RFC 1374 (rfc1374) - Page 2 of 43
IP and ARP on HIPPI
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1374 IP and ARP on HIPPI October 1992
ARP Example 23
Discovery of One's Own Switch Address 25
Path MTU Discovery 27
Channel Data Rate Discovery 27
Performance 29
Sharing the Switch 31
Appendix A -- HIPPI Basics 31
Appendix B -- How to Build a Practical HIPPI LAN 37
References 41
Security Considerations 42
Authors' Addresses 42
Introduction
The ANSI High-Performance Parallel Interface (HIPPI) is a simplex
data channel. Configured in pairs, HIPPI can send and receive data
simultaneously at nearly 800 megabits per second. (HIPPI has an
equally applicable 1600 megabit/second option.) Between 1987 and
1991, the ANSI X3T9.3 HIPPI working group drafted four documents that
bear on the use of HIPPI as a network interface. They cover the
physical and electrical specification (HIPPI-PH [1]), the framing of
a stream of octets (HIPPI-FP [2]), encapsulation of IEEE 802.2 LLC
(HIPPI-LE [3]), and the behavior of a standard physical layer switch
(HIPPI-SC [4]). HIPPI-LE also implies the encapsulation of Internet
Protocol[5]. The reader should be familiar with the ANSI HIPPI
documents, copies of which are archived at the site
"nsco.network.com" in the directory "hippi," and may be obtained via
anonymous FTP until they become published standards.
HIPPI switches can be used to connect a variety of computers and
peripheral equipment for many purposes, but the working group stopped
short of describing their use as Local Area Networks. This memo
takes up where the working group left off, using the guiding
principle that except for length and hardware header, Internet
datagrams sent on HIPPI should be identical to the same datagrams
sent on a conventional network, and that any datagram sent on a
conventional 802 network[6] should be valid on HIPPI.
Scope
This memo describes the HIPPI interface between a host and a
crosspoint switch that complies with the HIPPI-SC draft standard.
Issues that have no impact on host implementations are outside the
scope of this memo. Host implementations that comply with this memo
are believed to be interoperable on a network composed of a single
HIPPI-SC switch. They are also interoperable on a simple point-to-
point, two-way HIPPI connection with no switch between them. They
Renwick & Nicholson