 
# 	LOCAL		25	local area network
# 	DEDICATED	95	high speed dedicated
# 	DIRECT		200	local call
# 	DEMAND          300     normal call (long distance, anytime)
# 	HOURLY		500	hourly poll
# 	EVENING		1800	time restricted call
# 	DAILY		5000	daily poll
# 	WEEKLY		30000	irregular poll
# 	DEAD            a very high number - not usable path
# 
# Additionally, HIGH and LOW (used like DAILY+HIGH) are -5 and +5
# respectively, for baud-rate or quality bonuses/penalties.  Arithmetic
# expressions can be used, however, you should be aware that the results
# are often counter-intuitive (e.g. (DAILY*4) means every 4 days, not 4
# times a day).  This is because the numbers represent "cost of connection"
# rather than "frequency of connection."
# 
# The numbers are intended to represent cost of transferring mail over
# the link, measured very rougly in elapsed time, which seems to be
# far more important than baud rates for this type of
# traffic.  There is an assumed high overhead for each hop; thus,
# HOURLY is far more than DAILY/24.
# 
# There are a few other cost names that sometimes appear in the map.
# Some are synonyms for the preferred names above (e.g. POLLED is assumed
# to mean overnight and is taken to be the same as DAILY), some are
# obsolete (e.g.  the letters A through F, which are letter grades for
# connections.) It is not acceptable to make up new names or spellings
# (pathalias gets very upset when people do that...).
# 
# LOCAL AREA NETWORKS
# 
# We do not want local area network information in the published map.
# If you want to put your LAN in your local Path.* files, read about
# the LAN syntax in the pathalias.1 manual page.
# 
# WHAT TO DO WITH THIS STUFF
# 
# Once you have finished constructing your pathalias entry, mail it off
# to {ucbvax,ihnp4,akgua,seismo}!cbosgd!uucpmap, which will be sent to
# the appropriate regional map coordinator.  They maintain assigned geographic
# sections of the map, and the entire map is posted on a rolling basis in
# the USENET newsgroups mod.map.uucp over the course of a month (at the
# end of the month they start over).
# 
# Questions or comments about this specification should also be directed at
# cbosgd!uucpmap.
# 
SHAR_EOF
echo shar: extracting network
cat << 'SHAR_EOF' > network
# This is the current list of machines that have agreed to make the UUCP
# map available to the UUCP community (or some subset of).  The maps on
# these machines are the same as posted here, although they are updated
# more frequently than once per month.  If you missed a file or need
# an update in the middle of the month, please use the machine on this
# list which is closest to your area, and abide by the rules set up by
# the administrator of that machine.  Also, please keep in mind that
# the entire UUCP map is posted every month, so if you can wait
# for the next posting, we encourage you to do so.  This is a service provided
# on a volunteer basis by these machines, and if the privilege is abused,
# it will likely disappear.
#
# The map posted monthly has been checked as a unit for errors; the daily
# maps sometimes contain errors which are cleaned up in the monthly posting.
# 
# 	Mark Horton
# 	The UUCP Project
# 	cbosgd!mark
# 
# -------------------------
# Site ihnp4 - AT&T Bell Laboratories
# 	     Naperville, IL
# 
# 
# To pick up the UUCP map from ihnp4, use the command:
# 
# 	uucp -m ihnp4!~/uumap/.info !~/uumap/
# 
# 		After you receive notification:
# 
# 	cat /usr/spool/uucppublic/uumap/.info
# 
# 		and follow the instructions.
# 
# If ihnp4 has a direct connection to your system, an alternative is:
# 
# 	uux ihnp4!uupub uumap
# 
# 		ihnp4 will send the uucpmap database to your
# 		system!~/uumap/ and will mail you notification.
# 
# 	Gary Murakami
# 	ihnp4!gjm
# --------------------------
# Site rutgers - Laboratory for Computer Science Research
#                Hill Center - Busch Campus
#                Rutgers University
#                PO Box 879
#                New Brunswick, NJ 08855
#                (201) 932-2023
# 
# Rutgers has automated its map updating procedures.  As map updates reach
# rutgers, we will process them and pass them on to anyone wishing to
# receive them via uucp.  Under normal circumstances we can handle
# traffic only within the state of New Jersey.  However, if you have a
# special need, contact us.  We may be able to help.  We do not maintain
# a public uucp login.  To receive map updates, you'll need to contact
# us and establish a uucp login.  Once established, any part of the maps
# may be retrieved.
# 
#      Mel Pleasant
#      uucp: {ames, cbosagd, harvard, seismo, shasta}!rutgers!pleasant
#      ARPA: PLEASANT@RUTGERS.EDU
# 
# ---------------------------
# Site astrovax - Princeton University, Dept. of Astrophysics
#                 Princeton, NJ 08544
# 		(609) 452-3586
# 
# The uucpmap information will be available to our uucp neighbors as files in
# the directory /usr/spool/uucppublic/uumap  == ~uucp/uumap == ~/uumap .
# Please pick them up outside of working hours, preferably from 12 am. to
# 8 am. Eastern time.
# 
# I suggest first pulling over the file astrovax!~/uumap/LISTING which
# contains the list of uucp map files in the astrovax!~/uumap directory.  Then
# pull over the files listed in that file.  That way if the connection is hung
# up by line noise the transfer will not have to restart from the beginning.
# 
# 	Bill Sebok
# 	(ihnp4, cbosgd, princeton, akgua)!astrovax!wls
# ---------------------------
# Site cadre - University of Pittsburgh
# 	     Pittsburgh, PA 15261
# 	     (412) 624-3490
# 
# Cadre will have map accessable to all our directly connected uucp
# sites via uucp/uusend and mail service depending on neighboring site policies
# on thru uucp traffic. The mailbox cadre!usenetmap will provide information
# on map access once map is in place. We will not be servicing arpanet community.
# A reasonable person policy is the only restrictions planned for map access.
# 
# 	Russell Yount
# 	(pitt, vax135)!cadre!ry
# ---------------------------
# Site nbires - NBI, Inc.
# 	      P.O. Box 9001
# 	      Boulder, CO 80301
# 	      (303) 444-5710
# 
# Directly connected sites will be able to get the map and I am
# willing on a trial basis to allow other sites to call in to get
# the map.  Since nbires is a busy machine during the day, I would
# like to restrict access to the map to the period between 11PM and 6AM
# Mountain Time.
# 
# The files are available in nbires!~uucp/uumap.  A current directory listing
# is kept in nbires!~uucp/uumap/.info.  It is best if individual uucp's are
# done for each file begin retrieved.
# 
# Connection information is:
# 	phone:  303 443-1846
# 	login:  uucpmap
# 	password: UUCPmap
# 
# Contact person:
# 	Kirk Webb
# 	postmaster@nbires.UUCP, or kwebb@nbires.UUCP if you
# 		prefer the personal touch.
# 
# -------------------------------
# Site seismo - Center for Seismic Studies
# 	      Arlington, VA 22209
# 	      (703) 276-7900
# 
# On seismo, the uucp map will be available in the directory ~uucp/uumap.
# Each state,etc. will have a file containing the data for uucpsites
# in that state. The filename will be the same as that used for the Usenet
# map (e.g. usa.va, usa.oh, eur.nl, can.on, etc).
# 
# A listing of the files in the directory can be obtained by running
# 	uux seismo!listmap user@site.UUCP
# where user@site.UUCP is a return address for mail.
# 
# Sites already having uucp connections with seismo may uucp the map at
# any time, but should initiate the call if it is long distance.
# 
# ARPAnet sites will find the data in the same format in ~ftp/uumap on seismo.
# It may be ftped with the standard anonymous login.
# 
# 	Rick Adams
# 	seismo!rick
# --------------------------------
# Site zaiaz - Zaiaz Communications, Inc.
#              Huntsville, AL.  32805
#              (205) 881-2200
# 
# The computer phone number is (205) 881-2595.
# A login for uucp use is "nuucp", password "hellozaiaz".
# The files are in /usr/map/uucp
# The preferred hours are 6pm to 8am 7 days a week.
# 
# 	Bill Welch
# 	(akgua,jett)!zaiaz!bill    aka   (akgua,ihnp4)!jett!bill
# ----------------------------------
# Site harvard - Harvard University
#                Cambridge, MA 03128
# 	       (617) 495-3864
# 
# three sites:
# 		filenames same as in Usenet map ( usa.ma etc )
# 		please access between 1AM and 6AM E?T
# 
# 	ARPAnet access
# 		site harvard:
# 		data in ~ftp/uumap for standard anonymous login
# 	BITNET access
# 		site harvunxt:
# 		execute the net command SENDUUM filename
# 	UUCP access
# 		site talcott:
# 		data in ~uucp/uumap
# 		uucp login uucp, no password
# 		phone # (617) 495-8741
# 
# also on talcott:
# 
# 	~uucp/pathalias/data
# 
# is a file ( updated daily ) of the map information without the "#" lines
# much shorter if someone wants to get that.
# 
# 	Scott Bradner
# 	Harvard University
# 	(617)495-3864
# 	sob@harvard.{arpa,uucp,csnet}
# 	sob@harvunxt.bitnet
# ---------------------------
# Site gatech - Georgia Tech
# 
# Gatech supports transfer of map portions (or the whole map) to current
# uucp "neighbors."  Directions on how to obtain map copies may be
# retrieved by issuing the command:
# 	uux gatech!listmap directions mylogin@mysite.UUCP
# (substituting your mail address for "mylogin@mysite.UUCP", of course).
# The directions for access and transfer will be mailed back to you.
# 
# Gatech's uucp does not support uucp login except by "known" contacts.
# If you do not currently have uucp access to gatech and would like to
# establish such a link, send mail to "postmaster@gatech.UUCP" for details.
# 
# 	Gene Spafford
# 	gatech!spaf
# ----------------------------------
# Site sys1	-  Tandy/Radio Shack
# 		   400 Atrium - One Tandy Center
# 		   Fort Worth, Tx. 76102
# 		   (817)-390-3001
# 
# The uucpmap information is available to our uucp neighbors in
# the ~maps directory on sys1.  The file names follow the normal
# u.* and d.* standards. A current index of the maps is in the
# file ~maps/current-index. The only restriction will be, if you
# queue up any of the maps and your site is long distance from sys1
# they will not be sent to you until you initiate the call.
# 
# A program is available for you to have the maps sent to your
# site in compressed (16 bits) form. The program works as follows
# 	uux sys1!mapsend {filename} {system name} {where you want it}
# 
# where 
# 	uux sys1!mapsend u.usa.tx.1 foovax ~uucp/maps/compressed
# 
# will send the map u.usa.tx.1 into your ~uucp/maps/compressed
# 
# or
# 	uux sys1!mapsend u.usa.tx.1 barvax stdin
# 
# will compress the requested map and send it via uux to the standard
# input of a program called 'maprcv' which needs should be a program
# that can read and uncompress the incomeing data.  argv[1] will
# equal the requested map without the .Z extention..
# 
# Please note: we will only send maps to our uucp neighbors. 
# 
# 		Doug Davis
# 
# { ihnp4 || trsvax || soma || bigbang || motown || ico || uiucuxc }! sys1!doug
# Doug.Davis@sys1.tandy.com or doug@sys1.tandy.com
# 
# ----------------------------------
SHAR_EOF
:	End of shell archive
exit 0

uucpmap@rutgers.rutgers.edu (07/27/87)

#	This is a shell archive.
#	Remove everything above and including the cut line.
#	Then run the rest of the file through sh.
#----cut here-----cut here-----cut here-----cut here----#
#!/bin/sh
# shar:    Shell Archiver
#	Run the following text with /bin/sh to create:
#	README
#	network
# This archive created: Mon Jul 27 04:09:17 1987
# By:	The UUCP Project (Dave Wecker Midnight Hacks)
echo shar: extracting README
cat << \SHAR_EOF > README
# The UUCP map is posted to newsgroup comp.mail.maps.
#
# From rn, the map can be easily unpacked with a command such as
#	43-46w | (cd ~uucp/uumap ; sh)
# or you can use John Quarterman's script to automatically unpack the files.
# All files intended as pathalias input being with "d." and "u.", thus
#	pathalias Path.* uumap/[du].*
# is a useful command to run.  (You supply Path.* with local additions.)
# 
# The map is also available on a demand basis at a number of hosts who
# have volunteered to make their copy available to the general public ;
# details of this access are posted separately in file "network".
# 
# The files are organized by country, using the ISO 3166 3 letter country
# code for each country.  Each file has a name like u.iso.r1.r2.s, where
# "iso" is the country code, r1, r2, etc are regions and subregions
# (e.g. states in the USA, provinces in Canada, etc.) and s is a sequence
# number (usually 1, but sometimes 2, 3, and up may be provided to keep
# individual files down to a reasonable size, thus, u.usa.ca is separated
# into two regions: [135] for southern, [246] for northern.)  In a few
# cases where very large companies post their maps, separate files are used.
# For instance, *.b.* is the Bellcore file.
#
# The map contains two types of files: u.* and d.* files.  The d.* files
# are for domains registered in the UUCP Zone.  The u.* files are for
# UUCP hosts that do not have officially registered domains, but rather
# belong to the unofficial ".UUCP domain".  Membership in the UUCP Zone
# allows organizations and individuals to register official, unique,
# domain names, recognized by all major academic computing networks
# worldwide.  For more information about joining the UUCP Zone, send
# electronic mail to the UUCP Project at one of the addresses
#	uucp-query@stargate.com
#	{uiucdcs,cbosgd,cbatt}!stargate!uucp-query
#	cbosgd!stargate!uucp-query@seismo.css.gov
# or, if you cannot send electronic mail, telephone
#	+1 213 868 1134
# We strongly encourage you to send email if at all possible, since it
# cuts down on telephone tag and is much more efficient our volunteer
# workforce.
# 
# This map can be used to generate mail routes with pathalias.  Pathalias
# was posted to Usenet in January 1986 and will be posted again as needed
# The map is also useful to determine the person to contact when a problem
# arises, and to find someone for a new site to connect to.
# 
# Please check the entry for your host (and any neighbors for whom you know
# the information and have the time) for correctness and completeness.
# Please send corrections and additional information to uucpmap@cbosgd.UUCP
# or cbosgd!uucpmap or uucpmap@cbosgd.att.com.
# 
# This map is maintained by a group of volunteers, making up part of the UUCP
# Project.  These people devote many hours of their own time to helping out
# the UUCP community by keeping this map up to date.  The volunteers include:
#
# Jeff Janock - jeff@necntc.nec.com
#	USA: Conneticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
#	     Rhode Island, Vermont
#
#
# Nicholas (Nike) Horton - nike@harvard.harvard.edu
#	USA: Washington D.C., Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia,
#	     West Virginia
# 
#
# Rayan Zachariassen rayan@ai.toronto.edu
# 	CANADA: All provinces
# 
# 
#
# Bill Blue - bblue@crash.uucp
# 	USA: Arizona, California (Southern half)
# 
# 
#
# Erik Fair - nca-maps@ucbvax.berkeley.edu
# 	USA: California (Northern half)
# 
# 
# Karen Summers-Horton - ksh@stargate.com
# 	USA: Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming
# 
# 
# Doug McCallum - dougm@ico.isc.com
# 	USA: Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi,
# 	     Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah
# 
#
# Piet Beertema - Europe (piet@cwi.nl)
# 	Europe: all countries (unless otherwise noted)
# 
# 
# Gene Spafford - spaf@ics.gatech.edu
# 	USA: Florida, Georgia
# 
# 
# Bill Welch - zaiaz32!uucpmap@zaiaz.UUCP
# 	USA: Alabama, South Carolina
# 
# 
# Tim Thompson - tgt@stargate.com
# 	USA: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, North Carolina,
#	North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Wisconsin
#
#
# Hokey - hokey@plus5.com
# 	USA: Missouri
# 
#
# David Herron - david@ukma.UUCP
# 	USA: Kentucky
# 
#
# Steve Miller, Brian Richter - steve@cs.d.umn.edu,brianr@rosevax.rosemount.com
# 	USA: Minnesota
# 
#
# Kathy Andrews, Larry Auton - attmap@ihnp4.att.com, lda@clyde.att.com
# 	ATT: all logical regions
# 
#
# Torben Nielson, Bob Cunningham - torben@uhmanoa.UUCP, bob@uhmanoa.UUCP
# 	USA: Hawaii
# 
#
# Haesoon Cho - nmc@sorak.kaist.ac.kr
# 	Korea: all regions
# 
#
# Tohru Asami - asami@kddspeech.uucp
# 	Japan: all regions
# 
#
# Robert Elz, Dave Davey - map-coord@munnari.UUCP
# 	Australia: all regions
# 
#
# Jim Hand - hand@pyuxp.UUCP
# 	Bell Communicates Research (Bellcore): all sections
# 
#
# Paul Graham - pjg@unrvax.unr.edu
#	USA: Nevada
#
#
# Benny Somali - somali@indovax.uucp
#	Indonesia: all regions
#
#
# Mel Pleasant - pleasant@rutgers.edu
# 	Singapore: all regions
# 	New Zealand: all regions
# 
# 
# Please note that the purpose of this map is to make routers within
# UUCP work.  The eventual direction is to make the map smaller (through
# the use of domains), not larger.  As such, sites with lots of local
# machines connected together are encouraged to create a few gateway
# machines and to make arrangements that these gateways can forward
# mail to your local users.  We would prefer not to have information
# listing the machines on your local area networks, and certainly not
# your personal computers and workstations.  If you need such information
# for local mail delivery, create a supplement in pathalias form which
# you do not publish, but which you combine with the published data
# when you run pathalias.  We also do not want information about machines
# which are not on UUCP, that is, which are not reachable with the !
# notation from the main UUCP cluster.
#
# If you don't have pathalias, it has been posted to mod.sources most
# recently in January 1986.  If you
# don't have access to a mod.sources archive, contact the mod.sources
# moderator (currently Rich $alz, cbosgd!mirror!sources-request.)
# 
# The remainder of this file describes the format of the UUCP map data.
# It was written July 9, 1985 by Erik E. Fair <ucbvax!fair>, and
# last updated July 12, 1985 by Mark Horton <stargate!mark>.
# 
# The entire map is intended to be processed by pathalias, a program that
# generates UUCP routes from this data.  All lines beginning in `#' are
# comment lines to pathalias, however the UUCP Project has defined a set
# of these comment lines to have specific format so that a complete
# database could be built.
# 
# The generic form of these lines is
# 
# #<field id letter><tab><field data>
# 
# Each host has an entry in the following format.  The entry should begin
# with the #N line, end with a blank line after the pathalias data, and
# not contain any other blank lines, since there are ed, sed, and awk
# scripts that use expressions like /^#N $1/,/^$/ for the purpose of
# separating the map out into files, each containing one site entry.
# 
# #N	UUCP name of site
# #S	manufacturer machine model; operating system & version
# #O	organization name
# #C	contact person's name
# #E	contact person's electronic mail address
# #T	contact person's telephone number
# #P	organization's address
# #L	latitude / longitude
# #R	remarks
# #U	netnews neighbors
# #W	who last edited the entry ; date edited
# #
# sitename	.domain
# sitename	remote1(FREQUENCY), remote2(FREQUENCY),
# 	remote3(FREQUENCY)
# 
# Example of a completed entry:
# 
# #N	ucbvax
# #S	DEC VAX-11/750; 4.3 BSD UNIX
# #O	University of California at Berkeley
# #C	Robert W. Henry
# #E	ucbvax!postmaster
# #T	+1 415 642 1024
# #P	573 Evans Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720
# #L	37 52 29 N / 122 13 44 W
# #R	This is also UCB-VAX.BERKELEY.EDU [10.2.0.78] on the internet
# #U	decvax ibmpa ucsfcgl ucbtopaz ucbcad
# #W	ucbvax!fair (Erik E. Fair); Sat Jun 22 03:35:16 PDT 1985
# #
# ucbvax	.ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU
# ucbvax	decvax(DAILY/4), ihnp4(DAILY/2),
# 	sun(POLLED)
# 
# Specific Field Descriptions
# 
# #N	system name
# 
# Your system's UUCP name should go here. Either the uname(1) command
# from System III or System V UNIX; or the uuname(1) command from Version
# 7 UNIX will tell you what UUCP is using for the local UUCP name.
# 
# One of the goals of the UUCP Project is to keep duplicate UUCP host
# names from appearing because there exist mailers in the world which
# assume that the UUCP name space contains no duplicates (and attempts
# UUCP path optimization on that basis), and it's just plain confusing to
# have two different sites with the same name.
# 
# At present, the most severe restriction on UUCP names is that the name
# must be unique somewhere in the first six characters, because of a poor
# software design decision made by AT&T for the System V release of UNIX.
# 
# This does not mean that your site name has to be six characters or less
# in length. Just unique within that length.
# 
# With regard to choosing system names, HARRIS'S LAMENT:
# 
# 	``All the good ones are taken.''
# 
# #S	machine type; operating system
# 
# This is a quick description of your equipment. Machine type should
# be manufacturer and model, and after a semi-colon(;), the operating
# system name and version number (if you have it). Some examples:
# 
# 	DEC PDP-11/70; 2.9 BSD UNIX
# 	DEC PDP-11/45; ULTRIX-11
# 	DEC VAX-11/780; VMS 4.0
# 	SUN 2/150; 4.2 BSD UNIX
# 	Pyramid 90x; OSx 2.1
# 	CoData 3300; Version 7 UniPlus+
# 	Callan Unistar 200; System V UniPlus+
# 	IBM PC/XT; Coherent
# 	Intel 386; XENIX 3.0
# 	CRDS Universe 68; UNOS
# 
# #O	organization name
# 
# This should be the full name of your organization, squeezed to fit
# inside 80 columns as necessary. Don't be afraid to abbreviate where the
# abbreviation would be clear to the entire world (say a famous
# institution like MIT or CERN), but beware of duplication (In USC the C
# could be either California or Carolina).
# 
# #C	contact person
# 
# This should be the full name (or names, separated by commas) of the
# person responsible for handling queries from the outside world about
# your machine.
# 
# #E	contact person's electronic address
# 
# This should be just a machine name, and a user name, like
# `ucbvax!fair'. It should not be a full path, since we will be able to
# generate a path to the given address from the data you're giving us.
# There is no problem with the machine name not being the same as the #N
# field (i.e. the contact `lives' on another machine at your site).
# 
# Also, it's a good idea to give a generic address or alias (if your mail
# system is capable of providing aliases) like `usenet' or `postmaster',
# so that if the contact person leaves the institution or is re-assigned
# to other duties, he doesn't keep getting mail about the system. In a
# perfect world, people would send notice to the UUCP Project, but in
# practice, they don't, so the data does get out of date. If you give a
# generic address you can easily change it to point at the appropriate
# person.
# 
# Multiple electronic addresses should be separated by commas, and all of
# them should be specified in the manner described above.
# 
# #T	contact person's telephone number
# 
# Format: +<country code><space><area code><space><prefix><space><number>
# 
# Example:
# 
# #T	+1 415 642 1024
# 
# This is the international format for the representation of phone
# numbers. The country code for the United States of America (and Canada)
# is 1. Other country codes should be listed in your telephone book.
# 
# If you must list an extension (i.e. what to ask the receptionist for,
# if not the name of the contact person), list it after the main phone
# number with an `x' in front of it to distinguish it from the rest of
# the phone number.
# 
# Example:
# 
# #T	+1 415 549 3854 x37
# 
# Multiple phone numbers should be separated by commas, and all of them
# should be completely specified as described above to prevent confusion.
# 
# #P      organization's address
# 
# This field should be one line filled with whatever else anyone would
# need after the contact person's name, and your organization's name
# (given in other fields above), to mail you something by paper mail.
# 
# #L      latitude and longitude
# 
# This should be in the following format:
# 
# #L	DD MM [SS] "N"|"S" / DDD MM [SS] "E"|"W" ["city"]
# 
# Two fields, with optional third.
# 
# First number is Latitude in degrees (NN), minutes (MM), and seconds (SS),
# and a N or S to indicate North or South of the Equator.
# 
# A Slash Separator.
# 
# Second number is Longitude in degrees (DDD), minutes (MM), and seconds (SS),
# and a E or W to indicate East or West of the Prime Meridian in Greenwich,
# England.
# 
# Seconds are optional, but it is worth noting that the more accurate you
# are, the more accurate maps we can make of the network (including
# blow-ups of various high density areas, like New Jersey, or the San
# Francisco Bay Area).
# 
# If you give the coordinates for your city (i.e. without fudging for
# where you are relative to that), add the word `city' at the end of the
# end of the specification, to indicate that. If you know where you are
# relative to a given coordinate for which you have longitude and
# latitude data, then the following fudge factors can be useful:
# 
# 1 degree	=	69.2 miles	=	111 kilometers
# 1 minute	=	1.15 miles	=	1.86 kilometers
# 1 second	=	102 feet	=	30.9 meters
#
# For LONGITUDE, multiply the above numbers by the cosine of your
# latitude.  For instance, at latitude 35 degrees, a degree of
# longitude is 69.2*0.819 = 56.7 miles; at latitude 40 degrees,
# it is 69.2*0.766 = 53.0 miles.  If you don't see why the measure
# of longitude depends on your latitude, just think of a globe, with
# all those N-S meridians of longitude converging on the poles.
# You don't do this cosine multiplication for LATITUDE.
#
# Here is a short cosine table in case you don't have a trig calculator
# handy.  (But you can always write a short program in C.  The cosine
# function in bc(1) doesn't seem to work as documented.)
# deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos
#  0  1.000  5  0.996 10  0.985 15  0.966 20  0.940 25  0.906
# 30  0.866 35  0.819 40  0.766 45  0.707 50  0.643 55  0.574
# 60  0.500 65  0.423 70  0.342 75  0.259 80  0.174 85  0.087
# 
# The Prime Meridian is through Greenwich, England, and longitudes run
# from 180 degrees West of Greenwich to 180 East.  Latitudes run from
# 90 degrees North of the Equator to 90 degrees South.
# 
# #R      remarks
# 
# This is for one line of comment. As noted before, all lines beginning
# with a `#' character are comment lines, so if you need more than one
# line to tell us something about your site, do so between the end of the
# map data (the #?\t fields) and the pathalias data.
# 
# #U	netnews neighbors
# 
# The USENET is the network that moves netnews around, specifically,
# mod.announce. If you send mod.announce to any of your UUCP neighbors,
# list their names here, delimited by spaces. Example:
# 
# #U	ihnp4 decvax mcvax seismo
# 
# Since some places have lots of USENET neighbors, continuation lines
# should be just another #U and more site names.
# 
# #W      who last edited the entry and when
# 
# This field should contain an email address, a name in parentheses,
# followed by a semi-colon, and the output of the date program.
# Example:
# 
# #W	ucbvax!fair (Erik E. Fair); Sat Jun 22 03:35:16 PDT 1985
# 
# The same rules for email address that apply in the contact's email
# address apply here also. (i.e. only one system name, and user name).
# It is intended that this field be used for automatic ageing of the
# map entries so that we can do more automated checking and updating
# of the entire map. See getdate(3) from the netnews source for other
# acceptable date formats.
# 
# PATHALIAS DATA (or, documenting your UUCP connections & frequency of use)
# 
# The DEMAND, DAILY, etc., entries represent imaginary connect costs (see
# below) used by pathalias to calculate lowest cost paths.  The cost
# breakdown is:
# 
# 	LOCAL		25	local area network
# 	DEDICATED	95	high speed dedicated
# 	DIRECT		200	local call
# 	DEMAND          300     normal call (long distance, anytime)
# 	HOURLY		500	hourly poll
# 	EVENING		1800	time restricted call
# 	DAILY		5000	daily poll
# 	WEEKLY		30000	irregular poll
# 	DEAD            a very high number - not usable path
# 
# Additionally, HIGH and LOW (used like DAILY+HIGH) are -5 and +5
# respectively, for baud-rate or quality bonuses/penalties.  Arithmetic
# expressions can be used, however, you should be aware that the results
# are often counter-intuitive (e.g. (DAILY*4) means every 4 days, not 4
# times a day).  This is because the numbers represent "cost of connection"
# rather than "frequency of connection."
# 
# The numbers are intended to represent cost of transferring mail over
# the link, measured very rougly in elapsed time, which seems to be
# far more important than baud rates for this type of
# traffic.  There is an assumed high overhead for each hop; thus,
# HOURLY is far more than DAILY/24.
# 
# There are a few other cost names that sometimes appear in the map.
# Some are synonyms for the preferred names above (e.g. POLLED is assumed
# to mean overnight and is taken to be the same as DAILY), some are
# obsolete (e.g.  the letters A through F, which are letter grades for
# connections.) It is not acceptable to make up new names or spellings
# (pathalias gets very upset when people do that...).
# 
# LOCAL AREA NETWORKS
# 
# We do not want local area network information in the published map.
# If you want to put your LAN in your local Path.* files, read about
# the LAN syntax in the pathalias.1 manual page.
# 
# WHAT TO DO WITH THIS STUFF
# 
# Once you have finished constructing your pathalias entry, mail it off
# to {ucbvax,ihnp4,akgua,seismo}!cbosgd!uucpmap, which will be sent to
# the appropriate regional map coordinator.  They maintain assigned geographic
# sections of the map, and the entire map is posted on a rolling basis in
# the USENET newsgroups mod.map.uucp over the course of a month (at the
# end of the month they start over).
# 
# Questions or comments about this specification should also be directed at
# cbosgd!uucpmap.
# 
SHAR_EOF
echo shar: extracting network
cat << \SHAR_EOF > network
# This is the current list of machines that have agreed to make the UUCP
# map available to the UUCP community (or some subset of).  The maps on
# these machines are the same as posted here, although they are updated
# more frequently than once per month.  If you missed a file or need
# an update in the middle of the month, please use the machine on this
# list which is closest to your area, and abide by the rules set up by
# the administrator of that machine.  Also, please keep in mind that
# the entire UUCP map is posted every month, so if you can wait
# for the next posting, we encourage you to do so.  This is a service provided
# on a volunteer basis by these machines, and if the privilege is abused,
# it will likely disappear.
#
# The map posted monthly has been checked as a unit for errors; the daily
# maps sometimes contain errors which are cleaned up in the monthly posting.
# 
# 	Mark Horton
# 	The UUCP Project
# 	cbosgd!mark
# 
# -------------------------
# Site ihnp4 - AT&T Bell Laboratories
# 	     Naperville, IL
# 
# 
# To pick up the UUCP map from ihnp4, use the command:
# 
# 	uucp -m ihnp4!~/uumap/.info !~/uumap/
# 
# 		After you receive notification:
# 
# 	cat /usr/spool/uucppublic/uumap/.info
# 
# 		and follow the instructions.
# 
# If ihnp4 has a direct connection to your system, an alternative is:
# 
# 	uux ihnp4!uupub uumap
# 
# 		ihnp4 will send the uucpmap database to your
# 		system!~/uumap/ and will mail you notification.
# 
# 	Gary Murakami
# 	ihnp4!gjm
# --------------------------
# Site rutgers - Laboratory for Computer Science Research
#                Hill Center - Busch Campus
#                Rutgers University
#                PO Box 879
#                New Brunswick, NJ 08855
#                (201) 932-2023
# 
# Rutgers has automated its map updating procedures.  As map updates reach
# rutgers, we will process them and pass them on to anyone wishing to
# receive them via uucp.  Under normal circumstances we can handle
# traffic only within the state of New Jersey.  However, if you have a
# special need, contact us.  We may be able to help.  We do not maintain
# a public uucp login.  To receive map updates, you'll need to contact
# us and establish a uucp login.  Once established, any part of the maps
# may be retrieved.
# 
#      Mel Pleasant
#      uucp: {ames, cbosagd, harvard, seismo, shasta}!rutgers!pleasant
#      ARPA: PLEASANT@RUTGERS.EDU
# 
# ---------------------------
# Site astrovax - Princeton University, Dept. of Astrophysics
#                 Princeton, NJ 08544
# 		(609) 452-3586
# 
# The uucpmap information will be available to our uucp neighbors as files in
# the directory /usr/spool/uucppublic/uumap  == ~uucp/uumap == ~/uumap .
# Please pick them up outside of working hours, preferably from 12 am. to
# 8 am. Eastern time.
# 
# I suggest first pulling over the file astrovax!~/uumap/LISTING which
# contains the list of uucp map files in the astrovax!~/uumap directory.  Then
# pull over the files listed in that file.  That way if the connection is hung
# up by line noise the transfer will not have to restart from the beginning.
# 
# 	Bill Sebok
# 	(ihnp4, cbosgd, princeton, akgua)!astrovax!wls
# ---------------------------
# Site cadre - University of Pittsburgh
# 	     Pittsburgh, PA 15261
# 	     (412) 624-3490
# 
# Cadre will have map accessable to all our directly connected uucp
# sites via uucp/uusend and mail service depending on neighboring site policies
# on thru uucp traffic. The mailbox cadre!usenetmap will provide information
# on map access once map is in place. We will not be servicing arpanet community.
# A reasonable person policy is the only restrictions planned for map access.
# 
# 	Russell Yount
# 	(pitt, vax135)!cadre!ry
# ---------------------------
# Site nbires - NBI, Inc.
# 	      P.O. Box 9001
# 	      Boulder, CO 80301
# 	      (303) 444-5710
# 
# Directly connected sites will be able to get the map and I am
# willing on a trial basis to allow other sites to call in to get
# the map.  Since nbires is a busy machine during the day, I would
# like to restrict access to the map to the period between 11PM and 6AM
# Mountain Time.
# 
# The files are available in nbires!~uucp/uumap.  A current directory listing
# is kept in nbires!~uucp/uumap/.info.  It is best if individual uucp's are
# done for each file begin retrieved.
# 
# Connection information is:
# 	phone:  303 443-1846
# 	login:  uucpmap
# 	password: UUCPmap
# 
# Contact person:
# 	Kirk Webb
# 	postmaster@nbires.UUCP, or kwebb@nbires.UUCP if you
# 		prefer the personal touch.
# 
# -------------------------------
# Site seismo - Center for Seismic Studies
# 	      Arlington, VA 22209
# 	      (703) 276-7900
# 
# On seismo, the uucp map will be available in the directory ~uucp/uumap.
# Each state,etc. will have a file containing the data for uucpsites
# in that state. The filename will be the same as that used for the Usenet
# map (e.g. usa.va, usa.oh, eur.nl, can.on, etc).
# 
# A listing of the files in the directory can be obtained by running
# 	uux seismo!listmap user@site.UUCP
# where user@site.UUCP is a return address for mail.
# 
# Sites already having uucp connections with seismo may uucp the map at
# any time, but should initiate the call if it is long distance.
# 
# ARPAnet sites will find the data in the same format in ~ftp/uumap on seismo.
# It may be ftped with the standard anonymous login.
# 
# 	Rick Adams
# 	seismo!rick
# --------------------------------
# Site zaiaz - Zaiaz Communications, Inc.
#              Huntsville, AL.  32805
#              (205) 881-2200
# 
# The computer phone number is (205) 881-2595.
# A login for uucp use is "nuucp", password "hellozaiaz".
# The files are in /usr/map/uucp
# The preferred hours are 6pm to 8am 7 days a week.
# 
# 	Bill Welch
# 	(akgua,jett)!zaiaz!bill    aka   (akgua,ihnp4)!jett!bill
# ----------------------------------
# Site harvard - Harvard University
#                Cambridge, MA 03128
# 	       (617) 495-3864
# 
# three sites:
# 		filenames same as in Usenet map ( usa.ma etc )
# 		please access between 1AM and 6AM E?T
# 
# 	ARPAnet access
# 		site harvard:
# 		data in ~ftp/uumap for standard anonymous login
# 	BITNET access
# 		site harvunxt:
# 		execute the net command SENDUUM filename
# 	UUCP access
# 		site talcott:
# 		data in ~uucp/uumap
# 		uucp login uucp, no password
# 		phone # (617) 495-8741
# 
# also on talcott:
# 
# 	~uucp/pathalias/data
# 
# is a file ( updated daily ) of the map information without the "#" lines
# much shorter if someone wants to get that.
# 
# 	Scott Bradner
# 	Harvard University
# 	(617)495-3864
# 	sob@harvard.{arpa,uucp,csnet}
# 	sob@harvunxt.bitnet
# ---------------------------
# Site gatech - Georgia Tech
# 
# Gatech supports transfer of map portions (or the whole map) to current
# uucp "neighbors."  Directions on how to obtain map copies may be
# retrieved by issuing the command:
# 	uux gatech!listmap directions mylogin@mysite.UUCP
# (substituting your mail address for "mylogin@mysite.UUCP", of course).
# The directions for access and transfer will be mailed back to you.
# 
# Gatech's uucp does not support uucp login except by "known" contacts.
# If you do not currently have uucp access to gatech and would like to
# establish such a link, send mail to "postmaster@gatech.UUCP" for details.
# 
# 	Gene Spafford
# 	gatech!spaf
# ----------------------------------
# Site sys1	-  Tandy/Radio Shack
# 		   400 Atrium - One Tandy Center
# 		   Fort Worth, Tx. 76102
# 		   (817)-390-3001
# 
# The uucpmap information is available to our uucp neighbors in
# the ~maps directory on sys1.  The file names follow the normal
# u.* and d.* standards. A current index of the maps is in the
# file ~maps/current-index. The only restriction will be, if you
# queue up any of the maps and your site is long distance from sys1
# they will not be sent to you until you initiate the call.
# 
# A program is available for you to have the maps sent to your
# site in compressed (16 bits) form. The program works as follows
# 	uux sys1!mapsend {filename} {system name} {where you want it}
# 
# where 
# 	uux sys1!mapsend u.usa.tx.1 foovax ~uucp/maps/compressed
# 
# will send the map u.usa.tx.1 into your ~uucp/maps/compressed
# 
# or
# 	uux sys1!mapsend u.usa.tx.1 barvax stdin
# 
# will compress the requested map and send it via uux to the standard
# input of a program called 'maprcv' which needs should be a program
# that can read and uncompress the incomeing data.  argv[1] will
# equal the requested map without the .Z extention..
# 
# Please note: we will only send maps to our uucp neighbors. 
# 
# 		Doug Davis
# 
# { ihnp4 || trsvax || soma || bigbang || motown || ico || uiucuxc }! sys1!doug
# Doug.Davis@sys1.tandy.com or doug@sys1.tandy.com
# 
# ----------------------------------
SHAR_EOF
#	End of shell archive
exit 0

uucpmap@rutgers.rutgers.edu (09/29/87)

#	This is a shell archive.
#	Remove everything above and including the cut line.
#	Then run the rest of the file through sh.
#----cut here-----cut here-----cut here-----cut here----#
#!/bin/sh
# shar:    Shell Archiver
#	Run the following text with /bin/sh to create:
#	README
#	network
# This archive created: Tue Sep 29 02:03:01 1987
# By:	The UUCP Project (Dave Wecker Midnight Hacks)
echo shar: extracting README
cat << \SHAR_EOF > README
# The UUCP map is posted to newsgroup comp.mail.maps.
#
# From rn, the map can be easily unpacked with a command such as
#	43-46w | (cd ~uucp/uumap ; sh)
# or you can use John Quarterman's script to automatically unpack the files.
# All files intended as pathalias input being with "d." and "u.", thus
#	pathalias Path.* uumap/[du].*
# is a useful command to run.  (You supply Path.* with local additions.)
# 
# The map is also available on a demand basis at a number of hosts who
# have volunteered to make their copy available to the general public ;
# details of this access are posted separately in file "network".
# 
# The files are organized by country, using the ISO 3166 3 letter country
# code for each country.  Each file has a name like u.iso.r1.r2.s, where
# "iso" is the country code, r1, r2, etc are regions and subregions
# (e.g. states in the USA, provinces in Canada, etc.) and s is a sequence
# number (usually 1, but sometimes 2, 3, and up may be provided to keep
# individual files down to a reasonable size, thus, u.usa.ca is separated
# into two regions: [135] for southern, [246] for northern.)  In a few
# cases where very large companies post their maps, separate files are used.
# For instance, *.b.* is the Bellcore file.
#
# The map contains two types of files: u.* and d.* files.  The d.* files
# are for domains registered in the UUCP Zone.  The u.* files are for
# UUCP hosts that do not have officially registered domains, but rather
# belong to the unofficial ".UUCP domain".  Membership in the UUCP Zone
# allows organizations and individuals to register official, unique,
# domain names, recognized by all major academic computing networks
# worldwide.  For more information about joining the UUCP Zone, send
# electronic mail to the UUCP Project at one of the addresses
#	uucp-query@stargate.com
#	{uiucdcs,cbosgd,cbatt}!stargate!uucp-query
#	cbosgd!stargate!uucp-query@seismo.css.gov
# or, if you cannot send electronic mail, telephone
#	+1 213 868 1134
# We strongly encourage you to send email if at all possible, since it
# cuts down on telephone tag and is much more efficient our volunteer
# workforce.
# 
# This map can be used to generate mail routes with pathalias.  Pathalias
# was posted to Usenet in January 1986 and will be posted again as needed
# The map is also useful to determine the person to contact when a problem
# arises, and to find someone for a new site to connect to.
# 
# Please check the entry for your host (and any neighbors for whom you know
# the information and have the time) for correctness and completeness.
# Please send corrections and additional information to uucpmap@cbosgd.UUCP
# or cbosgd!uucpmap or uucpmap@cbosgd.att.com.
# 
# This map is maintained by a group of volunteers, making up part of the UUCP
# Project.  These people devote many hours of their own time to helping out
# the UUCP community by keeping this map up to date.  The volunteers include:
#
# Jeff Janock - jeff@necntc.nec.com
#	USA: Conneticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
#	     Rhode Island, Vermont
#
#
# Nicholas (Nike) Horton - horton@reed.uucp
#	USA: Washington D.C., Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia,
#	     West Virginia
# 
#
# Rayan Zachariassen rayan@ai.toronto.edu
# 	CANADA: All provinces
# 
# 
#
# Bill Blue - bblue@crash.uucp
# 	USA: Arizona, California (Southern half)
# 
# 
#
# Erik Fair - nca-maps@ucbvax.berkeley.edu
# 	USA: California (Northern half)
# 
# 
# Karen Summers-Horton - ksh@stargate.com
# 	USA: Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming
# 
# 
# Doug McCallum - dougm@ico.isc.com
# 	USA: Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi,
# 	     Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah
# 
#
# Piet Beertema - Europe (piet@cwi.nl)
# 	Europe: all countries (unless otherwise noted)
# 
# 
# Gene Spafford - spaf@purdue.edu
# 	USA: Florida, Georgia
# 
# 
# Bill Welch - zaiaz32!uucpmap@zaiaz.UUCP
# 	USA: Alabama, South Carolina
# 
# 
# Tim Thompson - tgt@stargate.com
# 	USA: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, New York, North Carolina,
#	North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Wisconsin
#
#
# Hokey - hokey@plus5.com
# 	USA: Missouri
# 
#
# David Herron - david@ukma.UUCP
# 	USA: Kentucky
# 
#
# Brian Richter - brianr@rosevax.rosemount.com
# 	USA: Minnesota
# 
#
# Kathy Andrews, Larry Auton - attmap@ihnp4.att.com, lda@clyde.att.com
# 	ATT: all logical regions
# 
#
# Torben Nielson, Bob Cunningham - torben@uhmanoa.UUCP, bob@uhmanoa.UUCP
# 	USA: Hawaii
# 
#
# Haesoon Cho - nmc@sorak.kaist.ac.kr
# 	Korea: all regions
# 
#
# Tohru Asami - asami@kddspeech.kddlabs.jp
# 	Japan: all regions
# 
#
# Robert Elz, Dave Davey - map-coord@munnari.UUCP
# 	Australia: all regions
# 
#
# Larry Harrison - larryh@pyuxe.UUCP
# 	Bell Communicates Research (Bellcore): all sections
# 
#
# Paul Graham - pjg@unrvax.unr.edu
#	USA: Nevada
#
#
# Benny Somali - somali@indovax.uucp
#	Indonesia: all regions
#
#
# Mel Pleasant - pleasant@rutgers.edu
# 	Singapore: all regions
# 	New Zealand: all regions
# 
# 
# Please note that the purpose of this map is to make routers within
# UUCP work.  The eventual direction is to make the map smaller (through
# the use of domains), not larger.  As such, sites with lots of local
# machines connected together are encouraged to create a few gateway
# machines and to make arrangements that these gateways can forward
# mail to your local users.  We would prefer not to have information
# listing the machines on your local area networks, and certainly not
# your personal computers and workstations.  If you need such information
# for local mail delivery, create a supplement in pathalias form which
# you do not publish, but which you combine with the published data
# when you run pathalias.  We also do not want information about machines
# which are not on UUCP, that is, which are not reachable with the !
# notation from the main UUCP cluster.
#
# If you don't have pathalias, it has been posted to mod.sources most
# recently in January 1986.  If you
# don't have access to a mod.sources archive, contact the mod.sources
# moderator (currently Rich $alz, cbosgd!mirror!sources-request.)
# 
# The remainder of this file describes the format of the UUCP map data.
# It was written July 9, 1985 by Erik E. Fair <ucbvax!fair>, and
# last updated July 12, 1985 by Mark Horton <stargate!mark>.
# 
# The entire map is intended to be processed by pathalias, a program that
# generates UUCP routes from this data.  All lines beginning in `#' are
# comment lines to pathalias, however the UUCP Project has defined a set
# of these comment lines to have specific format so that a complete
# database could be built.
# 
# The generic form of these lines is
# 
# #<field id letter><tab><field data>
# 
# Each host has an entry in the following format.  The entry should begin
# with the #N line, end with a blank line after the pathalias data, and
# not contain any other blank lines, since there are ed, sed, and awk
# scripts that use expressions like /^#N $1/,/^$/ for the purpose of
# separating the map out into files, each containing one site entry.
# 
# #N	UUCP name of site
# #S	manufacturer machine model; operating system & version
# #O	organization name
# #C	contact person's name
# #E	contact person's electronic mail address
# #T	contact person's telephone number
# #P	organization's address
# #L	latitude / longitude
# #R	remarks
# #U	netnews neighbors
# #W	who last edited the entry ; date edited
# #
# sitename	.domain
# sitename	remote1(FREQUENCY), remote2(FREQUENCY),
# 	remote3(FREQUENCY)
# 
# Example of a completed entry:
# 
# #N	ucbvax
# #S	DEC VAX-11/750; 4.3 BSD UNIX
# #O	University of California at Berkeley
# #C	Robert W. Henry
# #E	ucbvax!postmaster
# #T	+1 415 642 1024
# #P	573 Evans Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720
# #L	37 52 29 N / 122 13 44 W
# #R	This is also UCB-VAX.BERKELEY.EDU [10.2.0.78] on the internet
# #U	decvax ibmpa ucsfcgl ucbtopaz ucbcad
# #W	ucbvax!fair (Erik E. Fair); Sat Jun 22 03:35:16 PDT 1985
# #
# ucbvax	.ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU
# ucbvax	decvax(DAILY/4), ihnp4(DAILY/2),
# 	sun(POLLED)
# 
# Specific Field Descriptions
# 
# #N	system name
# 
# Your system's UUCP name should go here. Either the uname(1) command
# from System III or System V UNIX; or the uuname(1) command from Version
# 7 UNIX will tell you what UUCP is using for the local UUCP name.
# 
# One of the goals of the UUCP Project is to keep duplicate UUCP host
# names from appearing because there exist mailers in the world which
# assume that the UUCP name space contains no duplicates (and attempts
# UUCP path optimization on that basis), and it's just plain confusing to
# have two different sites with the same name.
# 
# At present, the most severe restriction on UUCP names is that the name
# must be unique somewhere in the first six characters, because of a poor
# software design decision made by AT&T for the System V release of UNIX.
# 
# This does not mean that your site name has to be six characters or less
# in length. Just unique within that length.
# 
# With regard to choosing system names, HARRIS'S LAMENT:
# 
# 	``All the good ones are taken.''
# 
# #S	machine type; operating system
# 
# This is a quick description of your equipment. Machine type should
# be manufacturer and model, and after a semi-colon(;), the operating
# system name and version number (if you have it). Some examples:
# 
# 	DEC PDP-11/70; 2.9 BSD UNIX
# 	DEC PDP-11/45; ULTRIX-11
# 	DEC VAX-11/780; VMS 4.0
# 	SUN 2/150; 4.2 BSD UNIX
# 	Pyramid 90x; OSx 2.1
# 	CoData 3300; Version 7 UniPlus+
# 	Callan Unistar 200; System V UniPlus+
# 	IBM PC/XT; Coherent
# 	Intel 386; XENIX 3.0
# 	CRDS Universe 68; UNOS
# 
# #O	organization name
# 
# This should be the full name of your organization, squeezed to fit
# inside 80 columns as necessary. Don't be afraid to abbreviate where the
# abbreviation would be clear to the entire world (say a famous
# institution like MIT or CERN), but beware of duplication (In USC the C
# could be either California or Carolina).
# 
# #C	contact person
# 
# This should be the full name (or names, separated by commas) of the
# person responsible for handling queries from the outside world about
# your machine.
# 
# #E	contact person's electronic address
# 
# This should be just a machine name, and a user name, like
# `ucbvax!fair'. It should not be a full path, since we will be able to
# generate a path to the given address from the data you're giving us.
# There is no problem with the machine name not being the same as the #N
# field (i.e. the contact `lives' on another machine at your site).
# 
# Also, it's a good idea to give a generic address or alias (if your mail
# system is capable of providing aliases) like `usenet' or `postmaster',
# so that if the contact person leaves the institution or is re-assigned
# to other duties, he doesn't keep getting mail about the system. In a
# perfect world, people would send notice to the UUCP Project, but in
# practice, they don't, so the data does get out of date. If you give a
# generic address you can easily change it to point at the appropriate
# person.
# 
# Multiple electronic addresses should be separated by commas, and all of
# them should be specified in the manner described above.
# 
# #T	contact person's telephone number
# 
# Format: +<country code><space><area code><space><prefix><space><number>
# 
# Example:
# 
# #T	+1 415 642 1024
# 
# This is the international format for the representation of phone
# numbers. The country code for the United States of America (and Canada)
# is 1. Other country codes should be listed in your telephone book.
# 
# If you must list an extension (i.e. what to ask the receptionist for,
# if not the name of the contact person), list it after the main phone
# number with an `x' in front of it to distinguish it from the rest of
# the phone number.
# 
# Example:
# 
# #T	+1 415 549 3854 x37
# 
# Multiple phone numbers should be separated by commas, and all of them
# should be completely specified as described above to prevent confusion.
# 
# #P      organization's address
# 
# This field should be one line filled with whatever else anyone would
# need after the contact person's name, and your organization's name
# (given in other fields above), to mail you something by paper mail.
# 
# #L      latitude and longitude
# 
# This should be in the following format:
# 
# #L	DD MM [SS] "N"|"S" / DDD MM [SS] "E"|"W" ["city"]
# 
# Two fields, with optional third.
# 
# First number is Latitude in degrees (NN), minutes (MM), and seconds (SS),
# and a N or S to indicate North or South of the Equator.
# 
# A Slash Separator.
# 
# Second number is Longitude in degrees (DDD), minutes (MM), and seconds (SS),
# and a E or W to indicate East or West of the Prime Meridian in Greenwich,
# England.
# 
# Seconds are optional, but it is worth noting that the more accurate you
# are, the more accurate maps we can make of the network (including
# blow-ups of various high density areas, like New Jersey, or the San
# Francisco Bay Area).
# 
# If you give the coordinates for your city (i.e. without fudging for
# where you are relative to that), add the word `city' at the end of the
# end of the specification, to indicate that. If you know where you are
# relative to a given coordinate for which you have longitude and
# latitude data, then the following fudge factors can be useful:
# 
# 1 degree	=	69.2 miles	=	111 kilometers
# 1 minute	=	1.15 miles	=	1.86 kilometers
# 1 second	=	102 feet	=	30.9 meters
#
# For LONGITUDE, multiply the above numbers by the cosine of your
# latitude.  For instance, at latitude 35 degrees, a degree of
# longitude is 69.2*0.819 = 56.7 miles; at latitude 40 degrees,
# it is 69.2*0.766 = 53.0 miles.  If you don't see why the measure
# of longitude depends on your latitude, just think of a globe, with
# all those N-S meridians of longitude converging on the poles.
# You don't do this cosine multiplication for LATITUDE.
#
# Here is a short cosine table in case you don't have a trig calculator
# handy.  (But you can always write a short program in C.  The cosine
# function in bc(1) doesn't seem to work as documented.)
# deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos  deg  cos
#  0  1.000  5  0.996 10  0.985 15  0.966 20  0.940 25  0.906
# 30  0.866 35  0.819 40  0.766 45  0.707 50  0.643 55  0.574
# 60  0.500 65  0.423 70  0.342 75  0.259 80  0.174 85  0.087
# 
# The Prime Meridian is through Greenwich, England, and longitudes run
# from 180 degrees West of Greenwich to 180 East.  Latitudes run from
# 90 degrees North of the Equator to 90 degrees South.
# 
# #R      remarks
# 
# This is for one line of comment. As noted before, all lines beginning
# with a `#' character are comment lines, so if you need more than one
# line to tell us something about your site, do so between the end of the
# map data (the #?\t fields) and the pathalias data.
# 
# #U	netnews neighbors
# 
# The USENET is the network that moves netnews around, specifically,
# mod.announce. If you send mod.announce to any of your UUCP neighbors,
# list their names here, delimited by spaces. Example:
# 
# #U	ihnp4 decvax mcvax seismo
# 
# Since some places have lots of USENET neighbors, continuation lines
# should be just another #U and more site names.
# 
# #W      who last edited the entry and when
# 
# This field should contain an email address, a name in parentheses,
# followed by a semi-colon, and the output of the date program.
# Example:
# 
# #W	ucbvax!fair (Erik E. Fair); Sat Jun 22 03:35:16 PDT 1985
# 
# The same rules for email address that apply in the contact's email
# address apply here also. (i.e. only one system name, and user name).
# It is intended that this field be used for automatic ageing of the
# map entries so that we can do more automated checking and updating
# of the entire map. See getdate(3) from the netnews source for other
# acceptable date formats.
# 
# PATHALIAS DATA (or, documenting your UUCP connections & frequency of use)
# 
# The DEMAND, DAILY, etc., entries represent imaginary connect costs (see
# below) used by pathalias to calculate lowest cost paths.  The cost
# breakdown is:
# 
# 	LOCAL		25	local area network
# 	DEDICATED	95	high speed dedicated
# 	DIRECT		200	local call
# 	DEMAND          300     normal call (long distance, anytime)
# 	HOURLY		500	hourly poll
# 	EVENING		1800	time restricted call
# 	DAILY		5000	daily poll
# 	WEEKLY		30000	irregular poll
# 	DEAD            a very high number - not usable path
# 
# Additionally, HIGH and LOW (used like DAILY+HIGH) are -5 and +5
# respectively, for baud-rate or quality bonuses/penalties.  Arithmetic
# expressions can be used, however, you should be aware that the results
# are often counter-intuitive (e.g. (DAILY*4) means every 4 days, not 4
# times a day).  