On Mon, Jan 19, 2015 at 11:55 PM, joel jaeggli <joelja@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 1/19/15 6:55 PM, Phillip Hallam-Baker wrote:
> Before we go too far with this, it just occurred to me that implicit in
> the discussion to date has been the notion that an AD spends most of
> their time managing WGs.
There's an enormous fraction of this activity that is devoted to
spherding documents through post-working group stages, reviewing other
documents prior to the telechat's that punctuate iesg review. and
triaging documents where there are seriously problems. Those are not
by-in-large tied up in working group management.
Absolutely. But the point I was making is that every draft has security implications while an application draft that has routing implications almost certainly needs slapping with something.
Sorry to sound like a broken record on this, but I think we are making a lot of work for ourselves by not having a reference architecture. This creates work at the WG level as each WG goes off and makes its own interpretation of the architectural principles. Then the IESG starts with a set of divergent documents and tries to make sense of them.
I have been trying to do write a reference architecture to describe it to non Internet folk and I am rather surprised to find that the Internet architecture as currently deployed can be described in a reasonably compact and clean model[*] without resorting to calling firewalls, NAT, VPN, SDN etc. blasphemies.
It is counterproductive to have a WG spend time deciding how to apply JSON, etc. and then have those decisions overridden at the IESG level to get consistency between specs. I want the consistency, just at a lower human cost.
One approach that might help would be for the IESG to maintain a wiki with prior feedback from ADs sorted into some form of structure. This would then serve as precedent folk could look up. Another pathology I really dislike is when certain individuals wait till the AD is out of the room and then tell the WG what the IESG is going to demand (which is frequently rather different to what they actually say). So basically the same thing as minutes but structured somehow.
[*] About the same number of elements as the standard model of particle physics.