Network Working Group                                         C. Huitema
Request for Comments: 1796                                         INRIA
Category: Informational                                        J. Postel
                                                                    ISI
                                                             S. Crocker
                                                              CyberCash
                                                             April 1995


                      Not All RFCs are Standards

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
  does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
  this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  This document discusses the relationship of the Request for Comments
  (RFCs) notes to Internet Standards.

Not All RFCs Are Standards

  The "Request for Comments" (RFC) document series is the official
  publication channel for Internet standards documents and other
  publications of the IESG, IAB, and Internet community.  From time to
  time, and about every six months in the last few years, someone
  questions the rationality of publishing both Internet standards and
  informational documents as RFCs.  The argument is generally that this
  introduces some confusion between "real standards" and "mere
  publications".

  It is a regrettably well spread misconception that publication as an
  RFC provides some level of recognition.  It does not, or at least not
  any more than the publication in a regular journal.  In fact, each
  RFC has a status, relative to its relation with the Internet
  standardization process: Informational, Experimental, or Standards
  Track (Proposed Standard, Draft Standard, Internet Standard), or
  Historic.  This status is reproduced on the first page of the RFC
  itself, and is also documented in the periodic "Internet Official
  Protocols Standards" RFC (STD 1).  But this status is sometimes
  omitted from quotes and references, which may feed the confusion.

  There are two important sources of information on the status of the
  Internet standards:  they are summarized periodically in an RFC
  entitled "Internet Official Protocol Standards" and they are
  documented in the "STD" subseries.  When a specification has been



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  adopted as an Internet Standard, it is given the additional label
  "STD xxxx", but it keeps its RFC number and its place in the RFC
  series.

  It is important to note that the relationship of STD numbers to RFC
  numbers is not one to one.  STD numbers identify protocols, RFC
  numbers identify documents.  Sometimes more than one document is used
  to specify a Standard protocol.

  In order to further increase the publicity of the standardization
  status, the IAB proposes the following actions:

     Use the STD number, rather than just the RFC numbers, in the cross
     references between standard tracks documents,

     Utilize the "web" hypertext technology to publicize the state of
     the standardization process.

  More precisely, we propose to add to the current RFC repository an
  "html" version of the "STD-1" document, i.e., the list of Internet
  standards.  We are considering the extension of this document to also
  describes actions in progress, i.e., standards track work at the
  "proposed" or "draft" stage.

A Single Archive

  The IAB believes that the community benefitted significantly from
  having a single archival document series.  Documents are easy to find
  and to retrieve, and file servers are easy to organize.  This has
  been very important over the long term.  Experience of the past shows
  that subseries, or series of limited scope, tend to vanish from the
  network.  And, there is no evidence that alternate document schemes
  would result in less confusion.

  Moreover, we believe that the presence of additional documents does
  not actually hurt the standardization process.  The solution which we
  propose is to better publicize the "standard" status of certain
  documents, which is made relatively easy by the advent of networked
  hypertext technologies.

Rather Document Than Ignore

  The RFC series includes some documents which are informational by
  nature and other documents which describe experiences.  A problem of
  perception occurs when such a document "looks like" an official
  protocol specification.  Misguided vendors may claim conformance to
  it, and misguided clients may actually believe that they are buying
  an Internet standard.



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RFC 1796               Not All RFCs are Standards             April 1995


  The IAB believes that the proper help to misguided vendors and
  clients is to provide them guidance.  There is actually very little
  evidence of vendors purposely attempting to present informational or
  experimental RFCs as "Internet standards".  If such attempts
  occurred, proper response would indeed be required.

  The IAB believes that the community is best served by openly
  developed specifications.  The Internet standardization process
  provides guarantees of openness and thorough review, and the normal
  way to develop the specification of an Internet protocol is indeed
  through the IETF.

  The community is also well served by having access to specifications
  of which have been developed outside the IETF standards process,
  either because the protocols are experimental in nature, were
  developed privately, or failed to achieve the acquire the degree of
  consensus required for elevation to the standards track.

  The IAB believes that publication is better than ignorance.  If a
  particular specification ends up being used in products that are
  deployed over the Internet, we are better off if the specification is
  easy to retrieve as an RFC than if it is hidden in some private
  repository.




























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RFC 1796               Not All RFCs are Standards             April 1995


Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Authors' Addresses

  Christian Huitema
  INRIA, Sophia-Antipolis
  2004 Route des Lucioles
  BP 109
  F-06561 Valbonne Cedex
  France

  Phone: +33 93 65 77 15
  EMail: [email protected]


  Jon Postel
  USC/Information Sciences Institute
  4676 Admiralty Way
  Marina del Rey, CA 90292

  Phone: 1-310-822-1511
  EMail: [email protected]


  Steve Crocker
  CyberCash, Inc.
  2086 Hunters Crest Way
  Vienna, VA 22181

  Phone: 1- 703-620-1222
  EMail: [email protected]


















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