Original author(s) | Rich Salz |
---|---|
Developer(s) | ISC |
Initial release | 1991 |
Stable release |
2.6.1 / December 17, 2016
|
Development status | Active |
Written in | C, with some tools in Perl and Python |
Operating system | Unix-like |
Platform | Multi-platform |
Available in | English |
Type | Usenet server |
License | Mostly ISC license, with parts under other licenses |
Website | http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/software/inn/ |
InterNetNews (INN) is a Usenet news server package, originally released by Rich Salz in 1991, and presented at the Summer 1992 USENIX conference in San Antonio, Texas. It was the first news server with integrated functionality.
While previous servers processed articles individually or in batches, innd is a single continuously running process that receives articles from the network, files them, and records what remote hosts should receive them. Readers can access articles directly from the disk in the same manner as B News and C News, but an included program, called nnrpd, also serves newsreaders that employ NNTP.
A later improvement was the Cyclical News Filesystem (CNFS), which sequentially stores articles in large on-disk buffers. This method, implemented by Scott Fritchie, greatly increased performance by eliminating the operating system overhead needed to deal with thousands of individual article files.
James Brister's innfeed program was also added to the package. Like innd, innfeed operates continuously to feed articles out to other servers, while the earlier innxmit processed them in batches. This combination allows articles to be received and redistributed with virtually no latency, and has substantially changed the nature of Usenet interaction by reducing the time for messages to be posted, read across the network and answered, from hours or days, to seconds or minutes. A similar earlier program, called nntplink, provided a comparable function, but it was produced independently.
INN is under active development as of 2015[update]. The package is maintained by volunteers, and development is hosted by the Internet Systems Consortium.