[ih] Memories of Flag Day?

Tom Lyon pugs78 at gmail.com
Sun Aug 6 17:54:15 PDT 2023


When IP was first coming to Nokia phones - circa 1999 - Bob Hinden and I
tried to get Nokia to do IPv6 only.  It should've been easy, because at
that stage there was no chance of http or most other extant apps running on
the phone, and operators were always gonna use NAT anyways to get to the
Internet. Would've been a major boost for V6, but no....

On Sun, Aug 6, 2023 at 1:56 PM Brian E Carpenter via Internet-history <
internet-history at elists.isoc.org> wrote:

> Andy,
>
> So, it was your fault that we decided that "no flag day" was a vital
> requirement for IPng :-). Seriously, I think that enough people
> remembered the 1983 flag day and definitely said "never again!"
>
> Regards
>     Brian Carpenter
>
> On 07-Aug-23 04:17, Andrew G. Malis via Internet-history wrote:
> > Miles,
> >
> > I wrote the IMP code to enforce the flag day and ran the transition from
> > the NOC.
> >
> > To prepare for the flag day, we added a new bit to each port's
> > configuration in the IMPs. The bit said whether or not a port was allowed
> > to use the NCP host-host protocol (port 0). If the bit was off, then NCP
> > host-host packets were discarded by the IMPs.
> >
> > There was a defined procedure in place well prior to the cutover for
> > approving exceptions to the no-NCP policy.
> >
> > On January 1, I pulled the switch to flip the bits from "on" to "off"
> > except for the pre-approved list of exceptions.
> >
> > A good number of hosts made the deadline, but additional exceptions were
> > approved as the phone calls started coming in. The exception list
> continued
> > to grow in the first few days of 1983, but as hosts gradually got their
> > TCP/IP stacks working, their NCP permission was turned off.
> >
> > As I recall, the exception list quickly shrank, and by the end of the
> year
> > there were very few NCP-only hosts left. There was certainly some amount
> > of pain involved, but NCP would have hung around for much longer if the
> > switchover hadn't been enforced.
> >
> > Cheers,
> > Andy
> >
> >
> > On Sun, Aug 6, 2023 at 7:35 AM Miles Fidelman via Internet-history <
> > internet-history at elists.isoc.org> wrote:
> >
> >> Hi Folks,
> >>
> >> Does anybody have some memories of the TCP/IP Flag Day they can share?
> >>
> >> I'm doing some writing about "how network ecosystems develop" looking at
> >> how the Internet evolved from the days the net was a gleam in a few
> >> people's eyes, Licklider distributed his famous memo, the NWG & IETF
> >> evolved, Flag Day, etc.  Also looking at the Environmental Movement
> >> (Earth Day, Whole Earth Catalog, ...), FOSS, Crisis Mapping,
> >> Entrepreneurship Support, Makers - all of which I've been up close and
> >> personal with, and now trying to document some common threads &
> techniques.
> >>
> >> A particular focus is on organizing for significant
> >> changes/transformations - like the transition to IP that pretty much
> >> marks the birth of the Internet as we know it.  Hence a particular
> >> interest in what led up to the Flag Day, and how folks responded.
> >>
> >> In particular, I'm wondering how folks organized at various network
> >> sites (universities, military bases, etc.) to respond to the mandate.
> >> Working groups, plans & programs, that sort of thing. How did folks get
> >> their act together?
> >>
> >> Anybody have any stories they can share?
> >>
> >> Thanks Very Much,
> >>
> >> Miles Fidelman
> >>
> >> --
> >> In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice.
> >> In practice, there is.  .... Yogi Berra
> >>
> >> Theory is when you know everything but nothing works.
> >> Practice is when everything works but no one knows why.
> >> In our lab, theory and practice are combined:
> >> nothing works and no one knows why.  ... unknown
> >>
> >> --
> >> Internet-history mailing list
> >> Internet-history at elists.isoc.org
> >> https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/listinfo/internet-history
> >>
> --
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