Internet Engineering Task Force Jeffrey E. Altman INTERNET-DRAFT Frank da Cruz Columbia University 7 August 1998 Expires: 12 February 1999 TELNET KERMIT OPTION DRAFT 00 STATUS OF THIS MEMO This document is an Internet-Draft. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress". To view the entire list of current Internet-Drafts, please check the "1id-abstracts.txt" listing contained in the Internet-Drafts Shadow Directories on ftp.is.ca.za (Africa), ftp.nordu.net (Northern Europe), ftp.nis.garr.it (Southern Europe), munnari.oz.au (Pacific Rim), ftp.ietf.org (US East Coast), or ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast). ABSTRACT This memo proposes an optional extension to the Telnet protocol to allow the negotiation, coordination, and use of the Kermit file transfer and management protocol within a Telnet session. CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION 2. DEFINITIONS 3. TELNET KERMIT OPTION 4. KERMIT PROTOCOL IMPLICATIONS 5. EXAMPLES 5.1. EXAMPLE 1 5.2. EXAMPLE 2 5.3. EXAMPLE 3 5.4. EXAMPLE 4 5.5. EXAMPLE 5 6. REFERENCES 7. AUTHORS' ADDRESS 1. INTRODUCTION The Kermit protocol [KER] performs error-corrected file transfer and management over many types of connections, including terminal connections, among diverse hardware and software platforms. It is supported by a large number of Telnet clients and is also widely available on the Internet hosts to which Telnet connections are made. Traditionally, the Kermit protocol connection is started manually by a user, or perhaps by an automated script. It is the user's responsibility to start the Kermit server on one end of the connection and the Kermit client on the other, or to start a Kermit "send" operation on one end and a Kermit "receive" on the other. This procedure grew out of necessity on ordinary direct-dial connections, and serves its purpose within the limitations of that context. But it introduces timing and dexterity problems, and lacks an effective way for each Kermit program to determine the "mode" of the other, or even its very presence, and therefore to know with certainty which operations and procedures are legal on the connection at any given time. When Kermit services are offered on the Internet, however, a strong coupling can be established between the two end applications by having the Telnet protocol [TEL] serve as a supervisor for Kermit sessions, ensuring that a valid and known relationship is always obtained. Kermit sessions are, in effect, embedded within Telnet sessions, with Telnet providing the mechanism for starting and stopping them and defining which end is the Kermit client and which is the Kermit server, possibly changing the relationship in response to user actions. Kermit clients and servers that implement the Telnet Kermit Option can form the basis of a new Internet Kermit Service, described in a separate Internet Draft [IKS]. This draft assumes knowledge of Transmission Control Protocol, the Telnet Protocol [TEL], and the Kermit File Transfer Protocol [KER]. The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [BCP]. 2. DEFINITIONS Kermit server A software program that is ready to accept and act upon commands in the form of well-defined Kermit packets [KER]. Kermit client A software program that receives requests through its user interface from a human agent (or a script or other source) and translates them to command packets, which it sends to a Kermit server, thus initiating a Kermit protocol transaction such as the transfer of one or more files. Availability of Kermit server For the purposes of this document, a Kermit server is said to be available if, through the negotiations described herein, its Telnet partner knows that it is a Kermit server. 3. TELNET KERMIT OPTION Support for a Kermit server is negotiated separately in each direction, allowing Kermit service to be embedded in the Telnet client, the Telnet server, or in both. The proposed Telnet extensions are, therefore, symmetrical. When the connection is first opened, Kermit service is unavailable in both directions. The availability of Kermit service is negotiated using the following Telnet option: KERMIT 47 (or other number assigned by IANA) NOTE: 47 is currently the lowest unassigned Telnet Option number, but by the time you read this, it might well be assigned to some other option. As noted above, do not consider this draft an authoritative source of information. The state of the connection is controlled by the following Telnet subnegotiation function codes: START-SERVER 0 STOP-SERVER 1 REQ-START-SERVER 2 REQ-STOP-SERVER 3 SOP 4 The KERMIT OPTION is negotiated using the standard Telnet mechanisms: IAC WILL KERMIT The sender of this command incorporates a Kermit server and is willing to negotiate its use. IAC WONT KERMIT The sender of this command does not incorporate a Kermit server or refuses to negotiate its use. IAC DO KERMIT The sender of this command requests that the receiver negotiate use of a Kermit server. IAC DONT KERMIT The sender of this command refuses to negotiate the use of a Kermit server. Once WILL KERMIT is negotiated in a particular direction, subnegotiations are used to indicate or request a change in state of the connection, or to convey other information. Subnegotiations may be sent at any time. IAC SB KERMIT START-SERVER This command is sent by the WILL side to indicate that the Kermit server is now active; that is, that client-initiated Kermit packets will be accepted. IAC SB KERMIT STOP-SERVER This command is sent by the WILL side to indicate that the Kermit server is no longer active, and therefore that it is not ready to accept Kermit packets. IAC SB KERMIT REQ-START-SERVER This command is sent by the DO side to request that the Kermit server be started. IAC SB KERMIT REQ-STOP-SERVER This command is sent by the DO side to request that the Kermit server be stopped. IAC SB KERMIT SOP Kermit Start Of Packet. The sender of this command specifies the octet it will use to mark the beginning of the Kermit packets it sends. This command must be sent by each connection partner upon the first WILL/DO pair to allow unambigious identification of Kermit packets in the data stream. This subnegotiation must be sent whenever the Start of Packet character changes. The values are restricted to ASCII C0 control characters other than Carriage Return and NUL. The normal value is 1 (ASCII SOH). The two Kermit partners normally use the same SOP, but may use distinct ones if desired. IAC SB KERMIT SOP is necessary to allow each Telnet partner to recognize subsequent incoming Kermit packets. Data following the SOP is processed by the Kermit packet analyzer. All other Kermit protocol parameters are automatically negotiated within the Kermit protocol upon the initial exchange of Kermit packets [KER]. START-SERVER and STOP-SERVER commands must be sent by the WILL side whenever the state of the Kermit server changes. Therefore, by definition, the Kermit server is unavailable at the beginning of negotiations. The receiver of a REQ-START-SERVER or REQ-STOP-SERVER is not required to agree to the request to change state. The receiver must respond with either START-SERVER or STOP-SERVER to indicate the state of the Kermit Server subsequent to the request. If the Kermit server receives a Kermit packet commanding it to cease Kermit service (such as a FINISH, REMOTE EXIT or BYE packet [KER]), it must send IAC SB KERMIT STOP-SERVER if the command is accepted. These rules ensure that the Telnet client's user interface always knows whether (and on which end) a Kermit server is available, and can therefore present the user only with valid choices, and that changes in state of one Telnet partner automatically switch the other to a complementary and valid state. 4. KERMIT PROTOCOL IMPLICATIONS The Kermit protocol is described elsewhere [KER]. It is an extensible and self-configuring protocol, like Telnet, and thus any two proper Kermit implementations should interoperate automatically. In Kermit, as in Telnet, one particular octet is distinguished. In Telnet's case, it is IAC (decimal 255); in Kermit's it is the character specified by the IAC SB KERMIT SOP negotiation, normally SOH (decimal 1, Ctrl-A). All Kermit packets must begin with the SOP, and must not contain IAC unless it is quoted with another IAC according to Telnet rules (or else transformed and quoted according to Kermit rules). Telnet protocol takes precedence over Kermit protocol; whenever an IAC is detected, it is processed as the beginning of a Telnet command. Telnet commands can contain any characters at all, including the SOP octet, transparently to the Kermit protocol, and in fact Telnet commands are not seen by the Kermit protocol at all. Kermit protocol must follow Telnet NVT rules in each direction when Telnet binary mode is not negotiated for that direction. If 8-bit transparency is desired, Telnet binary mode may be negotiated upon entry to Kermit protocol in the appropriate direction, and the previous mode (NVT or binary) restored upon exit from Kermit protocol. Telnet binary mode can result in more efficient transfers, but is not required for data transfer, since Kermit protocol does not require a transparent path. 5. EXAMPLES 5.1. EXAMPLE 1 The Telnet server contains a Kermit server. The Telnet client includes Kermit protocol but does not implement the Telnet KERMIT Option. Telnet Server Telnet Client ----------------------------- ----------------------------- WILL KERMIT DO KERMIT DONT KERMIT WONT KERMIT From this point, no subnegotiations take place, and the Kermit client/server relationship is under manual control of the user of the Telnet client. This will be the case (for example) with existing Kermit-capable Telnet clients. 5.2. EXAMPLE 2 The Telnet server contains a Kermit server and starts a Kermit server immediately after a connection is made. The Telnet client does not offer a Kermit server. Telnet Server Telnet Client ----------------------------- ----------------------------- WILL KERMIT DO KERMIT DO KERMIT SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> WONT KERMIT SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> SB KERMIT START-SERVER At this point the Telnet client knows that a Kermit server is on the other end of the connection, and so may customize its command set or menus to allow only those commands that are valid as a client of a Kermit server. 5.3. EXAMPLE 3 Telnet server and Telnet client both contain a Kermit server. Telnet client Kermit server is active whenever its terminal emulator is active, and not active at other times. The Telnet server is used for shell access and does not start a Kermit Server unless requested. Telnet Server Telnet Client --------------------------- ----------------------------- WILL KERMIT DO KERMIT DO KERMIT SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> WILL KERMIT SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> SB KERMIT START-SERVER SB KERMIT STOP-SERVER SB KERMIT REQ-START-SERVER SB KERMIT START-SERVER SB KERMIT STOP-SERVER SB KERMIT START-SERVER 5.4. EXAMPLE 4 Telnet server and Telnet client both contain a Kermit server. Telnet client's Kermit server is active whenever the terminal emulator is active. Telnet server is used solely for Kermit protocol and automatically starts a Kermit Server upon accepting the connection. Telnet Server Telnet Client --------------------------- ----------------------------- WILL KERMIT DO KERMIT DO KERMIT SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> WILL KERMIT SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> SB KERMIT START-SERVER SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> SB KERMIT START-SERVER SB KERMIT STOP-SERVER SB KERMIT REQ-STOP-SERVER SB KERMIT START-SERVER 5.5. EXAMPLE 5 This is an example of something that should not be allowed to happen. Some Telnet clients that implement file transfer capabilities are designed to accept incoming connections. In this situation the Telnet Client acts as a pseudo Telnet Server but without the ability to provide shell access or many of the other functions associated with Telnet. If both Telnet clients support this option and contain a Kermit server that is active during terminal emulation there is the potential for a deadlock situation if scripting is also supported. This is because Telnet clients that support a script language do not process input while waiting for the next command to be issued. Telnet Client One Telnet Client Two --------------------------- ----------------------------- WILL KERMIT DO KERMIT DO KERMIT SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> SB KERMIT SOP <0x01> SB KERMIT START-SERVER WILL KERMIT SB KERMIT START-SERVER SB KERMIT STOP-SERVER SB KERMIT STOP-SERVER At this point both clients have restricted their command set to Kermit Protocol commands. However, in both cases neither side is processing input. Therefore the following restriction MUST be enforced: A Telnet partner may not restrict the command set if it accepted the incoming connection. 6. REFERENCES [BCP] Bradner, Scott, RFC 2119, "Best Current Practice", March 1997. [KER] da Cruz, Frank, "Kermit, A File Transfer Protocol", Digital Press/ Butterworth Heinemann, Newton, MA, ISBN 0-932376-88-6 (1987). [IKS] da Cruz, Frank, and Jeffrey E. Altman, "Internet Kermit Service", Internet Draft , August 1998. [TEL] Postel, J., and J. Reynolds, "Telnet Protocol Specification", RFC854, May 1983, et seq. 7. AUTHORS' ADDRESS Jeffrey E. Altman jaltman@columbia.edu Frank da Cruz fdc@columbia.edu The Kermit Project Columbia University 612 West 115th Street New York NY 10025-7799 USA http://www.columbia.edu/kermit/ (End)