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- N-1-1-040.20 Internet Engineering Task Force Report, by Phillip
- Gross*, <pgross@NRI.Reston.VA.US>
-
-
- This is the first report on the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
- in an Internet Society publication. Therefore, I'd like to start by
- saying how exciting it is for the Internet Engineering Steering Group
- (IESG) and IETF to be part of the formation of a new professional
- society concerned with something very important to us all -- the
- global communications network called the Internet. The IETF has
- played a key role under the Internet Activities Board (IAB) in many
- important Internet development activities. We all look forward to
- working within the Internet Society in the future.
-
- Since this is an initial report on the IETF, I feel it is important to
- give an overview of the IETF, how it operates, and how to become more
- involved in the open IETF activities. I will also give a brief report
- on the most recent IETF meeting, which took place in November 1991 in
- Santa Fe New Mexico, USA.
-
- IETF Overview
-
- The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is the protocol
- engineering, development, and standardization arm of the Internet
- Architecture Board (IAB). The IETF began in January 1986 as a forum
- for technical coordination by contractors for the U.S. Defense
- Advanced Projects Agency (DARPA), working on the ARPANET, U.S. Defense
- Data Network (DDN), and the Internet core gateway system. Since that
- time, the IETF has grown into a large open international community of
- network designers, operators, vendors, and researchers concerned with
- the evolution of the Internet protocol architecture and the smooth
- operation of the Internet.
-
- The IETF mission includes:
-
- 1. Identifying and proposing solutions to pressing operational and
- technical problems in the Internet,
-
- 2. Specifying the development (or usage) of protocols and the
- near-term architecture to solve such technical problems for
- the Internet,
-
- 3. Making recommendations to the IAB regarding standardization
- of protocols and protocol usage in the Internet,
-
- 4. Facilitating technology transfer from the Internet Research Task
- Force to the wider Internet community, and
-
- 5. Providing a forum for the exchange of information within the
- Internet community between vendors, users, researchers, agency
- contractors, and network managers.
-
- Technical activity on any specific topic in the IETF is addressed
- within Working Groups (WG). All Working Groups are organized roughly by
- function into nine technical areas. Each is led by an Area Director
- who has primary responsibility for that one area of IETF activity.
- Together with the Chair of the IETF, these nine technical Directors
- (plus, a director for Standards Procedures) compose the IESG.
-
- The current Areas and Directors, which compose the IESG, are:
-
- IETF and IESG Chair: Phill Gross/ANS
-
- Applications: Russ Hobby/UC-Davis
- Internet: Noel Chiappa/Consultant
- Philip Almquist/Consultant
- Network Management: James Davin/ MIT
- OSI Integration: David Piscitello/Bellcore
- Ross Callon/DEC (retiring)
- Operational Requirements: Susan Estrada/CERFnet
- Phill Gross/ANS
- Bernard Stockman/Nordunet
- Routing: Robert Hinden/BBN
- Security: Steve Crocker/TIS
- Transport and Services Dave Borman/Cray Research
- User Services Joyce Reynolds/ISI
- Standards Management: Dave Crocker/DEC
-
- The IETF has a secretariat, headquartered at the Corporation for
- National Research Initiatives in Reston Virginia, with the following
- staff:
-
- IETF Executive Director: Steve Coya
- IESG Secretary: Greg Vaudreuil
- IETF Coordination: Megan Davies
- Administrative Support: Debra Legare
- Cynthia Clark
-
- The Working Groups conduct business during plenary meetings of the
- IETF, during meetings outside of the IETF, and via electronic mail on
- mailing lists established for each group.
-
- The IETF holds 4.5 day plenary sessions three times a year. These
- plenary meetings are composed of Working Group sessions, technical
- presentations, network status briefings, WG reporting, and an open
- IESG meeting. A Proceeding of each IETF plenary is published, which
- includes reports from each area, each WG, and each technical
- presentation. The Proceedings includes a summary of all current
- standardization activities.
-
- Mailing Lists
-
- Much of the daily work of the IETF is conducted on electronic mailing
- lists. There are mailing lists for each of the Working Groups, as
- well as a general IETF list. Mail on the Working Group mailing lists
- is expected to be technically relevant to the Working Groups supported
- by that list.
-
- To join a mailing list, send a request to the associated request list.
- All internet mailing lists have a companion "-request" list. Send
- requests to join a list to <listname>-request@<listhost>.
-
- Information and logistics about upcoming meetings of the IETF are
- distributed on the general IETF mailing list. For general inquiries
- about the IETF, send a request to ietf-request@isi.edu. An archive of
- mail sent to the IETF list is available for anonymous ftp from the
- directory ~ftp/irg/ietf on venera.isi.edu
-
- On Line IETF Information
-
- The Internet Engineering Task Force maintains up-to-date on-line
- information on all its activities. There is a directory containing
- Internet-Draft documents and a directory containing IETF working group
- information. All this information is available in identical format
- for public access at several locations globally. (See below for
- locations.)
