Internet Architecture Board (IAB) S. Dawkins Request for Comments: 7241 Huawei Obsoletes: 4441 P. Thaler Category: Informational Broadcom ISSN: 2070-1721 D. Romascanu AVAYA B. Aboba, Ed. Microsoft Corporation July 2014
The IEEE 802/IETF Relationship
Abstract
This document describes the standardization cooperation between Project 802 of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). This document obsoletes RFC 4441.
Note: This document was collaboratively developed by authors from both the IEEE 802 and IETF leadership and was reviewed and approved by the IEEE 802 Executive Committee prior to publication.
Status of This Memo
This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.
This document is a product of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) and represents information that the IAB has deemed valuable to provide for permanent record. It represents the consensus of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB). Documents approved for publication by the IAB are not a candidate for any level of Internet Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7241.
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction ....................................................4 1.1. Why Cooperate? .............................................4 2. Organization, Participation, and Membership .....................4 2.1. IEEE 802 ...................................................5 2.2. IETF .......................................................7 2.3. Structural Differences .....................................8 2.4. Cultural Differences .......................................9 2.5. Mailing Lists .............................................11 3. Document Access and Cross-Referencing ..........................12 3.1. Access to IETF Documents ..................................12 3.2. Access to IEEE 802 Standards ..............................12 3.3. Access to IEEE 802 Working Group Drafts ...................12 3.4. Cross-Referencing .........................................15 4. Guidance on Cooperation ........................................16 4.1. Exchange of Information about Work Items ..................16 4.2. Document Review and Approval ..............................20 4.3. Solicited Review Processes ................................23 5. Liaison Managers and Liaison Statements ........................23 5.1. Liaison Managers ..........................................24 5.2. Liaison Statements ........................................24 6. Protocol Parameter Allocation ..................................24 6.1. IANA ......................................................24 6.2. IEEE Registration Authority ...............................25 6.3. IEEE 802 Registration at the Working Group Level ..........26 6.4. Joint-Use Registries ......................................26 7. Security Considerations ........................................26 8. References .....................................................26 8.1. Normative References ......................................26 8.2. Informative References ....................................26 9. Acknowledgments ................................................30 10. IAB Members at the Time of Approval ...........................31 11. IEEE 802 Executive Committee Members at the Time of Approval ..31 Appendix A. Current Examples of IEEE 802 and IETF Cooperation ....32 A.1. MIB Review .................................................32 A.2. AAA Review .................................................32 A.3 EAP Review .................................................33 Appendix B. Pointers to Additional Information ...................34 B.1. IEEE 802 Information .......................................34 B.2. IETF Information ...........................................34
This document contains a set of principles and guidelines that serve as the basis for coordination between Project 802 of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE 802) and the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), a program under the Internet Society (ISOC) organizational umbrella [BCP101]. The objective is to encourage timely development of technical specifications that facilitate maximum interoperability with existing (fixed and mobile) Internet systems, devices, and protocols. Each organization will operate according to their own rules and procedures including rules governing IPR policy, specification elaboration, approval, and maintenance.
While this document is intended to improve cooperation between the two organizations, it does not change any of the formal practices or procedures of either organization.
IEEE 802 and the IETF are independent standards organizations that each use standards produced by the other organization and develop standards dependent on those produced by the other organization. This dependency may extend to carrying attributes in protocols that reflect technologies defined by the other organization.
The dependencies between IEEE 802 and IETF standards are a motivation for cooperation between the organizations. However, since the benefits of cooperation come at the cost of coordination overhead, the benefits of coordination must outweigh the cost.
The IETF benefits from coordination by obtaining improved access to IEEE 802 expertise in the widely deployed and widely used IEEE 802 Local Area Network architecture [ARCH802].
IEEE 802 benefits from coordination by obtaining improved access to IETF expertise on IP datagram encapsulation, routing, transport, and security, as well as specific applications of interest to IEEE 802.
IEEE 802 and IETF are similar in some ways but different in others. When working on projects of interest to both organizations, it is important to understand the similarities and differences.
The IEEE Standards Association (IEEE-SA) is the standards-setting body of the IEEE. The IEEE-SA Standards Board oversees the IEEE standards development process.
The IEEE-SA Standards Board supervises what IEEE calls "sponsors" -- IEEE entities that develop standards. The IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee is a sponsor that develops and maintains networking standards and recommended practices for local, metropolitan, and other area networks, using an open and accredited process, while advocating for them on a global basis. Areas of standardization work include Ethernet, Bridging and Virtual Bridged LANs, Wireless LAN (Local Area Network), Wireless PAN (Personal Area Network), Wireless MAN (Metropolitan Area Network), Wireless Coexistence, Media Independent Handover Services, and Wireless RAN (Regional Access Network). Within IEEE 802, a Working Group provides the focus for each of these areas.
In IEEE 802, work is done in Working Groups operating under an Executive Committee. Each Working Group is led by a Working Group Chair. Most Working Groups have one or more Task Groups. A Task Group is responsible for a project or group of projects.
The Executive Committee is comprised of the Executive Committee Chair, Executive Committee Officers (e.g., Vice-Chairs, Secretaries, Treasurer), and Working Group Chairs.
A good place to learn more is the IEEE 802 Home Page, at <http://www.ieee802.org/>. An IEEE 802 Orientation for new participants that gives an overview of IEEE 802 process is available from the home page.
The IEEE 802 Executive Committee and all Working Groups meet three times per year at plenary sessions. Plenary sessions are held in March, July, and November. Most Working Groups hold interim meetings, usually in January, May, and September. The meeting schedule can be found at <http://www.ieee802.org/meeting/index.html>.
A Study Group is a group formed to consider starting a new project and, if new work is found to be suitable, to develop an IEEE Project Authorization Request (PAR), similar in purpose to an IETF Working Group charter. A Study Group may operate under a Working Group or under the Executive Committee depending on whether the new work under consideration falls within the scope of an existing Working Group. Study Groups are expected to exist for a limited time, usually for one or two plenary cycles, and must be authorized to continue at each plenary if they have not completed their work.
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Participation in IEEE 802 Working Groups is at the level of individuals -- participants are human beings and not companies. While participation is open, individuals are required to declare their affiliation (i.e., any individual or entity that financially or materially supports the individual's participation in IEEE 802).
Working Groups maintain membership rosters, with voting membership attained on the basis of in-person meeting attendance. Retention of voting membership generally requires continued attendance and responsiveness to letter ballots. Voting membership allows one to vote on motions and on Working Group Ballots of drafts. All drafts are also balloted by a Sponsor ballot pool before approval as standards. Joining a Sponsor ballot pool does not require participation in meetings. It is not necessary to be eligible to vote in order to comment on drafts, and the Working Group is required to consider and respond to all comments submitted during Working Group and Sponsor ballots.
To foster ongoing communication between IEEE 802 and IETF, it is important to identify and establish contact points within each organization. IEEE 802 contact points may include:
IEEE 802 Working Group Chair: An IEEE 802 Working Group chair is an individual who is assigned to lead the work of IEEE 802 in a particular area. IEEE 802 Working Group chairs are elected by the Working Group and confirmed by the Executive Committee for a two-year term. The Working Group Chair provides a stable contact point for cooperation between the two organizations for a given topic.
IEEE 802 Task Group (or Task Force) Chair: An IEEE 802 Task Group chair is an individual who is assigned to lead the work on a specific project or group of projects within a Working Group. The Task Group Chair often serves for the duration of a project. The Task Group Chair provides a stable contact point for cooperation between the two organizations on a particular project.
IEEE 802 Study Group Chair: An IEEE 802 Study Group Chair is an individual assigned to lead consideration of new work and development of an IEEE 802 Project Authorization Request (PAR). The Study Group chair provides a stable contact point for cooperation between the two organizations on a study group topic.
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IEEE 802 Liaisons: It may be beneficial to establish liaisons as additional contact points for specific topics of mutual interest. These contact points should be established early in the work effort. The IEEE 802 and IETF projects may select the same individual as their contact point, but this is not required, so that two individuals each serve as contact points for one project participating in the liaison relationship.
Informal Contact points: Other informal contacts can provide useful cooperation points. These include Project Editors who are responsible for editing the drafts and work with the Task Group Chairs to lead tracking and resolution of issues. Joint members who are active in both the IEEE 802 and IETF projects in an area can also aid in cooperation.
The IETF Standards Process is defined in [BCP9]. [BCP11] is a helpful description of organizations involved in the IETF standards process. It can still be useful as an overview, although details have changed since 1996.
In the IETF, work is done in Working Groups (WGs) and is mostly carried out through open, public mailing lists rather than face-to- face meetings. The IETF Working Group process is defined in [BCP25].
WGs are organized into areas, and each area is managed by one or more Area Directors. Collectively, the Area Directors constitute the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) [RFC3710].
To foster ongoing communication between IEEE 802 and IETF, it is important to identify and establish contact points within each organization. IETF contact points may include Area Directors, Working Group chairs, and other points of contact who can help communicate between IEEE 802 and IETF Working Groups.
The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) charter [BCP39] assigns the IAB several responsibilities relevant to this document:
1. IESG Appointment Confirmation [BCP10] 2. Architectural Oversight 3. Standards Process Oversight and Appeal 4. Appointment of the RFC Series Editor [RFC6635] and Independent Submission Editor [RFC6548] 5. Appointment of the Internet Assigned Number Authority (IANA) operator [RFC6220] 6. Oversight of External Liaisons for the IETF [BCP102]
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IESG and IAB members are selected using the NomCom process defined in [BCP10]. Working Group chairs serve at the pleasure of their Area Directors, as described in [BCP25].
The IETF is designed to be a "bottom-up" protocol engineering organization -- the leadership steers and manages but does not direct work in a top-down way. Technical agreements with "the IETF" are based on the consensus of Working Group participants, rather than negotiated with IETF leadership.
IETF meets in plenary sessions three times per year. Some Working Groups schedule additional interim meetings, which may be either face-to-face or "virtual". Information about IETF meetings is available at <http://www.ietf.org/meeting/upcoming.html>. Information about IETF Working Group interim meetings is available on <http://www.ietf.org/meeting/interim-meetings.html>.
The preferred way to develop specifications is to do work on mailing lists, reserving face-to-face sessions for topics that have not been resolved through previous mailing list discussion.
Participation in the IETF is open to anyone (technically, anyone with access to email sufficient to allow subscription to one or more IETF mailing lists). All IETF participants act as individuals. There is no concept of "IETF membership".
A good place to learn more is the IETF Home Page, at <http://www.ietf.org/>, and especially the "About the IETF" page at <http://www.ietf.org/about>, selectable from the IETF Home Page.
The "Tao of the IETF" is also very helpful, especially for IEEE 802 participants who will also be participating in IETF Working Groups and attending IETF meetings. It is available at <http://www.ietf.org/tao.html>.
The current list of IETF Area Directors and Working Group chairs can be found in the IETF Working Group charters, at <http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/>.
IEEE 802 and IETF have similar structures, but the terms they use are different, and even conflicting. For example, both IEEE 802 and IETF use the term "Working Group", but this means very different things in the two organizations.
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Thumbnail comparison between IETF and IEEE 802 entities
IETF Area is similar to IEEE 802 Working Group IETF Working Group is similar to IEEE 802 Task Group IETF BOF is similar to IEEE 802 Study Group
Both IEEE 802 Working Groups and IETF Areas are large, long-lived, and relatively broadly scoped, containing more narrowly chartered entities (IEEE 802 Task Groups and IETF Working Groups), which tend to be short-lived and narrowly chartered. IEEE 802 uses Study Groups to develop proposals for new work, and these are analogous to IETF Birds of a Feather ("BOF") sessions.
Several IETF Areas also have one or more directorates to support the work of the Area Directors. Area Directors often ask directorate members to review documents or provide input on technical questions. These directorates are often a source of expertise on specific topics. The list of Area Directorates is at <http://www.ietf.org/iesg/directorate.html>. IEEE 802 does not have a corresponding organizational entity.
IEEE 802 and IETF have cultures that are similar but not identical. Some of the differences include:
Consensus and Rough Consensus: Both organizations make decisions based on consensus, but in the IETF, "consensus" can mean "rough consensus, as determined by Working Group chairs". In practice, this means that a large part of the community being asked needs to agree. Not everyone has to agree, but if someone disagrees, they need to convince other people of their point of view. If they're not able to do that, they'll be "in the rough" when "rough consensus" is declared. Although IEEE Working Groups ultimately rely on voting for decision-making, they vary widely in their use of consensus versus voting in the course of a meeting and in their attention to Robert's Rules [RONR].
Running Code: David Clark coined the phrase "We reject kings, presidents and voting. We believe in rough consensus and running code" in 1992, to explain IETF culture. Although that's not always true today, the existence of "running code" as a proof of feasibility for a proposal often carries weight during technical discussions. IEEE 802 considers both technical and economic feasibility when deciding whether to approve new work, as noted in Section 4.1.7.
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Decision-making: IEEE 802 Working Groups vary in their reliance upon voting versus consensus, and in the breadth of coverage of an individual motion, but ultimately, all rely upon a 75 percent vote to decide technical issues, and a 50 percent +1 vote to decide other issues. IETF Working Groups do not use voting. Working Group chairs may ask for a "show of hands" or "take a hum" to judge backing for a proposal and identify technical concerns and objections, but this is not considered "voting". IETF consensus and humming is discussed further in [RFC7282].
