Internet-Draft | RFC Formats and Versions | August 2024 |
Hoffman & Flanagan | Expires 7 February 2025 | [Page] |
In order to improve the readability of RFCs while supporting their archivability, the definitive version of the RFC Series transitioned from plain-text ASCII to XML using the RFCXML vocabulary; different publication versions are rendered from that base document. This document describes how RFCs are published.¶
This document obsoletes RFC 7990. This document also updates the stability policy in RFC 9280.¶
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.¶
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.¶
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This Internet-Draft will expire on 7 February 2025.¶
Copyright (c) 2024 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.¶
"RFC Series Format Requirements and Future Development" [RFC6949] discussed the need to improve the display of items such as author names and artwork in RFCs as well as the need to improve the ability of RFCs to be displayed properly on various devices. Based on the discussions with communities of interest, such as the IETF, the RFC Series Editor decided to explore a change to the format of the Series. [RFC7990] was the culmination of that exploration.¶
This document is concerned with the production of RFCs, focusing on the published documents. It does not address any changes to the processes each stream uses to develop and review their submissions (specifically, how Internet-Drafts will be developed). While I-Ds have a similar set of issues and concerns, directly addressing those issues for I-Ds should be discussed within each document stream.¶
The details described in this document are expected to continue to change over time as the community and the RFC Production Center (RPC) gains further experience implementing the policies described here.¶
Implementors of those components are advised to avoid assuming that all such changes will be backwards-compatible.¶
[RFC7990] defined a framework for how RFCs would be published after that document was published, including new formats and a new "canonical format" for archiving RFCs. It talked about "the XML file" as if there would only be one XML file for an RFC because that was the expectation at the time [RFC7990] was published. It also talked about "publication formats" as the versions of HTML, text, and PDF derived from the "canonical format".¶
After extensive experience with publishing RFCs in the RFCXML format [RFC7991], it has been decided that an RFC's XML file can be updated for narrowly limited purposes. This document changes [RFC7990] in significant ways:¶
It defines four terms that replace the use of the term "canonical" and clarifies "format":¶
It defines a policy governing how the RFCXML format changes.¶
It defines a policy for when the definitive version of an RFC can be updated and older definitive versions archived.¶
It defines a policy for when the publication versions of an RFC can be updated and older publication versions archived.¶
When using the new terminology, it is important to note that [RFC7990] used the term "canonical format" to mean two very different things. Quoting from RFC 7990:¶
Canonical format: the authorized, recognized, accepted, and archived version of the document¶
and¶
At the highest level, the changes being made to the RFC format involve breaking away from solely ASCII plain text and moving to a canonical format that includes all the information required for rendering a document into a wide variety of publication formats.¶
This document uses two terms, "definitive version" and "definitive format", for the earlier term "canonical format".¶
Other terminology changes made by this document are the following: - It changes the phrase "xml2rfc version 3" to "RFCXML". - It changes the name of the body that publishes RFCs from "RFC Editor" to "RFC Production Center" (RPC).¶
Historical text from [RFC7990] such as Section 2 ("Problem Statement"), Section 4 ("Overview of the Decision-Making Process"), and Section 10 ("Transition Plan") were purposely omitted from this document. Text from [RFC7990] that repeated what was in other RFCs, particularly Section 8 (Figures and Artwork) and Section 9 (Content and Page Layout) were also removed.¶
Section 7.6 of [RFC9280] currently says:¶
Once published, RFC Series documents are not changed.¶
This document replaces that sentence with:¶
Once published, RFCs may be re-issued, but the semantic content of publication versions shall be preserved to the greatest extent possible.¶
This document also creates a new policy that would exist in Section 7 of [RFC9280]:¶
7.8. Consistency¶
RFCs are copyedited, formatted, published, and may be reissued to maintain a consistent presentation.¶
Section 2.1 and Section 3 in this document are based on this updated policy in [RFC9280].¶
The first RFC to be published following the guidance of the group of RFCs described in [RFC7990] was [RFC8651], published in October 2019. In the time since then, all published RFCs have followed the general plan from [RFC7990].¶
