\section{FidoNet addressing and the IFNA kludge} \lline{Tom Jennings} \lline{25 Jan 88} I believe Fido/FidoNet starting with 12f's addressing is spirit¨ \& letter of the ``law''. It works as follows: I am node 1:125/111. I enter a message to 2:500/1. Fido does¨ this:\par {\obeylines\parskip=0pt 1) Create the .MSG file as we all know it. 2) Since the destination is outside our own zone: 2a) Put the ifna kludge algorithmic address into the .MSG file¨ header: ``myzone/destzone''. This case, the message is marked¨ ``1/2'', ie. implied full address is ``1:1/2'', if the IFNA¨ Kludge ``zone gate''. 2b) Put the ``full'' address into the INTL line: ``Control-A)INTL 2:500/1 1:125/111''. } Programs that don't understand the INTL line just route according¨ to ancient tradition to 1/2, with no side effects. Programs that¨ understand INTL lines do whatever it is they decide to do. The only thing that Fido does that is different here is that it¨ hides the ugliness. Fido has a pure three level addressing¨ scheme, and knows enough to how to treat what I call ``fully¨ addressed'' (INTL lines) messages properly. By default, Fido treats the network as a true three level¨ addressing scheme; a message addressed to ``2:500/1'' will go to¨ mathematically correct ``2:0/0'', the host for that zone. (Zone¨ Host not Zone Gate.) I realize this isn't what is desired, IFNA¨ kludge or not, and am not trying to foist anything on anyone. The¨ intent was a ``pure'' FidoNet three level mailer, and that's what¨ I got. The problem is solved by the router. There is a route file,¨ supplied with the FIDO.EXE program, called ROUTE.DEF. It only has¨ to exist, and it is applied to *all* possible FidoNet routing¨ unless overridden. By default, Fido will do the Zone Host¨ routing; all you do is specify a new host: {\tty Zone 2; ZoneGate 1:1/2 \dots Zone N; ZoneGate 1:1/N \dots } A ROUTE.DEF file is supplied with Fido. Instead of all mail for¨ zone 2 going to ``2:0/0'', the ``pure'' ZoneHost, it goes to (in¨ this example) ``1:1/2''. It could all go to ``1:125/31'' and¨ drive Bob Kovach crazy. It could even go to ``3:1/1'' and waste¨ everybodys time. For a Fido operated in Europe, in Zone 2, it¨ would have a ROUTE.DEF that contained: \lline{\tt Zone 1; ZoneGate 2:2/1} My intent was to build a mailer devoid of all kludges, plus solve¨ the stupid IFNA Kludge thing. Plus not force someone to use ``my¨ way''. Zones are here to stay, and I do not like coding things twice.¨ Network addressing issues are very serious, and we have to live¨ with them for years, and I want to do things ``right''. This is¨ my solution; if anyone is interested in implementation details¨ just ask!