IBM®
Skip to main content
    Country/region [change]    Terms of use
 
 
 
    Home    Products    Services & solutions    Support & downloads    My account    

IBM Technical Journals

Special report: Celebrating 50 years of the IBM Journals
All topics > Computing System Architectures >

Systems Network Architecture: An overview

Award plaque by J. H. McFadyen

Recent technological advances have allowed information processing and data storage capability to be distributed more easily from a central computer complex to remote user locations. Systems Network Architecture provides a unified systems structure for the contemporary teleprocessing environment that resulted from these advances. Using some current implementations as examples, this overview introduces the concepts on which the architecture is based and broadly describes the basic components of the structure. Specific architectural and implementation details can be found in the references.

Originally published:

IBM Systems Journal, Volume 15, Issue 1, pp. 4-23 (1976).

Significance:

Systems Network Architecture (SNA), created in 1974, introduced the concept of network architecture. This layered architecture consists of a complete protocol stack for interconnecting computers and their resources and allows communications facilities to be shared across multiple applications. The SNA architecture was one of the foundations of the seven-layered OSI Reference Model, the networking standard underpinning TCP/IP, the protocol on which the Internet runs.

Comments:


    About IBMPrivacyContact