-
- The "IETF" directory contains a general description of the IETF,
- summaries of ongoing working group activities and provides information
- on past and upcoming meetings. The directory generally reflects
- information contained in the most recent IETF Proceedings and Working
- Group Reports.
-
- The "Internet-Drafts" directory makes available for review and comment
- draft documents that will be submitted ultimately to the IAB for
- standardization and/or submitted to the RFC Editor to be considered
- for publishing as an RFC. Comments on Internet-Drafts from the wider
- Internet community (i.e., in addition to those attending the WG
- sessions at the IETF plenaries) are strongly encouraged and should be
- addressed to the responsible person whose name and electronic mail
- addresses are listed on the first page of the respective draft.
-
- The IETF Directory
-
- Below is a list of the files available in the IETF directory and a
- short synopsis of what each file contains.
-
- Files prefixed with a 0 contain information about upcoming meetings.
- Files prefixed with a 1 contain general information about the IETF,
- the working groups, and the internet-drafts.
-
- FILE NAME
-
- 0mtg-agenda the current agenda for the upcoming quarterly IETF
- plenary, which contains what Working Groups will be
- meeting and at what times, and the technical
- presentations and network status reports to be given.
- 0mtg-logistics the announcement for the upcoming quarterly IETF
- plenary, which contains specific information on the
- date/location of the meeting, hotel/airline
- arrangements, meeting site accommodations and travel
- directions.
- 0mtg-rsvp a standardized RSVP form to be used to notify the
- support staff of your plans to attend the upcoming IETF
- meeting.
- 0mtg-schedule current and future meeting dates and sites for IETF
- plenaries.
- 1id-abstracts the internet drafts current on-line in the
- internet-drafts directory.
- 1id-guidelines instructions for authors of internet drafts.
- 1ietf-overview a short description of the IETF, the IESG and how to
- participate.
- 1wg-summary a listing of all current Working Groups, the working
- group chairmen and their email addresses, working group
- mailing list addresses, and, where applicable,
- documentation produced. This file also contains the
- standard acronym for the working groups by which the
- IETF and Internet-Drafts directories are keyed.
-
- Finally, Working Groups have individual files dedicated to their
- particular activities which contain their respective Charters and
- Meeting Reports. Each Working Group file is named in this fashion:
-
- <standard wg abbreviation>-charter.txt
-
- <standard wg abbreviation>-minutes-date.txt
-
- Using FTP, the "dir" or "ls" command will permit you to review what
- Working Group files are available.
-
- The Internet-Drafts Directory
-
- The Internet-Drafts directory contains the current working documents of
- the IETF. These documents are indexed in the file 1id-abstracts.txt in
- the Internet-Drafts directory.
-
- The documents are named according to the following conventions. If the
- document was generated in an IETF working group, the filename is:
-
- draft-ietf-<std wg abrev>-<docname>-<rev>.txt , or .ps
-
- where <std wg abrev> is the working group acronym, <docname> is a very
- short name, and <rev> is the revision number.
-
- If the document was submitted for comment by a non-ietf group or author,
- the filename is:
-
- draft-<org>-<author>-<docname>-<rev>.txt, or .ps
-
- where <org> is the organization sponsoring the work and <author> is
- the author's name.
-
- For more information on writing and installing an Internet-Draft, see
- the file 1id-guidelines, "Guidelines to Authors of Internet-Drafts".
-
- Directory Locations
-
- The directories are maintained primarily at the NSFnet Service Center
- (NNSC). There are several official "shadow" machines which contain the
- IETF and INTERNET-DRAFTS directories in identical format. These
- machines may be more convenient than nnsc.nsf.nsf. (Plus, there are
- numerous "unofficial" sites, that may also be more convenient for
- specific users.)
-
- To access these directories, use FTP. After establishing a connection,
- Login with username ANONYMOUS and password GUEST. When logged in,
- change to the directory of your choice with the following commands:
-
- cd internet-drafts
- cd ietf
-
- Individual files can then be retrieved using the GET command:
-
- get <remote filename> <local filename>
- e.g., get 00README readme.my.copy
-
- IETF Directory Locations
-
- NSF Network Service Center Address: nnsc.nsf.net
-
- The Defense Data Network NIC Address: nic.ddn.mil
-
- Internet-drafts are also available by mail server from this
- machine. For more information mail a request:
- To: service@nic.ddn.mil
- Subject: Help
-
- NIC staff are happy to assist users with any problems that they
- may encounter in the process of obtaining files by FTP or
- "SERVICE". For assistance, phone the NIC hotline at
- 1-800-235-3155 between 6 am and 5 pm Pacific time.
-
- Pacific Rim Address: munnari.oz.au
-
- The Internet-drafts on this machine are stored in Unix
- compressed form (.Z).
-
- Europe Address: nic.nordu.net (192.36.148.17)
-
-
- *Advanced Network and Services
-