Sam, with one small exception, I think we are in complete agreement. The exception is noted below... --On Thursday, 17 May, 2007 15:32 -0400 Sam Hartman <hartmans-ietf@xxxxxxx> wrote: > Right. Here, I don't think the definition is wrong, I just > think the term being defined is wrong. We proposed a > definition for a useful concept. The word we chose (LWSP) > stuck in some places but not in others. IN fact other people > used the same word for a different although related concept. > sufficiently so that the definition we proposed in ABNF is not > the most common definition in our standards. Counting uses in this way so as to determine what is or is not the "most common definition" is as tricky in our environment as counting votes. For the same reason, I'd rather that we avoid it when we can. However, if we do need to count, I think we have to use some sort of system that attributes more weight to documents that use the terminology that have been, effectively, at full standard before some of the specifications that use different definitions were even dreamt of. I don't know how to assign those weights, which, recursively, is why I don't like counting. But I don't think you can count up a handful of recent misuses and then make an inference that the base definition needs to be retired (which you haven't done, but several others have), or even that it is not appropriately "common". > I think that in this instance, the value of future clarity > justifies coming up with a new term that will unambiguously > mean what LWSP means in ABNF today. That term will have to > start at proposed standard. Pragmatically, perhaps yes. But what I keep coming back to is that it appears to me to be perfectly clear and unambiguous "what LWSP means in ABNF today". That is what is written into the spec. As far as I can tell, we are having a discussion about two other things: (1) Other specifications that use the term "LWSP" to refer to something different from what is unambiguously defined in the ABNF spec. (2) Places where people might be tempted to use LWSP but where they have discovered that LWSP is either inappropriate or risky. The second group clearly needs new and appropriate terminology for what they do need and use. The first group is, IMO, just broken. > LWSP will need to continue in ABNF. > > I see a desire to document our operational experience with the > word: many people took this word and used it to mean something > else. Perhaps to avoid confusion you should consider whether > your use of the word is a good idea. I think there is > significant harm in choosing not to document this operational > experience when advancing standards. After all, we both agree > that it is this experience with running code that gives the > IETF value. Again, I have no problems with making carefully-considered comments about use and misuse. I think it is a fine idea as long as those comments do not imply that the misuses are a failure in the base specification. And I think everyone should consider a stopping rule, lest, as I indicated in my deliberately extreme example, we discover that we want to retire, replace, or update "IP" because of some use in the legal community that precedes the use in network protocols by many years. john _______________________________________________ Ietf@xxxxxxxx https://www1.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf