Jeremy,

A few of us are trying to unravel some of the mysteries of what is what.   The original 4 CD's has an early version of the TCP stack from BBN (although the provenance of same is not exactly clear).  That is the code that Warren has in the archives.   Since he originally published the CD Kirk obtained some other things (as Paul mentioned).   Paul and I are both trying to sift through what Kirk has, although again provenance is unfortunately not as clean as we would like.  The bad news is that Rob Gurwitz (was the original author of the BBN IP/TCP stack) does not seem to have tapes himself and has pointed Paul and I at Kirk's archives for now.  The question is can we figure out what it what.

Paul has done a great job of looking at some old DARPA qtr reports that BBN sent to ARPA that helps to put some structure around some of this.  Then using dates from there and some of the files, plus the memory of some of the protagonists involved, we can try to sort it out.

We'll let you all know what we learn ASAP.   FWIW:  Folks have been helping Warren get it right in his pages.   For instance, his old page on the BBN TCP, had some wording that was easy to misconstrue.   That data is being clarified so the reader does not in-advertently rewrite history.   We'll continue to do that when we can.   I do hope that when the dust settles, we see the historical archives as complete and correct as possible.

Clem

On Thu, Jan 17, 2019 at 8:20 AM <reed@reedmedia.net> wrote:
On Thu, 17 Jan 2019, Paul Ruizendaal wrote:

> I just discovered that Kirk McKusick has made a new DVD that covers a
> much broader set of software than his earlier 4 CD set:
> https://www.mckusick.com/csrg/
> (see bottom of the page, one but last paragraph).
>
> This new DVD includes the surviving BBN VAX TCP source code; it is not
> on the earlier 4 CD set.

Is there a list of the DVD's contents? I didn't see any details of this
on the webpage. (I have the four CD-ROM set which does have some of
the BBN code.)