The standards were defined in several documents, each addressing different aspects of computer network communication. They were identified by the colour of the cover: The
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol was extended to allow running over NITS. The Yellow Book Transport Service was somewhat misnamed, as it does not fulfill the Transport role in the OSI 7-layer model. It really occupies the top of the Network layer, making up for X.25's lack of NSAP addressing at the time, which did not appear until the X.25 (1980) revision, and was not available in implementations for some years afterward. YBTS used
source routing addressing between YBTS nodes—there was no global addressing scheme at that time.
Green Book The Green Book defined two protocols to connect terminals across a network: an early version of what became
Triple-X PAD running over X.25, and the TS29 protocol modelled on Triple-X PAD, but running over YBTS. It was developed by
Post Office Telecommunications. These protocols are similar in functionality to
TELNET.
Fawn Book The Fawn Book defined the Simple Screen Management Protocol (SSMP)
Blue Book The Blue Book defined the Network-Independent File Transfer Protocol (NIFTP), analogous to Internet
FTP, running over YBTS. Unlike Internet FTP, NIFTP was intended for
batch mode rather than
interactive usage.
Grey Book The Grey Book defined protocols for
e-mail transfer (not file transfer as is sometimes claimed), running over Blue Book FTP.
Red Book The Red Book defined the Job Transfer and Manipulation Protocol (JTMP), a mechanism for jobs to be transferred from one computer to another, and for the output to be returned to the originating (or another) computer, running over Blue Book FTP. == Legacy ==