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RFC 979 (rfc979) - PSN End-to-End functional specification (4653 words) |
 | It describes the services provided to the various types of hosts that RFC 979 March 1986 PSN End-to-End Functional Specification are supported by the PSN, the addressing capabilities that it makes available, the functionality required for the peer protocol, and the performance goals for the new EE. |
 | This RFC 979 March 1986 PSN End-to-End Functional Specification guarantees that when an AHIP host is sending messages to an X.25 host, messages using different link numbers come into the X.25 host on different X.25 connections. |
 | RFC 979 March 1986 PSN End-to-End Functional Specification One issue must be raised concerning interoperability between X.25 and packet-mode HDH hosts. |
| RFC 979 (rfc979) (4608 words) |
 | It describes the services provided to the various types of hosts that Malis [Page 1] RFC 979 March 1986 PSN End-to-End Functional Specification are supported by the PSN, the addressing capabilities that it makes available, the functionality required for the peer protocol, and the performance goals for the new EE. |
 | This Malis [Page 9] RFC 979 March 1986 PSN End-to-End Functional Specification guarantees that when an AHIP host is sending messages to an X.25 host, messages using different link numbers come into the X.25 host on different X.25 connections. |
 | Malis [Page 10] RFC 979 March 1986 PSN End-to-End Functional Specification One issue must be raised concerning interoperability between X.25 and packet-mode HDH hosts. |