At the highest level, the changes that [RFC7990] made to the RFC format involved breaking away from solely ASCII [RFC20] plain text and moving to a definitive format that includes all the information required for rendering a document into a wide variety of publication formats. The RPC became responsible for more than just the plain-text file and a PDF rendering that was created from the plain text at the time of publication; the RPC now creates the definitive version and three publication versions of the RFC in order to meet the diverse requirements of the community.¶
The final RFCXML file produced by the RPC is the definitive version for RFCs; it holds all the information intended for an RFC. Additional publication versions (HTML, PDF, and plain text) are also published by the RPC. The publication formats are described in Section 3 and fully specified in other RFCs.¶
The definitive version produced by the RPC is the publication version that holds all the information intended for an RFC. The RPC may change the definitive version of an RFC over time (that is, change the XML file), as described in Section 2.1. See [RFC7991] for the original complete description of RFCXML.¶
The XML may contain SVG line art, as originally described in [RFC7996]. That SVG will also appear in the HTML publication versions. The XML may contain non-ASCII characters, as originally described in [RFC7997]. These characters will appear in all the publication versions.¶
The definitive version must contain all information necessary to render the specified publication versions; any question about what was intended in the publication will be answered from this file. It is self-contained with all the semantic content known at publication time. For instance, all features that reference externally defined input are expanded. It does not contain src attributes for <artwork> or <sourcecode> elements. It does not contain comments or processing instructions.¶
RFCs may be re-issued, as described in Section 1.2. Such changes must preserve the semantics expressed in the original RFC. Reasons to make such changes include updates to the RFCXML schema, errors discovered in the XML, and changes to the tooling used to generate the publication versions of the definitive version of the RFC. The RPC will keep a public record of when it re-issues any RFC, and give a short description of its reasoning for each change.¶
It is anticipated that [RFC7991] will be updated. Updates to the RFCXML specification that are applied to existing RFCs should preserve to the greatest extent possible the semantics expressed in the original RFC. The goal of limiting changes only to syntax is to preserve the semantic meaning encoded in the published document.¶
This policy does not require that updates to RFCXML avoid all risk of introducing semantic changes to existing RFCs. Instead, it only requires that such updates consider the potential for semantic changes, take steps to understand the risk of a semantic change (either deliberate or inadvertent), and to limit those risks.¶
The RPC is permitted but not required to re-issue publication versions of an RFC, as described in Section 1.2. In deciding whether to update the publication versions of an RFC, the RPC will take into account both the risk of semantic changes and consistency of the series.¶
XML format errors and better design choices have been discovered by the community since the first RFCs were published using the RFCXML format. When the XML in a definitive version changes, the publication versions may change, even if this might not result in observable differences. Similarly, as production tools change, publication versions may be regenerated to ensure a consistent presentation.¶
The RPC will keep an archived set of all definitive versions of RFCs as well as archived sets of the publication versions for an RFC that were previously published. These archived sets must be available using the same access methods as for current definitive and publication versions. Every archived set shall record the date that a definitive and/or publication version was created or reissued.¶
When the RPC archives definitive and publication versions, it does so in a manner that allows them to be found by people who want the historical (as compared to current) files.¶
This document does not specify how archives are maintained or how archived documents might be located or identified. The methods for storage and access will be determined by the RPC in consultation with the technical community.¶
This document has no IANA considerations.¶
Allowing changes to the definitive versions and publication versions of RFCs introduces risks. A significant risk is that unintended changes could occur in either the definitive version or publication versions of an RFC as a result of an editing error, or may be introduced into a publication version when it is regenerated from the definitive version. This may result in the corruption of a standard, practice, or critical piece of information about a protocol, and harm to the reputation of the RFC series.¶
The RPC is expected to identify, track, and actively mitigate risks introduced by this new policy.¶
Martin Thomson wrote a great deal of the significant text here as part of draft-thomson-rswg-syntax-change.¶
This document has greatly benefited from the input of the RSWG. In particular, Alexis Rossi, Brian Carpenter, Eliot Lear, Jay Daley, Jean Mahoney, John Levine, and Pete Resnick, gave significant input on the early drafts of this document.¶