Balance between mailing lists and meetings: Both organizations make use of mailing lists. IETF Working Groups rely heavily on mailing lists, where work is done, in addition to formal meetings. The IETF requires all Working Group decisions to be made (or, often in practice, confirmed) on mailing lists -- final decisions aren't made in meetings. IEEE 802 Working Groups typically meet face-to-face about twice as often as IETF Working Groups (three IEEE 802 plenaries plus three IETF 802 interim meetings each year, compared to three IETF plenaries per year), and teleconferences are more common in IEEE 802 than in most IETF Working Groups. Most major decisions in IEEE 802 are made during plenary or interim meetings, except for procedural decisions. Attendance at meetings is critical to influencing decisions and to maintaining membership voting rights.
Interim meetings: Both organizations use interim meetings (between plenary meetings). IETF Working Groups schedule interim meetings on an as-needed basis. IETF interim meetings may be face-to-face or virtual. Most IEEE 802 WGs hold regularly interim meetings three times a year in the middle of the interval between two plenary meetings. The schedules and locations of these meetings are typically known many months in advance. IEEE 802 interim meetings are face-to-face only. In addition to regularly scheduled IEEE 802 interim meetings, teleconference and ad hoc meetings are held on an as-needed basis.
Remote participation: Because the IETF doesn't make decisions at face-to-face meetings, attendance is not absolutely necessary, and some significant contributors do not attend most face-to- face IETF meetings. However, finding people interested in a proposal for new work, or soliciting backing for ideas, is often more easily accomplished face-to-face, such as in a hallway or bar. Significant contributors to IEEE 802 almost always attend face-to-face meetings; participation in IEEE 802 meetings is a condition for WG membership.
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Lifetime of Standards: IEEE 802 periodically reviews existing standards. IETF Standards Track documents may be updated or obsoleted by newer Standards Track documents, but there is no formal periodic review for existing Standards Track documents. The status of specific IETF standards is available through the IETF "Datatracker" [DATATRACKER]. Because these status changes happen independently, standards from each organization may refer to documents that are no longer standards in the other organization.
Overlapping terminology: As two independent standards development organizations, IEEE 802 and IETF have developed vocabularies that overlap. For instance, IEEE 802 "ballots" at several levels of the organization during document approval, while IETF documents are only "balloted" during IESG review. The IESG uses "ballots" to indicate that all technical concerns have been addressed, not to indicate that the IESG agrees with a document. The intention is to "discuss" technical issues with a document, and "no" is not one of the choices on an IESG ballot.
All IETF Working Groups and all IEEE 802 Working Groups have associated mailing lists. Most IEEE 802 Task Groups also have mailing lists, but in some cases (e.g., the IEEE 802.1 Working Group), the Working Group mailing list is used for any Task Group matters.
In the IETF, the mailing list is the primary vehicle for discussion and decision-making. It is recommended that IEEE 802 experts interested in particular IETF Working Group topics subscribe to and participate in these lists. IETF WG mailing lists are open to all subscribers. The IETF Working Group mailing list subscription and archive information are noted in each Working Group's charter page.
In IEEE 802, mailing lists are typically used for meeting logistics, ballot announcements, reports, and some technical discussion. Most decision-making is at meetings, but in cases where a decision is needed between meetings, it may be done over the mailing list. Most technical discussion occurs at meetings and by generating comments on drafts that are compiled with responses in comment resolution documents.
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Most IEEE 802 mailing lists are open to all subscribers. For the few IEEE 802 mailing lists that are not open, please see the Working Group chair to arrange for access to the mailing list.
Some IEEE 802 participants refer to mailing lists as "reflectors".
During the course of IEEE 802 and IETF cooperation, it is important to share internal documents among the technical Working Groups. In addition, drafts of IEEE 802 standards, Internet-Drafts, and RFCs may also be distributed.
IETF Internet-Drafts may be located using the IETF Datatracker interface (see [DATATRACKER]) or via the IETF tools site at <http://tools.ietf.org>. RFCs may be found at either of the above sites, or via the RFC Editor web site at <http://www.rfc-editor.org>.
IEEE 802 standards, once approved, are published and made available for sale. They can be purchased from the IEEE Standards Store, at <http://www.techstreet.com/IEEEgate.html>. They are also available from other outlets, including the IEEE Xplore digital library, at <http://ieeexplore.ieee.org>.
The Get IEEE 802 program, at <http://standards.ieee.org/about/get>, grants public access to download individual IEEE 802 standards at no charge (although registration is required). IEEE 802 standards are added to the Get IEEE 802 program six months after publication. This program is approved year by year, but has been in place for several years.
The IEEE owns the copyright to drafts of standards developed within IEEE 802 standardization projects. The IEEE-SA grants permission for an IEEE 802 draft to be distributed without charge to the participants for that IEEE 802 standards development project. Typically, access is provided over the Internet under password protection, with the password provided to members of the participating WG. Requests to the relevant WG Chair for access to a draft for purposes of participation in the project are typically granted.
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An alternative access mechanism which may more easily enable document access for IETF WGs cooperating with IEEE 802 was established by a liaison statement sent to the IETF in July 2004 by Paul Nikolich, Chair of IEEE 802 (available at <https://datatracker.ietf.org/ documents/LIAISON/file41.pdf>), describing the process by which IETF WGs can obtain access to IEEE 802 work in progress. IEEE 802 WG Chairs have the authority to grant membership in their WGs and can use this authority to grant membership to an IETF WG chair upon request. The IETF WG chair will be provided with access to the username/password for the IEEE 802 WG archives and is permitted to share that information with participants in the IETF WG. Since it is possible to participate in IETF without attending meetings, or even joining a mailing list, IETF WG chairs will provide the information to anyone who requests it. However, since IEEE 802 work in progress is copyrighted, copyright restrictions prohibit incorporating material into IETF documents or postings.
In addition to allowing IETF participants to access documentation resources within IEEE 802, IEEE 802 can also make selected IEEE 802 documents at any stage of development available to the IETF by attaching them to a formal liaison statement. Although a communication can point to a URL where a non-ASCII document can be downloaded, sending attachments in proprietary formats to an IETF mailing list is discouraged.
Each IEEE 802 standardization project is assigned to a Working Group (WG) for development. In IEEE 802, the working methods of the WGs vary in their details. The documentation system is one area in which WG operations differ, based on varying needs and traditions. In some cases, the WGs assign the core development to a subgroup (typically known as a Task Group or Task Force), and the documentation procedures may vary among the subgroups as well. Prior to project authorization, or on topics not directly related to development of a standard, the WG may consider and develop documents itself or using other subgroups (standing committees, ad hocs, etc.).
IEEE 802 also supports Technical Advisory Groups (TAGs) that conduct business and develop documents, although not standards. References here to WGs apply to TAGs as well.
3.3.2. Access to Internal IEEE 802 Working Group Documents
Generally, the archives of minutes and contributions to IEEE 802 groups are publicly and freely available.
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Many IEEE 802 groups use a documentation system provided by IEEE and known as "Mentor". The list of these groups is available at the IEEE 802 Mentor Home Page: <https://mentor.ieee.org/802>. Mentor provides the following features:
1. The documentation system is structured and ordered, with documentation tags and unique numbering and versioning.
2. Online documentation is available.
3. Limited search functionality is provided, and publicly available search engines index the data.
4. The ability to submit documents to Mentor is limited but is generally available to any interested party. An IEEE web account is required but can be easily and freely established using the IEEE Account Request page, at <http://www.ieee.org/go/create_web_account>. If submission is protected, the privilege can be requested via the Mentor system (using the "Join group" link on each WG Mentor page) and would typically be granted by the WG documentation manager in a manual approval.
5. Submitted documents are immediately available to the general public at the same instant they become available for consideration by the group.
IEEE 802.3 documents are accessed from the home pages of the IEEE 802.3 subgroups (i.e., Task Force or Study Group) and are organized in folders by meeting date. These home pages are available from the IEEE 802.3 home page, at <http://www.ieee802.org/3/>. Files are uploaded by emailing to the subgroup chair.
In general, development of standards in IEEE 802 is contribution driven. In many cases, a WG or subgroup will issue a call for contributions with a specific technical solicitation, including deadlines and submission instructions. Some groups maintain specific submission procedures and specify a contribution cover sheet to clarify the status of the contribution.
Content for drafts of standards is submitted to WGs by individual participants or groups of participants. Content toward other group documents (such as, for example, external communication statements or foundation documents underlying a draft of a standard) might also be contribution driven. At some point, the group assembles contributed material to develop group documents, and revision takes place within group meetings or by assignment to Editors. For the most part, the contributions toward discussion as well as the group documents (including minutes and other reports) are openly available to the public.
IETF and IEEE 802 each recognize the standards defined by the other organization. Standards produced by each organization can be used as references in standards produced by the other organization.
IETF specifications may reference IEEE 802 work in progress, but these references should be labeled "Work in Progress". If the references are normative, this will block publication of the referring specification until the reference is available in a stable form.
IEEE 802 standards may normatively reference non-expired Internet- Drafts, but IEEE 802 prefers that this be avoided if at all possible.
Informative references in IEEE 802 standards are placed in a bibliography, so they may point to either approved IETF standards or IETF Internet-Drafts, if necessary.
When an IEEE 802 standard is revised, it normally retains the same number and the date is updated. Therefore, IEEE 802 standards are dated with the year of approval, e.g., IEEE Std 802.1Q(TM)-2011. There are two ways of referencing IEEE 802 standards: undated and dated references. IEEE 802 practice allows undated reference to be used when referencing a whole standard. An undated reference indicates that the most recent version of the standard should be used. A dated reference refers to a specific revision of an IEEE 802 standard. Since clauses, subclauses, tables, figures, etc., may be
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renumbered when a standard is revised, a dated reference should be used when citing specific items in a standard.
IETF standards may be cited by RFC number, which would also be a dated reference. If an undated reference to an IETF Internet Standard is desired, a number is also assigned in the "STD" series [BCP9], and these references refer to the most recent version of an IETF Internet Standard.
This section describes how existing processes within the IETF and IEEE 802 may be used to enable cooperation between the organizations.
Historically, much of the work of coordination has fallen on individuals attending meetings of both organizations. However, as noted in "Transferring MIB Work from IETF Bridge MIB WG to IEEE 802.1 WG" [RFC4663], downward pressure on travel budgets has made it increasingly difficult for participants to attend face-to-face meetings in both organizations. That pressure has continued in the intervening years. As a result, the coordination mechanisms described in this section typically do not require meeting attendance.
The following sections outline a process that can be used to enable each organization to stay informed about the other's active and proposed work items.
Early identification of topics of mutual interest allows the two organizations to cooperate in a productive way and helps each organization avoid developing specifications that overlap or conflict with specifications developed in the other organization. Where individuals notice a potential conflict or need for coordination, the issue should be brought to the attention of the relevant Working Group chairs and/or Area Directors.
4.1.1. How IEEE 802 Is Informed about Active IETF Work Items
The responsibility is on IEEE 802 Working Groups to review current IETF Working Groups to determine if there are any topics of mutual interest. Working Group charters and active Internet-Drafts can be found in the IETF Datatracker [DATATRACKER]. If an IEEE 802 Working Group identifies a common area of work, the IEEE 802 Working Group leadership should contact both the IETF Working Group chair and the Area Director(s) responsible. This may be accompanied by a formal liaison statement (see Section 5.2).
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4.1.2. How IETF Is Informed about Active IEEE 802 Work Items
It is the responsibility of IETF Working Groups to periodically review the IEEE 802 web site to determine if there is work in progress of mutual interest.
IEEE 802 Working Group status reports are published at the beginning and end of each plenary at <http://ieee802.org/minutes>. Each Working Group includes a list of their active projects and the status.
The charter of an IEEE 802 project is defined in an approved Project Authorization Request (PAR). PARs are accessible in IEEE Standards myProject, at <https://development.standards.ieee.org>. Access requires an IEEE web account, which is free and has no membership requirement.
In myProject, a search on "View Active PARs" for 802 will bring up a list of all active IEEE 802 PARs.
If an IETF working group identifies a common area of work or a need for cooperation, the Working Group leadership should contact the IEEE 802 Working Group Chair and Task Group Chair. This may be accompanied by a formal liaison statement (see Section 5.2).
4.1.3. Overview of Notifications of New Work Proposals
These principles describe the notification process used by both organizations:
1. For both organizations, the technical group making a proposal for new work that may conflict with, overlap with, or be dependent on the other organization is responsible for informing the top-level coordination body in the other organization that cooperation may be required.
2. For both organizations, the top-level coordination body receiving that notification is responsible for determining whether cooperation is, in fact, required, and informing the specific groups within the organization who may be affected by the proposal for new work.
These direct notifications will be the most common way that each organization is informed about proposals for new work in the other organization. Several other ways of identifying proposed new work are described in the following sections. These additional ways act
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as "belt and suspenders" to reduce the chances that proposals for new work in one organization escape notice in the other organization when cooperation will be required.
Several standards development organizations (SDOs), including IETF and IEEE 802, have agreed to use a mailing list for the distribution of information about proposals for new work items among these SDOs.
Rather than having individual IEEE 802 participants subscribe directly to New-Work, a single IEEE 802 mailing list is subscribed. Leadership of the IEEE 802 Working Groups may subscribe to this "second-level" IEEE 802 mailing list, which is maintained by the Executive Committee (EC).
This mailing list is limited to representatives of SDOs proposing new work that may require cooperation with the IETF. Subscription requests may be sent to the IAB Executive Director.
4.1.5. How IEEE 802 Is Informed about Proposed New IETF Work Items
Many proposals for new IETF work items can be identified in proposed Birds of a Feather (BOF) sessions, as well as draft charters for Working Groups. The IETF forwards all such draft charters for new and revised Working Groups and BOF session announcements to the IETF New-Work mailing list.
4.1.6. How IEEE 802 Comments on Proposed New IETF Work Items
Each IEEE 802 Working Group Chair, or designated representative, may provide comments on these charters by responding to the IESG mailing list at iesg@ietf.org clearly indicating their IEEE 802 position and the nature of their concern.
It should be noted that the IETF turnaround time for new Working Group charters can be as short as two weeks, although the call-for- comment period on work items that may require cooperation with IEEE 802 can be extended to allow more time for discussion within IEEE 802. This places a burden on both organizations to proactively communicate and avoid "late surprises" to either organization.
Although an IEEE 802 Working Group may not be able to develop a formal consensus response unless the notification arrives during that Working Group's meeting, the IEEE 802 Working Group chair can informally let the IETF know that IEEE 802 may have concerns about a proposed work item. The IETF will consider any informal comments received without waiting for a formal liaison statement.
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4.1.7. How IETF Is Informed about Proposed New IEEE 802 Work Items
An IEEE 802 project is initiated by approval of a Project Authorization Request (PAR), which includes a description of the scope of the work. Any IEEE 802 PARs that introduce new functionality are required to be available for review no less than 30 days prior to the Monday of the IEEE 802 plenary session where they will be considered.
IEEE 802 considers "Five Criteria" when deciding whether to approve new work: Broad Market Potential, Compatibility, Distinct Identity, Technical Feasibility, and Economic Feasibility. The criteria are defined in the IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standards Committee (LMSC) Operations Manual. The PARs are accompanied by responses on the "Five Criteria".
IEEE 802 posts proposed PARs to the New-Work mailing list, prior to the IEEE 802 meetings where the PARs will be discussed. The IETF coordination body will notify technical groups about PARs of interest.
4.1.8. How IETF Comments on Proposed New IEEE 802 Work Items
Any comments on proposed PARs should be submitted to the Working Group Chair and copied to the Executive Committee chair by email not later than 5:00 PM Tuesday of the plenary session (in the time zone where the plenary is located).
From time to time, IEEE 802 and IETF may agree to use additional mechanisms for coordination between the two groups. The details of these mechanisms may vary over time, but the overarching goal is to communicate effectively as needed.
As examples of such mechanisms, at the time this document was written, the two organizations are holding periodic conference calls between representatives of the IETF and IEEE 802 leadership teams, and are maintaining a "living list" of shared interests between the two organizations, along with the status of these interests and any related action items. At the time this document was written, the "living list" included about 20 topics being actively discussed, with more expected. These conference calls help the two organizations coordinate more effectively by allowing higher-bandwidth discussions than formal liaison statements would allow and by permitting more timely interactions than waiting for face-to-face meetings.
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Minutes for these conference calls, and the "living lists" discussed on each call, are available at <http://www.iab.org/activities/ joint-activities/iab-ieee-coordination/>.
During the course of IEEE 802 and IETF cooperation, it is important for technical experts to review documents of mutual interest and, when appropriate, to provide review comments to the approving body as the document moves through the approval process.
4.2.1. IEEE 802 Draft Review and Balloting Processes
IEEE 802 drafts are reviewed and balloted at multiple stages of the draft. Any ballot comments received from non-voters before the close of the ballot are required to be considered in the comment resolution process. The Editors, Task Group Chairs, or Working Group Chairs responsible for the project will facilitate the entering of comments from non-voters.
IEEE 802 draft reviews and ballots sometimes produce a large volume of comments. In order to handle them efficiently, spreadsheets or a comment database tool are used. It is highly recommended that balloters and others submitting comments do so with a file that can be imported into these tools. A file with the correct format is normally referenced in the ballot announcement or can be obtained from the Editor, Task Group Chair, or Working Group Chair responsible for the project. Comments on a draft should be copied to the Editor, Task Group Chair, and Working Group Chair.
During draft development, informal task group reviews (task group ballots) are conducted. Though these are called "ballots" by some Working Groups, the focus is on collecting and resolving comments on the draft rather than on trying to achieve a specific voting result.
Once the draft is substantially complete, Working Group ballots are conducted. Working Group voting members are entitled and required to vote in Working Group ballots. Any "disapprove" votes are required to be accompanied by comments that indicate what the objection is and a proposed resolution. "Approve" votes may also be accompanied by comments. The comments submitted with a "disapprove" vote may be marked to indicate which comments need to "be satisfied" to change the vote.
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Initial Working Group ballots are at least 30 days. Recirculation ballots to review draft changes and comment resolutions are open at least 10 days.
In order to submit a WG ballot, contact the WG Chair for the submission tool currently in use, as the tools may change over time.
When a draft has successfully completed Working Group ballot, it proceeds to Sponsor ballot. One may participate in IEEE 802 Sponsor ballots with an individual membership in the IEEE Standards Association (IEEE-SA) or by paying a per-ballot fee. Participants are also required to state their affiliation and the category of their relationship to the scope of the standards activity (e.g., producer, user, general interest).
Sponsor ballot is a public review. An invitation is sent to any parties known to be interested in the subject matter of the ballot. One can indicate interest in IEEE myProject (<https://development.standards.ieee.org>). An IEEE web account is freely available and is required for login. To select interest areas, go to the Projects tab and select "Manage Activity Profile" and check any areas of interest. IEEE 802 projects are under Computer Society; LAN/MAN Standards Committee.
The Sponsor ballot pool is formed from those that accept the invitation during the invitation period.
As with other ballot levels, the IETF participants who want to comment on Sponsor ballots need not be members in the Sponsor ballot pool. The Editors, Task Group Chairs, or Working Group Chairs responsible for the project will facilitate the entering of comments from IETF participants who are not members in the Sponsor ballot pool.
Any "disapprove" votes are required to be accompanied by comments that indicate what the objection is, along with a proposed resolution. "Approve" votes may also be accompanied by comments. The comments submitted with a "disapprove" vote may be marked to indicate which comments need to "be satisfied" for the commenter to change the vote from "disapprove".
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Initial Sponsor ballots are open for at least 30 days. Recirculation ballots to review draft changes and proposed comment resolutions are open at least 10 days.
At each level, the relevant group (Task Group for TG ballots, Working Group for WG and Sponsor ballots) examines the ballot comments and determines their disposition. The Editor (or editorial team) may prepare proposed dispositions. Task Group procedures vary, but at the Working Group level, the Working Group must vote 75 percent to approve the final ballot disposition in order to advance the document.
The IETF Working Group Process is defined in [BCP25]. The overall IETF standards process is defined in [BCP9].
As noted in Section 2.4, IETF Working Groups do not "ballot" to determine Working Group consensus to forward documents to the IESG for approval.
Technical contributions are welcome at any point in the IETF document review and approval process, but there are some points where contribution is more likely to be effective.
1. When a Working Group is considering adoption of an individual draft. Adoption is often announced on the Working Group's mailing list.
2. When Working Group chairs issue a "Working Group Last Call" ("WGLC") for a draft, to confirm that the Working Group has consensus to request publication. Although this is not a mandatory step in the document review and approval process for Internet-Drafts, most IETF Working Groups do issue WGLCs for most Working Group documents. WGLC would be announced on the Working Group's mailing list.
3. When the Internet Engineering Steering Group issues an "IETF Last Call" ("Last Call") for a draft. IETF Last Call is a formal and required part of the review and approval process, is addressed to the larger IETF community, and is often the first time the entire community has looked at the document. IETF Last Call is signaled on the IETF-Announce Mailing List, and comments and feedback are ordinarily directed to the IETF Discussion Mailing List.
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In practice, earlier input is more likely to be effective input. IEEE 802 participants who are interested in work within the IETF should be monitoring that work and providing input long before Working Group Last Calls and IETF Last Calls, for best results.
Some IETF Working Group charters direct the Working Group to communicate with relevant IEEE 802 Task Groups.
With the number of areas of cooperation between IEEE 802 and IETF increasing, the document review process has extended beyond the traditional subjects of SMI (Structure of Management Information) MIB modules and AAA (Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting) described in [RFC4441]. IESG members routinely solicit directorate reviews as a means to request the opinion of specialized experts on specific aspects of documents in IESG review (examples include security, "MIB Doctors", or congestion management reviews). Area Directors may also require solicited reviews from IEEE 802 or IEEE 802 Working Groups when it becomes clear that the Internet-Draft has implications that impact some area of IEEE 802's responsibility and expertise.
IEEE 802 leadership can also solicit similar reviews, but these reviews are not included as part of the formal IEEE 802 process.
5. Liaison Managers and Liaison Statements
Both IEEE 802 and IETF work best when people participate directly in work of mutual interest, but that is not always possible, and individuals speaking as individuals may not provide effective communication between the two SDOs. From time to time, it may be appropriate for a technical body in one SDO to communicate as a body with a technical body in the other SDO. This section describes the mechanisms used to provide formal communication between the two organizations, should that become necessary.
The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) is responsible for liaison relationship oversight for the IETF. In IEEE 802, liaison relationship oversight is distributed, and each organization appointing liaison managers is responsible for oversight of its own liaison relationships.
The reader should note that the role of a liaison manager in both IEEE 802 and IETF is not to "speak for" the appointing organization. A liaison manager is most helpful in ensuring that neither organization is surprised by what's happening in the other organization, helping to identify the right people to be talking to
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in each organization, and making sure that formal liaison statements don't "get lost" between the two organizations. The IAB's guidance to liaison managers is available in [RFC4691]. IEEE 802 organizations appointing each liaison manager also provide guidance to those liaison managers. There is no global guidance for all IEEE 802 liaison managers.
The IAB appoints IETF liaison managers using the process described in [BCP102]. The current list of the IETF's liaison relationships and the liaison managers responsible for each of these relationships is available at <http://www.ietf.org/liaison/managers.html>.
IEEE liaison managers are selected by the organizations they represent, either in an election or by Working Group or Task Group Chair appointment. The current list of IEEE 802's liaison relationships and the liaison managers responsible for each of these relationships is available at <http://www.ieee802.org/liaisons.shtml>.
The IEEE 802 procedure for sending and receiving liaison statements is defined by the Procedure for Coordination with Other Standards Bodies in the IEEE 802 LMSC Operations Manual (<http://ieee802.org/devdocs.shtml>).
The IETF process for sending and receiving liaison statements is defined in [BCP103].
Both IEEE 802 and IETF maintain registries of assigned protocol parameters, and some protocol parameters assigned in one organization are of interest to the other organization. This section describes the way each organization registers protocol parameters.
The IETF uses the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) as a central authority that administers registries for most protocol parameter allocations. The overarching document describing this is [BCP26]. [BCP141] discusses use of IEEE 802-specific IANA parameters in IETF protocols and specifies IANA considerations for allocation of code points under the IANA OUI (Organizationally Unique Identifier).
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Requests for protocol parameter allocations from IANA are subject to assignment policies, and these policies vary from registry to registry. A variety of well-known policies are described in [BCP26], but registries are not limited to one of the well-known choices.
The purpose of these allocations is to manage a namespace appropriately, so unless a registry has a policy that allows something like first come, first served ("FCFS") for a namespace that is effectively unbounded, requests for protocol parameter allocation will require some level of review. "Standards Action" is at the other extreme (an approved Standards Track RFC is required in order to obtain an allocation). Some registries require that a request for allocation pass "Expert Review" -- review by someone knowledgeable in the technology domain, appointed by the IESG and given specific criteria to use when reviewing requests.
The IEEE Standards Association uses the IEEE Registration Authority as a central authority administering registries. The IEEE Registration Authority Committee (IEEE RAC) provides technical oversight for the IEEE Registration Authority.
Regarding Ethertype allocation: Some IETF protocol specifications make use of Ethertypes. Ethertypes are a fairly scarce resource so allocation has the following requirements. All Ethertype requests are subject to review by a consultant to the IEEE RA, followed by IEEE RAC confirmation.
The IEEE RAC will not assign a new Ethertype to a new IETF protocol specification until the IESG has approved the protocol specification for publication as an RFC. In exceptional cases, the IEEE RA will consider "early allocation" of an Ethertype for an IETF protocol that is still under development when the request comes from, and has been vetted by, the IESG.
Note that "playpen" Ethertypes have been assigned in IEEE 802 [ARCH802] for use during protocol development and experimentation.
