References
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References
- 1
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A. Malis, D. Robinson, R. Ullman.
Multiprotocol Interconnect on X.25 and ISDN in the Packet Mode.
RFC-1356, August 1992.
- 2
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ACM.
Fairisle: An ATM Network for the Local Area, Computer
Communicatations Review, SIGCOMM, September 1991.
- 3
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ATM Forum.
ATM User-Network Interface Specification Version 2.1, 1993.
- 4
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M. Burrows.
A Prototype Elapsed Time Profiler for Alpha OSF and MIPS Ultrix.
Technical report, Digital Equipment Corporation, Systems Research
Center, 1993.
Yet to appear.
- 5
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M. J. Dixon.
System Support for Multi-Service Traffic.
Technical Report 245, Cambridge University Computer Laboratory,
January 1992.
Ph.D. dissertation.
- 6
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European Fibre Optic Conference.
The Cambridge Backbone Network, Amsterdam, June 1988.
- 7
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L. French, D. Greaves, and D. McAuley.
Private ATM Networks and Protocol and Interface for ATM LANs.
Technical Report 258, Computer Laboratory, May 1992.
- 8
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A. Hopper and R. M. Needham.
The Cambridge Fast Ring Networking System.
IEEE Transactions on Computers, 37(10), October 1988.
- 9
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IEEE Computer Society Draft Standard.
Extension for Portable Operating Systems P1003.4a / D6, 1992.
- 10
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Internet Working Group.
Draft 5, Classical IP and ARP over ATM, October 14th 1993.
- 11
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V. Jacobson.
Compressing TCP/IP Headers for Low-Speed Serial Links.
RFC-1144, February 1990.
- 12
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D. R. McAuley.
Protocol Design For High Speed Networks.
Technical Report 186, Cambridge University Computer Laboratory,
January 1990.
Ph.D. dissertation.
- 13
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SUN Microsystems.
SunNet X.25 System Administration Manual, October 1990.
Version 7.0 beta.
Richard Black (Richard.Black@cl.cam.ac.uk) obtained a Bachelor's
degree in Computer Science from the University of Cambridge in
1990. He is currently in his third year as a Ph.D. student at the
University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory. He has worked on the
hardware and software of the Fairisle ATM switch, and the
implementation of the Wanda micro-kernel.
Simon Crosby (Simon.Crosby@cl.cam.ac.uk) is a Ph.D. student
at the University of Cambridge Computer Laboratory, studying control
and management of ATM networks. He holds an MSc degree in Computer
Science from the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, and a BSc
(Hons) degree in Computer Science and Mathematics from the University
of Cape Town, South Africa.
Richard Black and Simon Crosby