Network Working Group Y. Sheffer
Internet-Draft Porticor
Intended status: Experimental A. Farrel
Expires: July 29, 2013 Juniper
January 25, 2013

Improving Awareness of Running Code: the Implementation Status Section
draft-sheffer-running-code-02

Abstract

This document describes a simple process that allows authors of Internet-Drafts to record the status of known implementations by including an Implementation Status section. This will allow reviewers and working groups to assign due consideration to documents that have the benefit of running code and potentially reward the documented protocols by treating the documents with implementations preferentially.

The process in this document is offered as an experiment. Authors of Internet-Drafts are encouraged to consider using the process for their documents, and working groups are invited to think about applying the process to all of their protocol specifications. The authors of this document intend to collate experiences with this experiment and to report them to the community.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet- Drafts is at http:/⁠/⁠datatracker.ietf.org/⁠drafts/⁠current/⁠.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

This Internet-Draft will expire on July 29, 2013.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Most IETF participants are familiar with the saying, "rough consensus and running code" [tao], and can identify with its pragmatic approach. However, there are many examples of Internet-Drafts containing protocol specification that have gone through to publication as Proposed Standard RFCs without implementation. Some of them may never get implemented.

Over time, a variety of policies have been implemented within the IETF to consider running code. In the Routing Area it used to be a requirement that one or more implementations must exist before an Internet-Draft could be published as a Proposed Standard RFC [RFC1264]. That RFC was later obsoleted and the requirement for implementation was lifted, but each working group was given the authority to impose its own implementation requirements [RFC4794] and at least one working group (IDR) continues to require two independent implementations.

The hypothesis behind this document is that there are benefits to the IETF standardization process of producing implementations of protocol specifications before publication as RFCs. These benefits, which include determining that the specification is comprehensible and that there is sufficient interest to implement, are further discussed in Section 4.

This document describes a simple process that allows authors of Internet-Drafts to record the status of known implementations, by including an Implementation Status section. The document defines (quite informally) the contents of this section, to ensure that the relevant information is included. This will allow reviewers and working groups to assign due consideration to documents that have the benefit of running code and potentially reward the documented protocols by treating the documents with implementations preferentially.

Contrary to proposals to fast-track Internet-Drafts that have associated source code implementations [I-D.farrell-ft], this document provides a mechanism to record and publicize the existence of running code. It is up to the individual working groups to use this information as they see fit, but one result might be the preferential treatment of documents resulting in them being processed more rapidly.

The process in this document is offered as an experiment. Authors of Internet-Drafts are encouraged to consider using the process for their documents, and working groups are invited to think about applying the process to all of their protocol specifications.

The authors of this document intend to collate experiences with this experiment and to report them to the community.

2. The “Implementation Status” Section

Each Internet-Draft may contain a section entitled "Implementation Status". This section, if it appears, should be located just before the "Security Considerations" section and contain, for each existing implementation:

In addition, this section can contain information about the interoperability of any or all of the implementations.

Since this information is necessarily time-dependent, it is inappropriate for a published RFC. The authors should include a note to the RFC Editor requesting that the section be removed before publication.

3. Alternative Formats

Sometimes it can be advantageous to publish the implementation status separately from the base Internet Draft, e.g. on the IETF wiki:

It is highly important that all readers of the Internet Draft should be made aware of this information. Initially this can be done by replacing the Implementation Status section's contents with a URL pointing to the wiki. Later, the IETF Tools may support this functionality, e.g. by including such a link from the HTMLized draft version, similarly to the IPR link.

The implementation status information must be publicly available, in line with general IETF policy.

4. Benefits

Publishing the information about implementations provides the working group with several benefits:

We do not specify here whether and to what degree working groups are expected to prefer proposals that have “running code” associated with them, over others that do not.

5. Process Experiment

The current proposal is proposed as an experiment. The inclusion of "Implementation Status" sections in Internet-Drafts is not mandatory, but the authors of this document wish to encourage authors of other Internet-Drafts to try out this simple process to discover whether it is useful. Working group chairs are invited to suggest this process to document editors in their working groups, and to draw the attention of their working group participants to "Implementation Status" sections where they exist.

Following a community discussion, it was concluded that [RFC3933] is not an appropriate framework for this experiment, primarily because no change is required to any existing process.

5.1. Duration

Given the typical time to produce an RFC (see [stats]), we propose a duration of 18 months for the experiment. Thus, 18 months after the date of initial posting of this document, the authors will report on the experiment as described in the next section.

5.2. Summary Report

The authors will summarize the results of the experiment at the end of the period assigned to the experiment (see Section 5.1). If nothing happens (no I-Ds or only a handful include an "Implementation Status" section), an email to the IETF list will be sufficient. This would obviously constitute a failure to adopt the idea and the authors will abandon the experiment.

If this idea is adopted by document authors, a summary I-D will be written containing the statistics of such adoption, as well as (necessarily subjective) reports by working group chairs and area directors who have used this mechanism.

The authors may then propose more wide-scale use of the process and might suggest more formal adoption of the process by the IETF.

5.3. Success Criteria

The goal of this experiment is to improve the quality of IETF specifications. This is impossible to quantify, of course. We suggest that generally positive answers to the following questions would indicate that the experiment was successful:

6. Implementation Status

This is a process document and therefore does not have any meaningful implementation status. “Implementation” in the context of this document means actual program code.

7. Security Considerations

This is a process document and therefore, it does not have a direct effect on the security of any particular IETF protocol. Better reviewed protocols are likely to also be more secure.

8. IANA Considerations

None.

9. Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Stephen Farrell, who reawakened community interest in this topic. Several reviewers provided important input, including Loa Andersson, Dave Crocker, Ned Freed, and Curtis Villamizar.

This document was prepared using the lyx2rfc tool, and we would like to thank Nico Williams, its author.

10. Informative References

[RFC1264] Hinden, R., "Internet Engineering Task Force Internet Routing Protocol Standardization Criteria", RFC 1264, October 1991.
[RFC3933] Klensin, J. and S. Dawkins, "A Model for IETF Process Experiments", BCP 93, RFC 3933, November 2004.
[RFC4794] Fenner, B., "RFC 1264 Is Obsolete", RFC 4794, December 2006.
[I-D.farrell-ft] Farrell, S, "A Fast-Track way to RFC with Running Code", Internet-Draft draft-farrell-ft-02, December 2012.
[stats] Arkko, J., "Distribution of Processing Times", December 2012.
[tao] Hoffman, P., ""The Tao of IETF: A Novice's Guide to the Internet Engineering Task Force", 2012.

Authors' Addresses

Yaron Sheffer Porticor 10 Yirmiyahu St. Ramat HaSharon, 47298 Israel EMail: yaronf.ietf@gmail.com
Adrian Farrel Juniper Networks EMail: adrian@olddog.co.uk