While a fee is normally charged by the IEEE Registration Authority Committee (RAC) for the allocation of an Ethertype, the IEEE RAC will consider waiving the fee for allocations relating to an IETF Standards Track document, based on a request from the IESG.
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6.3. IEEE 802 Registration at the Working Group Level
Each IEEE 802 Working Group has a registry of identifier values and a mechanism to allocate identifier values in its standards and approved amendments. This includes items such as Object Identifiers for managed objects and assignment for protocols defined by that Working Group, such as OpCodes. Contact the IEEE 802 Working Group Chair for the details of a given Working Group registry.
Because some registries are "joint-use" between IEEE 802 and IETF, it is necessary for each organization to review usage of registries maintained by the other organization as part of the review and approval process for standards.
If an IEEE 802 document refers to IANA registries, those references should be checked prior to Sponsor balloting. If an IETF document refers to IEEE 802 registries, those references should be checked as part of IANA Review during IETF Last Call.
[BCP26] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226, May 2008.
[BCP141] Eastlake 3rd, D. and J. Abley, "IANA Considerations and IETF Protocol and Documentation Usage for IEEE 802 Parameters", BCP 141, RFC 7042, October 2013.
[RFC4691] Andersson, L., Ed., "Guidelines for Acting as an IETF Liaison to Another Organization", RFC 4691, October 2006.
[ARCH802] IEEE 802, "IEEE Standard for Local and Metropolitan Area Networks: Overview and Architecture", IEEE 802 Std 802(TM)-2014, 2014.
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[BCP9] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.
Dusseault, L. and R. Sparks, "Guidance on Interoperation and Implementation Reports for Advancement to Draft Standard", BCP 9, RFC 5657, September 2009.
Housley, R., Crocker, D., and E. Burger, "Reducing the Standards Track to Two Maturity Levels", BCP 9, RFC 6410, October 2011.
Resnick, P., "Retirement of the "Internet Official Protocol Standards" Summary Document", BCP 9, RFC 7100, December 2013.
Kolkman, O., Bradner, S., and S. Turner, "Characterization of Proposed Standards", BCP 9, RFC 7127, January 2014.
[BCP10] Galvin, J., Ed., "IAB and IESG Selection, Confirmation, and Recall Process: Operation of the Nominating and Recall Committees", BCP 10, RFC 3777, June 2004.
Dawkins, S., Ed., "Nominating Committee Process: Earlier Announcement of Open Positions and Solicitation of Volunteers", BCP 10, RFC 5633, August 2009.
Dawkins, S., Ed., "The Nominating Committee Process: Open Disclosure of Willing Nominees", BCP 10, RFC 5680, October 2009.
Leiba, B., "Update to RFC 3777 to Clarify Nominating Committee Eligibility of IETF Leadership", BCP 10, RFC 6859, January 2013.
[BCP11] Hovey, R. and S. Bradner, "The Organizations Involved in the IETF Standards Process", BCP 11, RFC 2028, October 1996.
[BCP25] Bradner, S., "IETF Working Group Guidelines and Procedures", BCP 25, RFC 2418, September 1998.
Wasserman, M., "Updates to RFC 2418 Regarding the Management of IETF Mailing Lists", BCP 25, RFC 3934, October 2004.
[BCP39] Internet Architecture Board and B. Carpenter, Ed., "Charter of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)", BCP 39, RFC 2850, May 2000.
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[BCP101] Austein, R., Ed., and B. Wijnen, Ed., "Structure of the IETF Administrative Support Activity (IASA)", BCP 101, RFC 4071, April 2005.
Carpenter, B., Ed., and L. Lynch, Ed., "BCP 101 Update for IPR Trust", BCP 101, RFC 4371, January 2006.
[BCP102] Daigle, L., Ed., and Internet Architecture Board, "IAB Processes for Management of IETF Liaison Relationships", BCP 102, RFC 4052, April 2005.
[BCP103] Trowbridge, S., Bradner, S., and F. Baker, "Procedures for Handling Liaison Statements to and from the IETF", BCP 103, RFC 4053, April 2005.
[BCP111] Heard, C., Ed., "Guidelines for Authors and Reviewers of MIB Documents", BCP 111, RFC 4181, September 2005.
Heard, C., Ed., "RFC 4181 Update to Recognize the IETF Trust", BCP 111, RFC 4841, March 2007.
[BCP132] Housley, R. and B. Aboba, "Guidance for Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting (AAA) Key Management", BCP 132, RFC 4962, July 2007.
[BCP158] DeKok, A., Ed., and G. Weber, "RADIUS Design Guidelines", BCP 158, RFC 6158, March 2011.
[DADG] Morand, L., Ed., Fajardo, V. and H. Tschofenig, "Diameter Applications Design Guidelines", Work in Progress, June 2014.
[IEEE80211F] IEEE, "IEEE Trial-Use Recommended Practice for Multi- Vendor Access Point Interoperability Via an Inter-Access Point Protocol Across Distribution Systems Supporting IEEE 802.11 Operation", IEEE 802 Std 802.11F(TM)-2003, 2003.
[RFC3575] Aboba, B., "IANA Considerations for RADIUS (Remote Authentication Dial In User Service)", RFC 3575, July 2003.
[RFC3710] Alvestrand, H., "An IESG charter", RFC 3710, February 2004.
[RFC3748] Aboba, B., Blunk, L., Vollbrecht, J., Carlson, J., and H. Levkowetz, Ed., "Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)", RFC 3748, June 2004.
[RFC4137] Vollbrecht, J., Eronen, P., Petroni, N., and Y. Ohba, "State Machines for Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) Peer and Authenticator", RFC 4137, August 2005.
[RFC4441] Aboba, B., Ed., "The IEEE 802/IETF Relationship", RFC 4441, March 2006.
[RFC4663] Harrington, D., "Transferring MIB Work from IETF Bridge MIB WG to IEEE 802.1 WG", RFC 4663, September 2006.
[RFC5247] Aboba, B., Simon, D., and P. Eronen, "Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP) Key Management Framework", RFC 5247, August 2008.
[RFC6220] McPherson, D., Ed., Kolkman, O., Ed., Klensin, J., Ed., Huston, G., Ed., and Internet Architecture Board, "Defining the Role and Function of IETF Protocol Parameter Registry Operators", RFC 6220, April 2011.
[RFC6548] Brownlee, N., Ed., and IAB, "Independent Submission Editor Model", RFC 6548, June 2012.
[RFC6635] Kolkman, O., Ed., Halpern, J., Ed., and IAB, "RFC Editor Model (Version 2)", RFC 6635, June 2012.
[RFC6733] Fajardo, V., Ed., Arkko, J., Loughney, J., and G. Zorn, Ed., "Diameter Base Protocol", RFC 6733, October 2012.