This is because the numbers represent "cost of connection"
# rather than "frequency of connection."
# 
# The numbers are intended to represent cost of transferring mail over
# the link, measured very rougly in elapsed time, which seems to be
# far more important than baud rates for this type of
# traffic.  There is an assumed high overhead for each hop; thus,
# HOURLY is far more than DAILY/24.
# 
# There are a few other cost names that sometimes appear in the map.
# Some are synonyms for the preferred names above (e.g. POLLED is assumed
# to mean overnight and is taken to be the same as DAILY), some are
# obsolete (e.g.  the letters A through F, which are letter grades for
# connections.) It is not acceptable to make up new names or spellings
# (pathalias gets very upset when people do that...).
# 
# LOCAL AREA NETWORKS
# 
# We do not want local area network information in the published map.
# If you want to put your LAN in your local Path.* files, read about
# the LAN syntax in the pathalias.1 manual page.
# 
# WHAT TO DO WITH THIS STUFF
# 
# Once you have finished constructing your pathalias entry, mail it off
# to {ucbvax,ihnp4,akgua,seismo}!cbosgd!uucpmap, which will be sent to
# the appropriate regional map coordinator.  They maintain assigned geographic
# sections of the map, and the entire map is posted on a rolling basis in
# the USENET newsgroups mod.map.uucp over the course of a month (at the
# end of the month they start over).
# 
# Questions or comments about this specification should also be directed at
# cbosgd!uucpmap.
# 
SHAR_EOF
echo shar: extracting network
cat << \SHAR_EOF > network
# This is the current list of machines that have agreed to make the UUCP
# map available to the UUCP community (or some subset of).  The maps on
# these machines are the same as posted here, although they are updated
# more frequently than once per month.  If you missed a file or need
# an update in the middle of the month, please use the machine on this
# list which is closest to your area, and abide by the rules set up by
# the administrator of that machine.  Also, please keep in mind that
# the entire UUCP map is posted every month, so if you can wait
# for the next posting, we encourage you to do so.  This is a service provided
# on a volunteer basis by these machines, and if the privilege is abused,
# it will likely disappear.
#
# The map posted monthly has been checked as a unit for errors; the daily
# maps sometimes contain errors which are cleaned up in the monthly posting.
# 
# 	Mark Horton
# 	The UUCP Project
# 	cbosgd!mark
# 
# -------------------------
# Site ihnp4 - AT&T Bell Laboratories
# 	     Naperville, IL
# 
# 
# To pick up the UUCP map from ihnp4, use the command:
# 
# 	uucp -m ihnp4!~/uumap/.info !~/uumap/
# 
# 		After you receive notification:
# 
# 	cat /usr/spool/uucppublic/uumap/.info
# 
# 		and follow the instructions.
# 
# If ihnp4 has a direct connection to your system, an alternative is:
# 
# 	uux ihnp4!uupub uumap
# 
# 		ihnp4 will send the uucpmap database to your
# 		system!~/uumap/ and will mail you notification.
# 
# 	Gary Murakami
# 	ihnp4!gjm
# --------------------------
# Site topaz - Laboratory for Computer Science Research
#              Hill Center - Busch Campus
#              Rutgers University
#              PO Box 879
#              New Brunswick, NJ 08540
#              (201) 932-2287
# 
# Topaz has automated its map updating procedures.  As map updates reach
# topaz, we will process them and pass them on to anyone wishing to
# receive them via uucp.  Under normal circumstances we can handle
# traffic only within the state of New Jersey.  However, if you have a
# special need, contact us.  We may be able to help.  We do not maintain
# a public uucp login.  To receive map updates, you'll need to contact
# us and establish a uucp login.  Once established, any part of the maps
# may be retrieved.
# 
#      Mel Pleasant
#      uucp: {seismo, ut-sally, shasta, harvard, ihnp4!packard}!topaz!pleasant
#      ARPA: PLEASANT@RUTGERS
# 
# ---------------------------
# Site astrovax - Princeton University, Dept. of Astrophysics
#                 Princeton, NJ 08544
# 		(609) 452-3586
# 
# The uucpmap information will be available to our uucp neighbors as files in
# the directory /usr/spool/uucppublic/uumap  == ~uucp/uumap == ~/uumap .
# Please pick them up outside of working hours, preferably from 12 am. to
# 8 am. Eastern time.
# 
# I suggest first pulling over the file astrovax!~/uumap/LISTING which
# contains the list of uucp map files in the astrovax!~/uumap directory.  Then
# pull over the files listed in that file.  That way if the connection is hung
# up by line noise the transfer will not have to restart from the beginning.
# 
# 	Bill Sebok
# 	(ihnp4, cbosgd, princeton, akgua)!astrovax!wls
# ---------------------------
# Site cadre - University of Pittsburgh
# 	     Pittsburgh, PA 15261
# 	     (412) 624-3490
# 
# Cadre will have map accessable to all our directly connected uucp
# sites via uucp/uusend and mail service depending on neighboring site policies
# on thru uucp traffic. The mailbox cadre!usenetmap will provide information
# on map access once map is in place. We will not be servicing arpanet community.
# A reasonable person policy is the only restrictions planned for map access.
# 
# 	Russell Yount
# 	(pitt, vax135)!cadre!ry
# ---------------------------
# Site nbires - NBI, Inc.
# 	      P.O. Box 9001
# 	      Boulder, CO 80301
# 	      (303) 444-5710
# 
# Directly connected sites will be able to get the map and I am
# willing on a trial basis to allow other sites to call in to get
# the map.  Since nbires is a busy machine during the day, I would
# like to restrict access to the map to the period between 11PM and 6AM
# Mountain Time.
# 
# The files are available in nbires!~uucp/uumap.  A current directory listing
# is kept in nbires!~uucp/uumap/.info.  It is best if individual uucp's are
# done for each file begin retrieved.
# 
# Connection information is:
# 	phone:  303 443-1846
# 	login:  uucpmap
# 	password: UUCPmap
# 
# Contact person:
# 	Kirk Webb
# 	postmaster@nbires.UUCP, or kwebb@nbires.UUCP if you
# 		prefer the personal touch.
# 
# -------------------------------
# Site seismo - Center for Seismic Studies
# 	      Arlington, VA 22209
# 	      (703) 276-7900
# 
# On seismo, the uucp map will be available in the directory ~uucp/uumap.
# Each state,etc. will have a file containing the data for uucpsites
# in that state. The filename will be the same as that used for the Usenet
# map (e.g. usa.va, usa.oh, eur.nl, can.on, etc).
# 
# A listing of the files in the directory can be obtained by running
# 	uux seismo!listmap user@site.UUCP
# where user@site.UUCP is a return address for mail.
# 
# Sites already having uucp connections with seismo may uucp the map at
# any time, but should initiate the call if it is long distance.
# 
# ARPAnet sites will find the data in the same format in ~ftp/uumap on seismo.
# It may be ftped with the standard anonymous login.
# 
# 	Rick Adams
# 	seismo!rick
# ----------------------------------
# Site harvard - Harvard University
#                Cambridge, MA 03128
# 	       (617) 495-3864
# 
# three sites:
# 		filenames same as in Usenet map ( usa.ma etc )
# 		please access between 1AM and 6AM E?T
# 
# 	ARPAnet access
# 		site harvard:
# 		data in ~ftp/uumap for standard anonymous login
# 	BITNET access
# 		site harvunxt:
# 		execute the net command SENDUUM filename
# 	UUCP access
# 		site talcott:
# 		data in ~uucp/uumap
# 		uucp login uucp, no password
# 		phone # (617) 495-8741
# 
# also on talcott:
# 
# 	~uucp/pathalias/data
# 
# is a file ( updated daily ) of the map information without the "#" lines
# much shorter if someone wants to get that.
# 
# 	Scott Bradner
# 	Harvard University
# 	(617)495-3864
# 	sob@harvard.{arpa,uucp,csnet}
# 	sob@harvunxt.bitnet
# ---------------------------
# Site gatech - Georgia Tech
# 
# Gatech supports transfer of map portions (or the whole map) to current
# uucp "neighbors."  Directions on how to obtain map copies may be
# retrieved by issuing the command:
# 	uux gatech!listmap directions mylogin@mysite.UUCP
# (substituting your mail address for "mylogin@mysite.UUCP", of course).
# The directions for access and transfer will be mailed back to you.
# 
# Gatech's uucp does not support uucp login except by "known" contacts.
# If you do not currently have uucp access to gatech and would like to
# establish such a link, send mail to "postmaster@gatech.UUCP" for details.
# 
# 	Gene Spafford
# 	gatech!spaf
# ----------------------------------
SHAR_EOF
#	End of shell archive
exit 0