Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 13:11:23 -1000 From: "Foulk, Scott" <Scott.Foulk@SpirentCom.COM> Message-ID: <8AC36D3167EED41184C800508BD95405033998E1@apollo.adtech-inc.com> | Can anyone on this list tell me how one goes about making changes to | existing RFC's? For instance, adding options to a protocol, or finding a | portion of an RFC that is not applicable due to modern technology advances. You submit an internet-draft containing the change. If the change is relatively minor, the I-D will just contain the change. If it is major, sometimes it is better to rewrite the whole doc (and include a section indicating what actually changed). Then, if there's a working group working in the general area, you ask them to review it. If not, you send a request to the IESG and ask them to advance your draft (and they'll either create a working group, or send the doc for IETF last call, or just tell you that there's no interest in whatever you have proposed). Then assuming the idea isn't killed, you look for comments, update the draft, and cycle until done. Then the IESG gets to approve the doc after an IETF last call, and a new RFC will (mighht) eventually be issued, which will update, or obsolete, the earlier one. kre