[can.usrgroup] Is it time for a "uunet-north"?

evan@telly.on.ca (Evan Leibovitch) (02/03/90)

[Note: this is being cross-posted to ont.uucp and can.usrgroup. I would
like to take this discussion to a mailing list of interested people
sooner or later. For now, please leave the cross-posting, because it has
interest to people not involved with Uniforum Canada or Unix Unanimous,
and also to people on the UU mailing list who don't get news. Thanks.]

Some interesting side discussions at the recent Unix Unanimous meeting
in North York, coupled with the coming departure of the site nebulus,
have revived interest in this matter.

There has been widespread mumbling for the past year or so about the
feasability of having a central Ontario site that would function
similarly to uunet in the U.S. That is, a stable, well-connected site
which charges fees for feeds. It would carry every newsgroup and
mailing list available, allowing subscriber sites to make up their
own minds on what's appropriate to take.

The idea in concept appears to have the support of many of the board
members of Uniforum Canada, possibly even a majority at this time. The
backing of that body for a non-profit organization running this site
could involve direct funding, getting cheap hardware from the group's
corporate sponsors, or other means.

The consensus among those I have spoken to points to a small (maybe 1.5)
number of paid staff positions and a core of volunteers to assist.

One issue that may become sticky is that of Internet access. As I
understand it, present Onet policy concerning commercial sites hooking
up is unclear. Perhaps this site could be a lightening rod, taking care
of the commercial hookups and relieving other Onet members of that
"problem". I believe this can result in a working agreement that
benefits both sides.

I myself would like to see the site offer, besides Usenet and mail
feeds, some kind of ftp access for subscribers. Maybe modem SLIP links,
or perhaps we could implement an ftp server which would allow subscribers
to request uploads - requests would be queued up, and the files would be
set for UUCP transmission to the requesting site upon arrival.

Archives? Of course. Lots of disk, to allow for a full repository of the
GNU tapes, the newest Xwindows, TeX, the entire contents of comp.sources,
whatever. I can see that in the early going, some of the stuff could be
kept offline on Exabyte tapes, available for downloading on N hours notice.

I believe such a site would be of great interest to UUCP sites in
Ontario and Quebec. I don't think there'll be much interest in the
Maritimes and West, because with our stupid phone rates it's likely
cheaper to call Virginia from Vancouver than to call Toronto.

Comments?
-- 
The Northwest Territories:  | Evan Leibovitch, Sound Software
Where men are men, women    | Located in beautiful Brampton, Ontario
are scarce, and caribou are | evan@telly.on.ca / uunet!attcan!telly!evan
very careful how they walk. | (416) 452-0504

eastick@me.utoronto.ca (Doug Eastick) (02/03/90)

evan@telly.on.ca (Evan Leibovitch) writes:
>One issue that may become sticky is that of Internet access. As I
>understand it, present Onet policy concerning commercial sites hooking
>up is unclear. Perhaps this site could be a lightening rod, taking care
>of the commercial hookups and relieving other Onet members of that
>"problem". I believe this can result in a working agreement that
>benefits both sides.

To join Onet, the organization must have a `common purpose' (if you will)
between all submembers.  There would still be the restriction the `no
commercial traffic' (e.g. invoices, paid software).  I've spoken with 
one of the Onet people and they are open to suggestions, but there are 
many grey areas which could be argued about.  The price of Onet is 
also high.

>I myself would like to see the site offer, besides Usenet and mail
>feeds, some kind of ftp access for subscribers. Maybe modem SLIP links,

Essentially what the commercial end of UUNET is offering.  The only
real barrier in doing this is the cost of phone lines in Canada.
A line from Toronto to the border would, likely, cost twice that of
the line from the border to Boston.  Fortunately, Bell is planning 
to decrease rates on 56kbps and T-1 lines by around 50%.  I'll 
believe it when I see it.  There are other cheaper, in the long term, 
solutions which could be considered (e.g. satellite). 

>I believe such a site would be of great interest to UUCP sites in
>Ontario and Quebec. I don't think there'll be much interest in the
>Maritimes and West, because with our stupid phone rates it's likely
>cheaper to call Virginia from Vancouver than to call Toronto.

That's because your call only has to travel Vancouver-NearestUSborder
on Canadian lines and then the cheap US services take over.  Want to
build a national commercial backbone?  Lease lines to the nearest US
border points (Buffalo, Seattle) and a T-1 line from MCI between
Buffalo and Seattle.  Not too proper, but technically feasible. Sigh.

If a uunet-north site was established, it could also provide 1-800
dialin for out of town sites.  Price from Bell that covers most of
Ontario (except by Manitoba, 807?) is around $0.37/minute.

Please add me to any mailing list pertaining to this topic.  Thanks.
--
Doug Eastick -- eastick@me.utoronto.ca

lamy@cs.toronto.edu (Jean-Francois Lamy) (02/04/90)

If what you have in mind is a central node with dial-in access, you would in
effect be re-inventing CSNet (using SL/IP instead of IP/X.25).  I think your
estimate of 1.5 full-time staff is on the low side for such a set-up, and that
you are under-estimating the costs of a leased line to the US (after all, all
of ONET is only able to afford a 32Kbs link to the US, and that makes me
wonder where you'd find the money)

Note as well that there are already sites on ONET that charge for access
(UTCS being one), I don't see how a uunet north would be different in that
sense.  The only tricky point about all this would be whether SL/IP connection
to that uunetnorth (wow, a freudian sl/ip :-) would be able to climb on the
ONET/NSFNET link.  If your aim is to provide SL/IP access for mail and ftp
to uunetnorth, then I don't see any problem at all, and the 16K$ per year
charge would likely be quite competitive with your actual communication tab
(avoiding headaches running the link too).

If you want to allow full IP connectivity through ONET, then you should simply
raise the matter with the ONET board.  To my knowledge, the technical comittee
has discussed the matter, and the links certainly are technically feasible
(there are some already in-place within some member institutions), what has
not been raised is the issue of handling "third party" traffic, and that is
a policy issue.

Finally, the idea of dropping lines to the US and running T1 there is actually
illegal, as I understand things.

Jean-Francois Lamy               lamy@cs.utoronto.ca, uunet!cs.utoronto.ca!lamy
Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto, Canada M5S 1A4

eastick@me.utoronto.ca (Doug Eastick) (02/04/90)

lamy@cs.toronto.edu (Jean-Francois Lamy) writes:
>[...] and the 16K$ per year
>charge would likely be quite competitive with your actual communication tab
>(avoiding headaches running the link too).

Currently $18k/year and I suspect it will rise.

I thought UTCS's link to the NSFnet was 56k? not 32k.

>Finally, the idea of dropping lines to the US and running T1 there is actually
>illegal, as I understand things.

It was a joke.
--
Doug Eastick -- eastick@me.utoronto.ca

lamy@cs.toronto.edu (Jean-Francois Lamy) (02/04/90)

eastick@me.utoronto.ca (Doug Eastick) writes:

[ Concerning ONET connection costs, which are only worth discussing only
  if uunetnorth wants to provide Internet connections to the outside, or
  if they want to set-up an Internet connection for themselves ]

>Currently $18k/year and I suspect it will rise.

There is the very real question of "where do you go to get an Internet
connection".  The ONET fee compares very favourably to how much it would cost
you to tap in directly to NYSERNET, or another American regional net.  CSRI
used to spend 60000$ per annum to get Internet access from CSNET/X25Net, as a
quick reminder (now you know who was paying for ...!{utcsri,utai}!foo.bar.edu
all those years).  NSFNET won't even talk to you (soon they won't even talk to
ONET, their policy being to talk only to their counterpart national backbones
-- CAnet in Canada -- which is still in nascent state).  Networking is *not* a
trivial task, and even in the presence of better subsidies and cheaper
communication costs the US networks are still forced to charge a bundle to
provide the required infrastructure.  One reason the ONET fee will go up is
that it will more or less be forced into CAnet -- see discussion about NSFnet
above -- and CAnet, thanks to Canadian politics, will be providing service to
all 10 provinces, with predictable cost/revenue discrepencies)

For the ONET you get the leased line and an ethernet port in your building.
The router is actually amortized over a small positive number of years.  The
current "proper" way of building networks involves using homogeneous,
dedicated equipment with a clear delineation between what the network provides
(packet routing) and what the customer gets (a place to plug in a wire).
Cobbling up something where say the packets for UWO go through a
general-purpose machine at Waterloo would introduce both logistical problems
because of the heterogeneity, and sharply diminish predictability when
non-dedicated machines get loaded up.

I'm afraid the only real way to build regional networks circa 1990 is to do
it the ONET way.

>I thought UTCS's link to the NSFnet was 56k? not 32k.

Nope, sad as it may be.  The remaining bandwidth is paid for and used by
Netnorth.

Jean-Francois Lamy               lamy@cs.utoronto.ca, uunet!cs.utoronto.ca!lamy
Department of Computer Science, University of Toronto, Canada M5S 1A4

root@nebulus.UUCP (Dennis S. Breckenridge) (02/04/90)

In the interest of keeping the west alive as  well,  I  would  be
very  interested  in  adding to the network. I know the lyndon at
atha would want some input as well.
  Nebulus requires more disk (it's currently  at  630  megs)  but
ports,  modems  and  ether are already here. I am sure that if we
all discuss this with earnest we can pull it off. I  heard,  also
at that famous UU meeting that UUNET is in the process of setting
up a statewide network of machines as well.  I  do  not  see  the
point  of  UUNET-north  if  we  are going to compete with that. I
would like to see Canadian money stay here not drift  across  the
border in NNTP packets.
  This is a poll of all that are reading, what would you like  to
see  in  a  UUNET-north.  I don't think a free for all ftp - uucp
gateway would be a good  idea.  If  we  pooled  out  expertise  I
believe we could pull this off.
  Telly, do you want to take the lead, nebulus will disappear for
while! sigh!
-- 
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NAME:     Dennis S. Breckenridge                 UUCP: dennis@nebulus
               EMACS: Eight Megabytes And Constantly Swapping!
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