Internet Architecture Board (IAB) O. Kolkman, Ed.
Request for Comments:
8728 Internet Society
Obsoletes:
6635 J. Halpern, Ed.
Category: Informational Ericsson
ISSN: 2070-1721 R. Hinden, Ed.
Check Point Software
February 2020
RFC Editor Model (Version 2)
Abstract
The RFC Editor model described in this document divides the
responsibilities for the RFC Series into three functions: the RFC
Series Editor, the RFC Production Center, and the RFC Publisher.
Internet Architecture Board (IAB) oversight via the RFC Series
Oversight Committee (RSOC) is described, as is the relationship
between the IETF Administration Limited Liability Company and the
RSOC. This document reflects the experience gained with "RFC Editor
Model (Version 1)", documented in
RFC 5620; and obsoletes
RFC 6635 to
replace all references to the IETF Administrative Support Activity
(IASA) and related structures with those defined by the IASA 2.0
Model.
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 candidates for any level of Internet
Standard; see
Section 2 of RFC 7841.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8728.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2020 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
(
https://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.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
1.1. The RFC Editor Function
2. RFC Editor Model
2.1. RFC Series Editor
2.1.1. Strategic Leadership and Management of the Publication
and Production Functions
2.1.2. Representation of the RFC Series
2.1.2.1. Representation to the IETF
2.1.2.2. External Representation
2.1.3. Development of RFC Production and Publication
2.1.4. Development of the RFC Series
2.1.5. Workload
2.1.6. Qualifications
2.1.7. Conflict of Interest
2.2. RFC Production Center
2.3. RFC Publisher
3. Committees
3.1. RFC Series Oversight Committee (RSOC)
3.1.1. RSOC Composition
4. Administrative Implementation
4.1. Vendor Selection for the Production and Publisher Functions
4.2. Budget
4.3. Disagreements among Entities Related to the RFC Editor
4.4. Issues with Contractual Impact
5. IANA Considerations
6. Security Considerations
7. References
7.1. Normative References
7.2. Informative References
IAB Members at the Time of Approval
Acknowledgments
Authors' Addresses
1. Introduction
This document reflects the experience gained with "RFC Editor Model
(Version 1)", documented in [
RFC5620], and updates the RFC Editor
Model (Version 2) to be aligned with the new IASA 2.0 Model [
RFC8711]
that creates the IETF Administration Limited Liability Company (IETF
LLC) managed by a board of directors (IETF LLC Board). As part of
the IASA 2.0 Model, the IETF Administrative Oversight Committee
(IAOC) is eliminated, and its oversight and advising functions
transferred to the new IETF LLC. This document obsoletes [
RFC6635]
to replace all references to the IASA and related structures with
those defined by the IASA 2.0 Model.
The IAB, on behalf of the Internet technical community, is concerned
with ensuring the continuity of the RFC Series, orderly RFC Editor
succession, RFC quality, and RFC document accessibility. The IAB is
also sensitive to the concerns of the IETF LLC about providing the
necessary services in a cost-effective and efficient manner.
The previous RFC Editor model [
RFC5620] was first approved by the IAB
in October 2008, and our understanding of the model has evolved with
our experience since. During the implementation of version 1 of the
model [
RFC5620], it was quickly realized that the role of the RFC
Series Editor (RSE) and the oversight responsibilities needed to be
structured differently. In order to gain experience with "running
code", a transitional RSE was hired who analyzed the managerial
environment and provided recommendations. This was followed by the
appointment of an acting RSE, who ably managed the series while work
was undertaken to select and hire a permanent RSE. This version of
the model is based on the recommendations of both temporary RFC
Series Editors and the extensive discussion in the IETF community, on
the rfc-interest list, and within the IAB.
This document, and the resulting structures, will be modified as
needed through normal procedures. The RSE, and the IAB, through the
RFC Series Oversight Committee (see
Section 3.1), will continue to
monitor discussions within the community about potential adjustments
to the RFC Editor model and recognize that the process described in
this document may need to be adjusted to align with any changes that
result from such discussions; hence, the version number in the title.
The IAB maintains its responsibilities as defined in [
RFC2850].