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[RFC6756] Trowbridge, S., Ed., Lear, E., Ed., Fishman, G., Ed., and S. Bradner, Ed., "Internet Engineering Task Force and International Telecommunication Union - Telecommunication Standardization Sector Collaboration Guidelines", RFC 6756, September 2012.
[RFC6929] DeKok, A. and A. Lior, "Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS) Protocol Extensions", RFC 6929, April 2013.
[RFC7282] Resnick, P., "On Consensus and Humming in the IETF", RFC 7282, June 2014.
[RONR] Robert, H., et al., "Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised", 11th ed., Da Capo Press, 2011, <http://www.robertsrules.com/>.
This document borrows a significant amount of text, and much of its structure, from [RFC6756]. Additional text was borrowed from [RFC4441]. We are grateful to the authors and editors of both these predecessor documents.
The initial draft of this document was assembled by a team of participants from both IEEE 802 and IETF. Team members included Dan Romascanu, Dorothy Stanley, Eric Gray, Patricia Thaler, Roger Marks, Ross Callon, Spencer Dawkins, and Subir Das.
We also thank Abdussalam Baryun, Adrian Farrel, Dave Thaler, Jari Arkko, Russ Housley, Jouni Korhonen, Max Riegel, Norm Finn, Pete Resnick, Peter Yee, S. Moonesamy, and Stephen Farrell for providing review comments.
Bernard Aboba Jari Arkko Marc Blanchet Ross Callon Alissa Cooper Joel Halpern Russ Housley Eliot Lear Xing Li Erik Nordmark Andrew Sullivan Dave Thaler Hannes Tschofenig
11. IEEE 802 Executive Committee Members at the Time of Approval
Radhakrishna Canchi Clint Chaplin John D'Ambrosia Subir Das James Gilb Bob Heile Tony Jeffree Bruce Kraemer David Law John Lemon Mike Lynch Roger Marks Apurva Mody Paul Nikolich Max Riegel Jon Rosdahl Steve Shellhammer Pat Thaler Geoff Thompson
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Appendix A. Current Examples of IEEE 802 and IETF Cooperation
Historically, the MIB modules for IEEE 802.1 and IEEE 802.3 were developed in the IETF Bridge MIB and Hub MIB Working Groups, respectively. With travel budgets under pressure, it has become increasingly difficult for companies to fund employees to attend both IEEE 802 and IETF meetings.
As a result, an alternative was found to past arrangements that involved chartering MIB work items within an IETF WG. Instead, the work was transferred to IEEE 802 with expert support for MIB review from the IETF. The process of transfer of the MIB work from the IETF Bridge MIB WG to IEEE 802.1 WG is documented in [RFC4663].
By standardizing IEEE 802 MIBs only within IEEE 802 while utilizing the IETF SNMP quality control process, the IETF and IEEE 802 seek to ensure quality while decreasing overhead. In order to encourage wider review of MIBs developed by IEEE 802 WGs, it is recommended that MIB modules developed in IEEE 802 follow the MIB guidelines [BCP111]. An IEEE 802 group may request assignment of a "MIB Doctor" to assist in a MIB review by contacting the IETF Operations and Management Area Director.
IEEE 802 WGs requiring new AAA applications should send a liaison request to the IETF. Where new attribute definitions are sufficient, rather than defining new authentication, authorization, and accounting logic and procedures, an Internet-Draft can be submitted and review can be requested from AAA-related WGs such as the RADEXT or DIME WGs.
In addition to the RADEXT and DIME WGs, a "AAA doctors" team (directorate) is currently active in the OPS Area and can be consulted for more general advice on AAA issues that cross the limits of one or the other of the RADIUS or Diameter protocols, or are more generic in nature.
For attributes of general utility, particularly those useful in multiple potential applications, allocation from the IETF standard attribute space is preferred to creation of IEEE 802 Vendor-Specific Attributes (VSAs). As noted in [RFC3575]: "RADIUS defines a mechanism for Vendor-Specific extensions (Attribute 26) for functions specific only to one vendor's implementation of RADIUS, where no
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interoperability is deemed useful. For functions specific only to one vendor's implementation of RADIUS, the use of that should be encouraged instead of the allocation of global attribute types."
Where allocation of VSAs are required, it is recommended that IEEE 802 create a uniform format for all of IEEE 802, rather than having each IEEE 802 Working Group create their own VSA format. The VSA format defined in [IEEE80211F] is inappropriate for this, since the Type field is only a single octet, allowing for only 255 attributes. It is recommended that IEEE 802 Working Groups read and follow the recommendations in "RADIUS Design Guidelines" [BCP158] and "Protocol Extensions" [RFC6929] when designing and reviewing new extensions and attributes.
"Diameter Applications Design Guidelines" [DADG] explains and clarifies the rules to extend the Diameter base protocol [RFC6733]. Extending Diameter can mean either the definition of a completely new Diameter application or the reuse of commands, Attribute-Value Pairs (AVPs), and AVP values in any combination for the purpose of inheriting the features of an existing Diameter application. The recommendation for reusing existing applications as much as possible is meaningful as most of the requirements defined for a new application are likely already fulfilled by existing applications. It is recommended that IEEE 802 Working Groups read and follow the recommendations in [DADG] when defining and reviewing new extensions and attributes.
The Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), defined in [RFC3748], provides a framework within which authentication mechanisms, known as methods, can be defined. In addition to supporting authentication, EAP also provides for key derivation as described in [RFC5247]. State machines for EAP are described in [RFC4137].
As noted in [BCP132] and [RFC5247], security issues can arise in integration of EAP within lower layers. Therefore, it is recommended that IEEE 802 WGs looking to incorporate support for EAP send a liaison request to the IETF, requesting assistance in carrying out a security review. As an example, a security review of IEEE 802.16 was carried out by the EAP WG, at the request of IEEE 802.16 [IEEE-802.16-Liaison1] [IEEE-802.16-Liaison2]. Where development of new EAP authentication methods is sufficient, an Internet-Draft can be submitted and review can be requested from WGs such as the EAP Method Update (EMU) WG.
The IEEE 802 WG and TAG main page URLs follow this convention: They have the one- or two-digit numerical designation for the WG or TAG appended after <http://ieee802.org/>. For example the IEEE 802.1 main web page is at <http://ieee802.org/1>, while the IEEE 802.11 main web page is at <http://ieee802.org/11>.
Information on IETF procedures may be found in the documents in the informative references and at the URLs below.
Note: RFCs do not change after they are published. Rather, they are either obsoleted or updated by other RFCs. Such updates are tracked in the rfc-index.txt file.
Current list of IETF Working Groups and their Charters: <http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/> (includes Area Directors and chair contacts, mailing list information, etc.)