I agree with Paul- to a point. But first, CONGRATULATIONS to the httpbis working group, Martin Thomson, and Mark Nottingham in particular. These people have worked quite hard to produce a specification. There was some discussion in the working group about including various versioning bits in various places. At the end of the day, my recollection was that the group chose not to include versioning WITHIN the protocol because they would prefer to rev the protocol instead. After all, ALPN ids are cheap. While I doubt that any of the current developers really want to think past HTTP2 today, there are built-in deployment assumptions in every protocol, and on-the-ground considerations will dictate when and how to update. The developers in the WG today are in the best position to make this call, and keeping them together in some form would be useful (be that a WG, a mailing list, or some other construct). Eliot On 2/19/15 10:32 AM, Paul Hoffman wrote: > On Feb 19, 2015, at 10:09 AM, Sean Turner <turners@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On Feb 19, 2015, at 10:16, Michael Richardson <mcr+ietf@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >>> I propose that this document skip PS, and go straight to Internet Standard to >>> accurately reflect the status of this document. >> Six months after it gets an RFC# I’d completely support this. > Good god, no. HTTP/2 is quite complex, and it is likely that at least some parts will turn out to be non-optimal. Please give the HTTPBIS WG at least a year to shake out the protocol after wide deployment and constant use. Rushing the WG just so we can feel good about slapping a near-meaningless feel-good label on the spec is not a good process. > > Counter-proposal: we let the people closest to the protocol, the WG that created it, decide when to ask for STD status. > > --Paul Hoffman > >
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature