On 4 Jun 2016, at 13:42, Barry Leiba wrote:
I just find it fascinating and disturbing that at least two respected
IETF participants think it's perfectly fine to leave stale references
around, especially when it's trivially easy to fix them -- in the vast
majority of cases taking but one sentence in the IANA Considerations.
I'm simply flabbergasted. This isn't "useless hoops"; it's simple and
sensible updates that rarely take any effort.
I have to agree with Barry on this one.
RFCs and IANA registries are for the readers, not the authors. I don't understand the objection to asking the author to do a little more work, to save work for the reader. Typically there are many more readers than authors (one hopes). And readers commonly don't pay attention to all that "updated by" and "obsoleted by" stuff at the top of the RFC. In general, it's in the best interest of readers for IANA to point to the most up-to-date specification for a code point.
I'm okay if that guidance is not strict, that is along the lines of "it's a good idea..." or "It is helpful to readers if..."
If people think that readers don't use the registries to find the specs, that opens up much bigger questions about required author hoop-jumping.
Ben.
Barry
On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 8:13 PM, Stephen Farrell
stephen.farrell@xxxxxxxxx wrote:On 04/06/16 00:35, Brian E Carpenter wrote:
That's not realistic. If IANA refers to RFC822, and the programmer has a
copy of RFC822 on her disk, that's what she will follow, because RFC text
never changes and does not say "I am obsolete".I don't get how that applies.
Do we think there's a programmer who will start from IANA and
not notice that there are references to 5322 and 2822? If
there is such a peculiarly myopic programmer, their code will
likely be crap anyway won't it?Or do we think there's a programmer who'll start from RFC822
and not think "hey, this thing's 43 years old - I wonder did
anything happen in the meantime?" ;-)And anyway the current facts are that folks will much more
likely depend on stack overflow, not IANA, so the entire question
of the best reference is pretty much close to moot.IMO the only reason any of this matters is when there's a subtle
difference between the RFCyyyy and RFCxxxx versions of the same
registered thing and where there's significantly improved text in
RFCxxxx. In which case... we don't have a problem - RFCxxxx has
solved it for us by definition.All that's to say that there is no need to, and only a downside
to, forcing document authors to jump through more useless hoops.Cheers,
S.