1.1. The RFC Editor Function
The RFC Series is described in [
RFC8729]. Its
Section 3.1 defines
"RFC Editor":
| Originally, there was a single person acting as editor of the RFC
| Series (the RFC Editor). The task has grown, and the work now
| requires the organized activity of several experts, so there are
| RFC Editors, or an RFC Editor organization. In time, there may be
| multiple organizations working together to undertake the work
| required by the RFC Series. For simplicity's sake, and without
| attempting to predict how the role might be subdivided among them,
| this document refers to this collection of experts and
| organizations as the "RFC Editor".
|
| The RFC Editor is an expert technical editor and series editor,
| acting to support the mission of the RFC Series. As such, the RFC
| Editor is the implementer handling the editorial management of the
| RFC Series, in accordance with the defined processes. In
| addition, the RFC Editor is expected to be the expert and prime
| mover in discussions about policies for editing, publishing, and
| archiving RFCs.
RFC 8729 does not explore the internal organization of the RFC
Editor. However,
RFC 8729 envisions changes in the RFC Editor
organizational structure. There have been several iterations on
efforts to improve and clarify this structure. These have been led
by the IAB, in consultation with the community and many leadership
bodies within the community. This first resulted in the publication
of [
RFC5620] and then in further discussions leading to the
publication of [
RFC6635]. Some of the details on this evolution can
be found below. In undertaking this evolution, the IAB considered
changes that increase flexibility and operational support options,
provide for the orderly succession of the RFC Editor, and ensure the
continuity of the RFC Series, while maintaining RFC quality,
maintaining timely processing, ensuring document accessibility,
reducing costs, and increasing cost transparency. The model set
forth below describes the internal organization of the RFC Editor,
while remaining consistent with
RFC 8729.
Note that
RFC 8729 uses the term "RFC Editor function" or "RFC
Editor" as the collective set of responsibilities for which this memo
provides a model for internal organization. This memo defines the
term "RFC Series Editor" or "Series Editor" for one of the
organizational components.
2. RFC Editor Model
The RFC Editor model divides the responsibilities for the RFC Series
into the following components:
* RFC Series Editor (RSE)
* RFC Production Center
* RFC Publisher
The structure and relationship of the components of the RFC Series
production and process is schematically represented by Figure 1. The
picture does not depict oversight and escalation relations. It does
include the streams and their managers (which are not part of the RFC
Series Editor, the RFC Production Center, or Publisher facilities) in
order to more fully show the context in which the RFC Series Editor
operates.
+-------------+
| |
+--------------+ IAB <----------+
| | | |
| |=============| |
| | | |
| | RSOC <----------+
| | | |
| +-------+-----+ +----+----+
| | | |
| +...........|.........+ |Community|
| . | . | at |
| . +-------V-----+ . | Large |
| . | | . | |
| . | RFC | . +----+----+
| . | Series | . |
| . | Editor <----------+
| . | | .
| . +-+---------+-+ .
| . | | .
+-------------+ +-----V-------+ . +--V--+ +--V--+ . +-----+
| | | | . | | | | . | |
| Independent | | Independent | . | RFC | | | . | E |
| Authors +--> Submission +-----> | | | . | n |
| | | Editor | . | P | | | . | d |
| | | | . | r | | RFC | . | |
+-------------+ +-------------+ . | o | | | . | U |
+-------------+ +-------------+ . | d | | P | . | s |
| | | | . | u | | u | . | e |
| IAB +--> IAB +-----> c | | b | . | r |
| | | | . | t | | l | . | s |
+-------------+ +-------------+ . | i +---> i +--------> |
+-------------+ +-------------+ . | o | | s | . | & |
| | | | . | n | | h | . | |
| IRTF +--> IRSG +---->| | | e | . | R |
| | | | . | C | | r | . | e |
+-------------+ +-------------+ . | e | | | . | a |
+-------------+ +-------------+ . | n | | | . | d |
| | | | . | t | | | . | e |
| IETF +--> IESG +-----> e | | | . | r |
| | | | . | r | | | . | s |
+-------------+ +-------------+ . +-----+ +-----+ . +-----+
. .
+..... RFC Editor ....+
Figure 1: Structure of RFC Series Production and Process
In this model, documents are produced and approved through multiple
document streams. The stream manager for each stream is responsible
for the content of that stream. The four streams that now exist are
described in [
RFC8729]. The RFC Editor function is responsible for
the packaging and distribution of the documents. As such, documents
from these streams are edited and processed by the Production Center
and published by the Publisher. The RFC Series Editor will exercise
strategic leadership and management over the activities of the RFC
Publisher and the RFC Production Center (both of which can be seen as
back-office functions) and will be the entity that:
* Represents the RFC Series and the RFC Editor function within the
IETF and externally.
* Leads the community in the design of improvements to the RFC
Series.
* Is responsible for planning and seeing to the execution of
improvements in the RFC Editor production and access processes.
* Is responsible for the content of the rfc-editor.org web site,
which is operated and maintained by the RFC Publisher.
* Is responsible for developing consensus versions of vision and
policy documents. These documents will be reviewed by the RFC
Series Oversight Committee (
Section 3.1) and subject to its
approval before final publication.
These responsibilities are defined below, although the specific work
items under them are a matter for the actual employment contract and
its Statement of Work (SOW).
The IAB maintain its chartered responsibility as defined in
[
RFC2850]. More details on the oversight by the IAB via the RFC
Series Oversight Committee (RSOC) can be found in
Section 3.1. For
example, the RSE does not have the direct authority to hire or fire
RFC Editor contractors or personnel.
2.1. RFC Series Editor
The RFC Series Editor is the individual with overall responsibility
for the quality, continuity, and evolution of the RFC Series.
The RSE is appointed by the IAB, but formally hired by the IETF LLC.
The IAB delegates the direct oversight over the RSE to the RSOC,
which it appoints.
The RSE is expected to cooperate closely with the IETF LLC and the
stream managers.
2.1.1. Strategic Leadership and Management of the Publication and
Production Functions
With respect to the RFC Publisher and Production Center functions,
the RSE provides input to the IETF LLC budget, SOWs, and manages
vendor selection processes. The RSE performs annual reviews of the
RFC Production Center and Publisher function, which are then provided
to the RSOC, the IETF LLC, and the community. Normally, private
financial details would not be included in a public version unless
the IETF LLC concludes it is necessary to make such information
public.
The RSE is responsible for the performance of the RFC Production
Center and Publisher. The RSE is responsible for issues that go
beyond the RFC Production Center or Publisher functions, such as
cross-stream coordination of priorities. Issues that require changes
to the budget or contracts shall be brought to the attention of the
IETF LLC by the RSE.
The RSE is also responsible for creating documentation and structures
that will allow for continuity of the RFC Series in the face of
changes in contracts and personnel.
Vendor selection for the RFC Production Center and Publisher
functions is done in cooperation with the streams and under final
authority of the IETF LLC. Details on this process can be found in
Section 4.1.
2.1.2. Representation of the RFC Series
The RSE is the primary representative of the RFC Series. This
representation is important both internally, relative to the IETF,
and externally.
2.1.2.1. Representation to the IETF
The RSE is the primary point of contact to the IETF on matters
relating to the RFC Series in general, or policy matters relating to
specific documents. Issues of practical details in the processing of
specific documents are generally worked through directly with the RFC
Production Center staff.
This includes providing suitable reports to the community at large,
providing email contact for policy questions and inputs, and enabling
and participating in suitable on-line forums for discussion of issues
related to the RFC Series.
Due to the history and nature of the interaction between the RSE and
the IETF, certain principles, described in the following subsections,
must be understood and adhered to by the RSE in his or her
interactions with the community. These apply to the representation
function, as well as to the leadership the RSE provides for
production and series development.
The vast majority of Internet technical community work is led,
initiated, and done by community volunteers, including oversight,
policy making, and direct production of, for example, many software
tools. The RSE, while not a volunteer, is dependent upon these
volunteer participants. Also, the spirit of the community is heavily
focused on and draws from these volunteers. As such, the RSE needs
to support the vitality and effectiveness of volunteer participation.
All decisions are to be made in the overall interest of the broader
Internet community. The RSE is responsible for identifying
materially concerned interest groups within the Internet community
and reaching out to them. Those interest groups include at least the
IETF community, the IRTF community, the network research community,
and the network operations community. Other interest groups might
also be materially interested.
The RSE must consult with the community on policy issues. The RSE
works with the community to achieve policy that meets the overall
quality, continuity, and evolution goals the RSE is charged with
meeting. As described in
Section 3.1, the RSE reports the results of
such interactions to the RSOC, including a description of the
outreach efforts and the specific recommendations on policy. This
enables the RSOC to provide the oversight the IAB is required to
apply, as well as to confirm that the Internet community has been
properly consulted and considered in making policy.
2.1.2.2. External Representation
From time to time, individuals or organizations external to the IETF
need a contact person to talk to about the RFC Series. The RSE, or
the RSE's designate, serves this role.
Over time, the RSE should determine what, if any, means should be
employed to increase end-user awareness of the series, to reinforce
the stature of the series, and to provide the contact point for
outside parties seeking information on the series or the Editor.
2.1.3. Development of RFC Production and Publication
Closely related to providing strategic leadership and management to
the RFC Production Center and Publisher functions is the need to
develop and improve those functions. The RSE is responsible for
ensuring that such ongoing development takes place.
This effort must include the dimensions of document quality,
timeliness of production, and accessibility of results. It must also
specifically take into account issues raised by the IETF community,
including all the streams feeding into the RFC Editor function.
2.1.4. Development of the RFC Series
In order to develop the RFC Series, the RSE is expected to develop a
relationship with the Internet technical community. The Editor is
expected to engage with the Internet technical community in a process
of articulating and refining a vision for the series and its
continuous evolution. The RSE is also expected to engage other users
of the RFC Series, in particular, the consumers of these documents,
such as those people who use them to specify products, write code,
test behaviors, or other related activities.
Concretely:
The RSE is responsible for the coordination of discussion on
series evolution among the series' stream participants and the
broader Internet technical community.
In time, the RSE is expected to develop and refine a vision for
the RFC Series, including examining:
- The RFC Series, as it continues to evolve. The RSE is expected
to take a broad view and look for the best ways to evolve the
series for the benefit of the entire Internet community. As
such, the RSE may even consider evolution beyond the historical
'by engineers for engineers' emphasis; and
- Its publication-technical environment, by looking at whether it
should be slowly changing in terms of publishing and archiving
techniques -- particularly to better serve the communities that
produce and depend on the RFC Series. For example, all of
those communities have been slowly changing to include a
significant population of multi-lingual individuals or non-
native speakers of English. Another example is that some of
these constituencies also have shifted to include significant
groups whose primary focus is on the constraints and
consequences of network engineering, rather than a primary
interest in the engineering issues themselves.
For this type of responsibility, the RSE cooperates closely with the
community, and operates under oversight of the RSOC: thus,
ultimately, under oversight of the IAB.
On average, the job is expected to take half of a full-time
equivalent position (FTE, thus approximately 20 hrs per week), with
the workload per week nearing full time during IETF weeks. In
addition, the job is expected to take more than 20 hours per week in
the first few months of the engagement and when involved in special
projects.
2.1.6. Qualifications
The RFC Series Editor is a senior technology professional. The
following qualifications are desired:
1. Strategic leadership and management experience fulfilling the
requirements outlined in this document, the many aspects of this
role, and the coordination of the overall RFC Editor process.
2. Good understanding of the English language and technical
terminology related to the Internet.
3. Good communication skills.
4. Experience with editorial processes.
5. Ability to develop strong understanding of the IETF and RFC
process.
6. Independent worker.
7. Willingness to, and availability for, travel.
8. The ability to work effectively in a multi-actor and matrixed
environment with divided authority and responsibility similar to
that described in this document.
9. Experience with and ability to participate in, and manage,
activities by email and teleconferences, not just face-to-face
interactions.
10. Demonstrated experience in strategic planning and the management
of entire operations.
11. Experience as an RFC author.
2.1.7. Conflict of Interest
The RSE is expected to avoid even the appearance of conflict of
interest or judgment in performing these roles. To ensure this, the
RSE will be subject to a conflict of interest policy established by
the IETF LLC.
2.2. RFC Production Center
The RFC Production Center function is performed by a paid contractor,
and the contractor's responsibilities include the following:
1. Editing inputs from all RFC streams to comply with the RFC Style
Manual, under the direction of the RSE;
2. Creating records of edits performed on documents;
3. Identifying where editorial changes might have technical impact
and seeking necessary clarification;
4. Engaging in dialog with authors, document shepherds, IANA, and/
or stream-dependent contacts when clarification is needed;
5. Creating records of dialog with document authors;
6. Requesting advice from the RFC Series Editor as needed;
7. Providing suggestions to the RFC Series Editor as needed;
8. Providing sufficient resources to support reviews of RFC
Publisher performance by the RFC Series Editor and external
reviews of the RFC Editor function initiated by the IAB or IETF
LLC;
9. Coordinating with IANA to ensure correct documentation of IANA-
performed protocol registry actions;
10. Assigning RFC numbers;
11. Establishing publication readiness of each document through
communication with the authors, document shepherds, IANA, and/or
stream-dependent contacts, and, if needed, with the RFC Series
Editor;
12. Forwarding documents that are ready for publication to the RFC
Publisher;
13. Forwarding records of edits and author dialog to the RFC
Publisher so these can be preserved;
14. Liaising with the streams as needed.
All these activities will be done under the general direction, but
not day-to-day management, of the RSE and need some level of
coordination with various submission streams and the RSE.
The RFC Production Center contractor is to be selected through an
IETF LLC Request for Proposal (RFP) process as described in
Section 4.1.
2.3. RFC Publisher
The RFC Publisher responsibilities include the following:
1. Announcing and providing on-line access to RFCs.
2. Providing an on-line system to submit RFC Errata.
3. Providing on-line access to approved RFC Errata.
4. Providing backups.
5. Providing storage and preservation of records.
6. Authenticating RFCs for legal proceedings.
All these activities will be done under the general direction, but
not day-to-day management, of the RSE and need some level of
coordination with various submission streams and the RSE.
The RFC Publisher contractor is to be selected through an IETF LLC
RFP process as described in
Section 4.1.
3. Committees
3.1. RFC Series Oversight Committee (RSOC)
The IAB is responsible for the oversight of the RFC Series and acts
as a body for final conflict resolution, including the process
described in
Section 4.3.
In order to provide continuity over periods longer than the NomCom
appointment cycle [
RFC8713] and assure that oversight includes
suitable subject matter expertise, the IAB will establish a group
that implements oversight for the IAB, the RFC Series Oversight
Committee (RSOC).
The RSOC will act with authority delegated from the IAB: in general,
it will be the RSOC that will approve consensus policy and vision
documents as developed by the RSE in collaboration with the
community. While it is expected that the IAB will exercise due
diligence in its supervision of the RSOC, the RSOC should be allowed
the latitude to do its job without undue interference from the IAB.
Therefore, it is expected that the IAB will accord RSOC reports and
recommendations the benefit of the doubt.
For all decisions that affect the RSE individually (e.g., hiring and
firing), the RSOC prepares recommendations for the IAB. The final
recommendation to the IETF LLC is the responsibility of the IAB,
after discussion with RSOC on the recommendations. For instance the
RSOC would do the following:
* perform annual reviews of the RSE and report the result of these
reviews to the IAB.
* manage RSE candidate selection and advise the IAB on candidate
appointment (in other words, select the RSE subject to IAB
approval).
RSOC members are expected to recognize potential conflicts of
interest and behave accordingly.
For the actual recruitment and selection of the RSE, the RSOC will
propose a budget for the search process. It will work with the IETF
LLC to refine that budget and develop remuneration criteria and an
employment agreement or contracting plans, as appropriate.
The RSOC will be responsible for ensuring that the RFC Series is run
in a transparent and accountable manner.
The RSOC shall develop and publish its own rules of order.
The initial RSOC was charged with designing and executing a
solicitation, search, and selection process for the first actual (not
transitional or "acting") RSE appointment. That process involved
iteration on this and related documents and evaluation of various
strategies and options. During the creation of what became
[
RFC6635], it was expected that the RSOC would describe the process
it ultimately selected to the community. The RSOC did involve the
community in interim considerations when that was likely to be of
value. Following completion of the selection process, the RSOC will
determine the best way to share information learned and experience
gained with the community and determine how to best preserve that
information for future use.
3.1.1. RSOC Composition
The RSOC will operate under the authority of the IAB, with the IAB
retaining final responsibility. The IAB will delegate authority and
responsibility to the RSOC as appropriate and as RSOC and RSE
relationships evolve. The RSOC will include people who are not
current IAB members. Currently, this is aligned with the IAB program
structure. The IAB will designate the membership of the RSOC with
the following goals: preserving effective stability; keeping it small
enough to be effective, and keeping it large enough to provide
general Internet community expertise, specific IETF expertise,
publication expertise, and stream expertise. Members serve at the
pleasure of the IAB and are expected to bring a balance between
short- and long-term perspectives. Specific input about, and
recommendations of, members will be sought from the streams, the IETF
LLC, and the RSE.
In addition to the members from outside of the IAB appointed to the
RSOC, IAB members may participate as full members of the RSOC. Under
most circumstances, there will be a specific individual IAB member
appointed by the IAB as the program lead, who will be a full member
of the RSOC. This member's role is distinct from any RSOC-internal
organizational roles, such as would be created by the RSOC choosing
to appoint a chair from among its members. Other IAB members may
choose to be full members of the RSOC, with the consent of the IAB.
This consent is primarily concerned with avoiding overpopulating the
RSOC and providing it with relatively stable membership, which will
work best if it is not too large a committee.
The IETF LLC will appoint an individual to serve as its liaison to
the RSOC. The RSE and the IETF LLC Liaison will serve as non-voting
ex officio members of the RSOC. Either or both can be excluded from
its discussions if necessary.
4. Administrative Implementation
The exact implementation of the administrative and contractual
activities described here are a responsibility of the IETF
Administration Limited Liability Company [
RFC8711] in cooperation
with the RFC Series Editor. The authority structure is described in
Figure 2.
+----------------+ +----------------+
| | | |
| IAB | | IETF LLC |
| | | |
+==========+-----+ +-+--------------+
| | .
| RSOC | .
| | .
+----+-----+ .
| .
| .
| ...................
| . .
+--------V---V----+ .
| | .
| RFC | .
| Series | .
| Editor | .
| | .
+--------+--------+ .
| .
| .................
| . .
+--+----------------+ .
| . | .
| . | .
+---V-----V--+ +--V----V---+
| RFC | | RFC |
| Production | | Publisher |
| Center | | |
+------------+ +-----------+
Legend:
------- IAB RFC Series Oversight
....... IETF LLC Contract/Budget Oversight
Figure 2: Authority Structure of the RFC Series
4.1. Vendor Selection for the Production and Publisher Functions
As stated earlier, vendor selection is done in cooperation with the
streams and under the final authority of the IETF LLC.
The RSE owns and develops the work definition (the SOW) and
participates in the IETF LLC vendor selection process. The work
definition is created within the IETF LLC budget and takes into
account the stream managers and community input.
The process to select and contract for an RFC Production Center, RFC
Publisher, and other RFC-related services, is as follows:
* The IETF LLC establishes the contract process, including the steps
necessary to issue an RFP when necessary, the timing, and the
contracting procedures.
* The IETF LLC establishes the Selection Committee, which will
consist of the RSE, the IETF LLC Executive Director, and other
members selected by the RSOC and the IETF LLC. The Committee
shall be chaired by the RSE.
* The Selection Committee selects the vendor, subject to the
successful negotiation of a contract approved by the IETF LLC. In
the event that a contract cannot be reached, the matter shall be
referred to the Selection Committee for further action.
* The Selection Committee may select an RFC Publisher either through
the IETF LLC RFP process or, at the Committee's option, the
Committee may select the IETF Secretariat to provide RFC Publisher
services, subject to negotiations in accordance with the IETF LLC
procedures.
The expenses discussed in this document are not new expenses. They
have been and remain part of the IETF Administration Limited
Liability Company [
RFC8711] budget.
The RFC Series portion of the IETF LLC budget shall include funding
to support the RSE, RFC Production Center, RFC Publisher, and the
Independent Stream.
The IETF LLC has the responsibility to approve the total RFC Editor
budget (and the authority to deny it). The RSE must work within the
IETF LLC budgetary process.
The RSE is responsible for managing the RFC Editor function to
operate within those budgets. If production needs change, the RSE is
responsible for working with the Production Center, and where
appropriate, other RFC Editor component institutions, relevant
streams, and/or the RSOC to determine what the correct response
should be. If they agree that a budgetary change is needed, that
decision needs to be taken to the IETF LLC.
4.3. Disagreements among Entities Related to the RFC Editor
The RFC Series Editor and the RFC Production Center and Publisher
facilities work with the various streams to produce RFCs.
Disagreements may arise between these entities during the execution
of the RFC Editor operations. In particular, different streams may
disagree with each other, or disagree with the RFC Editor function.
Potentially, even the RSOC or the IETF LLC could find themselves in
disagreement with some aspect of the RFC Editor operations. Note
that disagreements between an author and the RFC Production Center
are not cross-entity issues, and they are to be resolved by the RSE,
in accordance with the rest of this document.
If such cross-entity disagreements arise, the community would
generally hope that they can be resolved politely and directly.
However, this is not always possible. At that point, any relevant
party would first formally request a review and reconsideration of
the decision. If the party still disagrees after the
reconsideration, that party may ask the RSE to decide or, especially
if the RSE is involved, the party may ask the IAB Chair (for a
technical or procedural matter) to mediate or appoint a mediator to
aid in the discussions, although he or she not is obligated to do so.
All parties should work informally and in good faith to reach a
mutually agreeable conclusion. As noted below, any such issues that
involve contractual matters must be brought to the attention of the
IETF LLC. If the IAB Chair is asked to assist in resolving the
matter, the Chair may ask for advice or seek assistance from anyone
the Chair deems helpful. The Chair may also alert any appropriate
individuals or organizations to the existence of the issue.
If such a conclusion is not possible through the above less formal
processes, then the matter must be registered with the RFC Series
Oversight Committee. The RSOC may choose to offer advice to the RSE
or more general advice to the parties involved and may ask the RSE to
defer a decision until it formulates its advice. However, if a
timely decision cannot be reached through discussion, mediation, and
mutual agreement, the RSE is expected to make whatever decisions are
needed to ensure the smooth operation of the RFC Editor function;
those decisions are final.
The RSE may make final decisions unilaterally only to assure the
functioning of the process, and only while there is an evaluation of
current policies to determine whether they are appropriately
implemented in the decision or need adjustment. In particular, it
should be noted that final decisions about the technical content of
individual documents are the exclusive responsibility of the stream
approvers from which those documents originate, as shown in the
illustration in Figure 1.
If informal agreements cannot be reached, then formal RSOC review and
decision making may be required. If so, the RSE must present the
issues involved to the community so that the community is aware of
the situation. The RSE will then report the issue to the RSOC for
formal resolution by the RSOC with confirmation by the IAB in its
oversight capacity.
IAB and community discussion of any patterns of disputes are expected
to inform future changes to RFC Series policies, including possible
updates to this document.
4.4. Issues with Contractual Impact
If a disagreement or decision has immediate or future contractual
consequences, it falls under [
RFC8711]. If this happens, the RSE
must identify the issue and provide advice to the IETF LLC.
Additionally, if the RSOC has also developed advice, it should
forward that advice to the IETF LLC.
The IETF LLC must notify the RSOC and IAB regarding the action it
concludes is required to resolve the issue based on its applicable
procedures and provisions in the relevant contracts.
5. IANA Considerations
This document defines several functions within the overall RFC Editor
structure, and it places the responsibility for coordination of
registry value assignments with the RFC Production Center. The IETF
LLC will facilitate the establishment of the relationship between the
RFC Production Center and IANA.
This document does not create a new registry nor does it register any
values in existing registries, and no IANA action is required.
6. Security Considerations
The same security considerations as those in [
RFC8729] apply. The
processes for the publication of documents must prevent the
introduction of unapproved changes. Since the RFC Editor maintains
the index of publications, sufficient security must be in place to
prevent these published documents from being changed by external
parties. The archive of RFC documents, any source documents needed
to recreate the RFC documents, and any associated original documents
(such as lists of errata, tools, and, for some early items, originals
that are not machine readable) need to be secured against any kind of
data storage failure.
The IETF LLC should take these security considerations into account
during the implementation and enforcement of the RFC Editor component
contracts.
7. References
7.1. Normative References
[
RFC2850] Internet Architecture Board and B. Carpenter, Ed.,
"Charter of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB)",
BCP 39,
RFC 2850, DOI 10.17487/
RFC2850, May 2000,
<
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2850>.
[
RFC6635] Kolkman, O., Ed., Halpern, J., Ed., and IAB, "RFC Editor
Model (Version 2)",
RFC 6635, DOI 10.17487/
RFC6635, June
2012, <
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6635>.
[
RFC8711] Haberman, B., Hall, J., and J. Livingood, "Structure of
the IETF Administrative Support Activity, Version 2.0",
BCP 101,
RFC 8711, DOI 10.17487/
RFC8711, February 2020,
<
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8711>.
[
RFC8729] Housley, R., Ed. and L. Daigle, Ed., "The RFC Series and
RFC Editor",
RFC 8729, DOI 10.17487/
RFC8729, February
2020, <
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8729>.
7.2. Informative References
[
RFC5620] Kolkman, O., Ed. and IAB, "RFC Editor Model (Version 1)",
RFC 5620, DOI 10.17487/
RFC5620, August 2009,
<
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5620>.
[
RFC8713] Kucherawy, M., Ed., Hinden, R., Ed., and J. Livingood,
Ed., "IAB, IESG, IETF Trust, and IETF LLC Selection,
Confirmation, and Recall Process: Operation of the IETF
Nominating and Recall Committees", BCP 10,
RFC 8713,
DOI 10.17487/
RFC8713, February 2020,
<
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8713>.
IAB Members at the Time of Approval
Internet Architecture Board Members at the time this document was
approved for publication were:
Jari Arkko
Alissa Cooper
Stephen Farrell
Wes Hardaker
Ted Hardie
Christian Huitema
Zhenbin Li
Erik Nordmark
Mark Nottingham
Melinda Shore
Jeff Tantsura
Martin Thomson
Brian Trammell
Acknowledgments
The RFC Editor model was conceived and discussed in hallways and on
mailing lists. The first iteration of the text on which this
document is based was first written by Leslie Daigle, Russ Housley,
and Ray Pelletier. In addition to the members of the IAOC and IAB in
conjunction with those roles, major and minor contributions were made
by (in alphabetical order): Bob Braden, Brian Carpenter, Sandy
Ginoza, Joel M. Halpern, Alfred Hoenes, Paul Hoffman, John Klensin,
Subramanian Moonesamy, Alice Russo, and Jim Schaad.
The IAOC members at the time
RFC 6635 was approved were (in
alphabetical order): Bernard Aboba (ex officio), Eric Burger, Dave
Crocker, Marshall Eubanks, Bob Hinden, Russ Housley (ex officio), Ole
Jacobsen, Ray Pelletier (non-voting), and Lynn St. Amour (ex
officio).
The IAB members at the time the initial RFC Editor model (Version 1,
RFC 5620) was approved were (in alphabetical order): Loa Andersson,
Gonzalo Camarillo, Stuart Cheshire, Russ Housley, Olaf Kolkman,
Gregory Lebovitz, Barry Leiba, Kurtis Lindqvist, Andrew Malis, Danny
McPherson, David Oran, Dave Thaler, and Lixia Zhang. In addition,
the IAB included two ex officio members: Dow Street, who was serving
as the IAB Executive Director, and Aaron Falk, who was serving as the
IRTF Chair.
The IAB members at the time
RFC 6635 was approved were (in
alphabetical order): Bernard Aboba, Ross Callon, Alissa Cooper,
Spencer Dawkins, Joel Halpern, Russ Housley, David Kessens, Olaf
Kolkman, Danny McPherson, Jon Peterson, Andrei Robachevsky, Dave
Thaler, and Hannes Tschofenig. In addition, at the time of approval
of
RFC 6635, the IAB included two ex officio members: Mary Barnes who
was serving as the IAB Executive Director, and Lars Eggert, who was
serving as the IRTF Chair.
Bob Hinden served as document editor for this RFC to align it with
the IASA 2.0 structure.
Authors' Addresses
Olaf Kolkman (editor)
Internet Society
Email: kolkman@isoc.org
Joel M. Halpern (editor)
Ericsson
Email: joel.halpern@ericsson.com
Robert M. Hinden (editor)
Check Point Software
959 Skyway Road
San Carlos, CA 94070
United States of America