RFC 1169 (rfc1169) - Page 3 of 15
Explaining the role of GOSIP
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1169 Explaining the Role of GOSIP August 1990
discuss the role of Federal Agencies in this process.
4. Acknowledgements
Special thanks are due to Rebecca Nitzan of Sterling and Phill Gross
of CNRI for developing several draft versions of this RFC.
5. GOSIP Background
The Government OSI Profile (GOSIP), published as Federal Information
Processing Standard (FIPS) 146, issued by the National Institute of
Standards and Technology (NIST), specifies the details of an OSI
configuration for use in the Government so that interoperable OSI
products can be procured from commercial vendors. GOSIP is needed
because OSI standards allow many potential options and choices, some
of which are incompatible. GOSIP is based on refinements of OSI
standards. The refinements are agreed to by commercial implementors
and potential users through a series of OSI Implementors Workshops
(OIW) hosted by NIST four times every year since 1983. As OSI
becomes more widely deployed, GOSIP compliance will become
increasingly important.
GOSIP was written by an inter-agency group and continues to evolve
under the guidance of the GOSIP Advanced Requirements Group. The
IETF is represented on the GOSIP Advanced Requirements Group, as are
Federal Government Agencies, including the FNC agencies.
The GOSIP FIPS consists of:
1. An announcement adopting GOSIP as a Federal standard. The
announcement section of the FIPS covers topics such as the
objectives of GOSIP, its applicability, implementation
requirements, and waiver procedures.
2. The technical specification of GOSIP products to be procured.
The technical specification section of GOSIP describes the
details of a subset of OSI protocols. Products implementing
GOSIP are in development by or available from many computer
vendors.
3. Appendices describing the plans for including additional
functionality into future versions of the GOSIP technical
specification.
The first version of GOSIP was published in August 1988 following a
long comment period beginning as early as January 1987. GOSIP was
adopted as FIPS 146 in February 1989 and will become a Federal
procurement requirement in August 1990 [1]. A second version of
Cerf & Mills