Early research Packet Radio Van, used for the first three-way
internetworked transmission The Internet protocol suite has its roots in research and development into
computer networks sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (
DARPA) in the late 1960s. After DARPA initiated the pioneering
ARPANET in 1969,
Steve Crocker established a "Network Working Group" which developed a host-host protocol, the
Network Control Program (NCP). In the early 1970s, DARPA started work on several other data transmission technologies, including mobile packet radio, packet satellite service, local area networks, and other data networks in the public and private domains. In 1972,
Bob Kahn joined the DARPA
Information Processing Technology Office, where he worked on both satellite packet networks and ground-based radio packet networks, and recognized the value of being able to communicate across both. In the spring of 1973,
Vinton Cerf, at
Stanford University, began collaborating with Kahn on the goal of designing the next protocol generation for the ARPANET to enable
internetworking. They drew on the experience the international research community, through the
International Network Working Group (INWG), chaired by Cerf, which included researchers from the ARPANET community,
Xerox PARC, the United Kingdom and France. During the summer of 1973, Kahn and Cerf worked out a fundamental reformulation, in which the differences between local network protocols were hidden by using a common
internetwork protocol, and, instead of the network being responsible for reliability, as in the existing ARPANET protocols, this function was delegated to the hosts. Cerf and Kahn credit several members of INWG with important influences on this design, which was published in May 1974. The first specification of this
Transmission Control Program was written in December 1974 by Cerf,
Yogen Dalal and Carl Sunshine at Stanford University. DARPA contracted with
BBN Technologies, Stanford University, and
University College London to begin developing operational versions of the protocol on several hardware platforms in 1975. Several versions were developed through discussion via the
Internet Experiment Note (IEN) series. As experience with the protocol grew, collaborators recommended division of functionality into layers of distinct protocols, providing direct access to datagram service. Advocates included
Bob Metcalfe, Yogen Dalal and
John Shoch at Xerox PARC;
Danny Cohen, who needed it for his
packet voice work; and
Jonathan Postel of the University of Southern California's
Information Sciences Institute, who edited the
Request for Comments (RFCs), the technical and strategic document series that has both documented and catalyzed Internet development. Postel stated, "We are screwing up in our design of Internet protocols by violating the principle of layering." Encapsulation of different mechanisms was intended to create an environment where the upper layers could access only what was needed from the lower layers. A monolithic design would be inflexible and lead to scalability issues. In
version 4, written in 1978, Postel split the Transmission Control Program into two distinct protocols, the
Internet Protocol (IP) as a connectionless layer and the
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) as a reliable
connection-oriented service. The design of the network included the recognition that it should provide only the functions of efficiently transmitting and routing traffic between end nodes and that all other intelligence should be located at the edge of the network, in the end nodes. This
end-to-end principle was pioneered by
Louis Pouzin and
Hubert Zimmermann in the
CYCLADES network, based on the ideas of
Donald Davies. Using this design, it became possible to connect other networks to the ARPANET that used the same principle, irrespective of other local characteristics, thereby solving Kahn's initial internetworking problem.
Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) was installed in the ARPANET in 1983, forming the
network layer protocols used on the Internet. Initially referred to as the
DOD Internet Architecture Model, together with the Transmission Control Protocol, it became commonly known as
TCP/IP.
Early implementation In 1975, a two-network IP communications test was performed between Stanford and University College London. In November 1977, a three-network IP test was conducted between sites in the US, the UK, and Norway. Several other IP prototypes were developed at multiple research centers between 1978 and 1983. A computer called a
router is provided with an interface to each network. It forwards
network packets back and forth between them. Originally a router was called
gateway, but the term was changed to avoid confusion with other types of
gateways.
Adoption In March 1982, the US Department of Defense declared TCP/IP as the standard for all military computer networking. In the same year, Norway (
NORSAR and
NDRE) and
Peter Kirstein's research group at
University College London adopted the protocol. The migration of the ARPANET from
NCP to TCP/IP was officially completed on
flag day January 1, 1983, when the new protocols were permanently activated. In 1985, the Internet Advisory Board (later
Internet Architecture Board) held a three-day TCP/IP workshop for the computer industry, attended by 250 vendor representatives, promoting the protocol and leading to its increasing commercial use. In 1985, the first
Interop conference focused on network interoperability by broader adoption of TCP/IP. The conference was founded by Dan Lynch, an early Internet activist. From the beginning, large corporations, such as IBM and DEC, attended the meeting. IBM, AT&T and DEC were the first major corporations to adopt TCP/IP, this despite having competing
proprietary protocols. In IBM, from 1984,
Barry Appelman's group did TCP/IP development. They navigated the corporate politics to get a stream of TCP/IP products for various IBM systems, including
MVS,
VM, and
OS/2. At the same time, several smaller companies, such as
FTP Software and the
Wollongong Group, began offering TCP/IP stacks for
DOS and
Microsoft Windows. The first
VM/CMS TCP/IP stack came from the University of Wisconsin. Some programmers are notable for early TCP/IP stack implementations. Jay Elinsky and Oleg Vishnepolsky of IBM Research wrote software for VM/CMS and OS/2, respectively. In 1984, Donald Gillies at
MIT wrote a
ntcp multi-connection TCP which runs atop the IP/PacketDriver layer maintained by John Romkey at MIT in 1983–84. Romkey leveraged this TCP in 1986 when FTP Software was founded. Starting in 1985, Phil Karn created a multi-connection TCP application for ham radio systems (KA9Q TCP). The spread of TCP/IP was fueled further in June 1989, when the
University of California, Berkeley agreed to place the TCP/IP code developed for
BSD UNIX into the public domain. Various corporate vendors, including IBM, included this code in commercial TCP/IP software releases. For Windows 3.1, the dominant PC operating system among consumers in the first half of the 1990s, Peter Tattam's release of the
Trumpet Winsock TCP/IP stack was key to bringing the Internet to home users. Trumpet Winsock allowed TCP/IP operations over a serial connection (
SLIP or
PPP). The typical home PC of the time had an external
Hayes-compatible
modem connected via an RS-232 port with an
8250 or
16550 UART which required this type of stack. Later, Microsoft would release their own TCP/IP add-on stack for
Windows for Workgroups 3.11 and a native stack in Windows 95. These events helped cement TCP/IP's dominance over other protocols on Microsoft-based networks, which included IBM's
Systems Network Architecture (SNA), and on other platforms such as
Digital Equipment Corporation's
DECnet,
Open Systems Interconnection (OSI), and
Xerox Network Systems (XNS). Nonetheless, for a period in the late 1980s and early 1990s, engineers, organizations and nations were
polarized over the issue of which standard, the OSI model or the Internet protocol suite, would result in the best and most robust computer networks.
Formal specification and standards The
technical standards underlying the Internet protocol suite and its constituent protocols have been delegated to the
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). The characteristic architecture of the Internet protocol suite is its broad division into operating scopes for the protocols that constitute its core functionality. The defining specifications of the suite are RFC 1122 and 1123, which broadly outlines four
abstraction layers (as well as related protocols); the link layer, IP layer, transport layer, and application layer, along with support protocols. These have stood the test of time, as the IETF has never modified this structure. As such a model of networking, the Internet protocol suite predates the OSI model, a more comprehensive reference framework for general networking systems. A successor
Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) was developed to address issues such as
IPv4 address exhaustion. ==Key architectural principles==