IESG Statement on Designating RFCs as Historic

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Date: 27 June 2011

RFC 2026 states the following:

A specification that has been superseded by a more recent specification 
or is for any other reason considered to be obsolete is assigned to the 
"Historic" level.

In practice, the Historic status is not automatically assigned to RFCs 
that have been "obsoleted". That is, when an RFC that contains the 
"Obsoletes: RFC XXXX" header is published the RFC editor does not 
automatically apply the Historic status to the XXXX RFC. Note that in 
some situations this is perfectly acceptable because multiple versions 
of an Internet Standard are permitted to "honor the installed base," as 
per RFC 2026.

If authors wish to change the status of RFCs that are in the obsoletes 
header to Historic, then the authors must include an explicit statement 
for the RFC editor to do so; preferably in the abstract and 
introduction. Further, when an AD sponsors a draft that includes the 
obsoletes header, then the AD should ask the authors whether the authors 
intended to move the RFC(s) listed in the obsoletes header to Historic 
status.

If an author wishes to publish a document directly to Historic status 
the preferred approach is to publish an I-D with the "Intended Status: 
Historic" in the header.

As allowed by RFC 2026 Section 6.4, anyone may request that the IESG 
move an RFC to Historic that is simply and obviously obsolete (and in 
A/S terms "not recommended") without the need to produce an internet-
draft. The IESG can issue Last Calls to request that the RFC in question 
be moved to Historic.

If a document (whatever its intended status) moves another document to 
"Historic" status, the Last-Call should go out saying, "Last 
Call:<draft-blah-blah-blah> to Informational and RFC XXXX to Historic", 
the document should be handled as a Protocol Action on the IESG agenda 
using IESG Protocol Action procedures, and a "Protocol Action" 
announcement should be sent out when the document is approved.

Moving a document to Historic status means that the document is "not 
[an] Internet Standards in any sense," as per RFC 2026. 
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