On 29 Mar 2017 21:52, "Dave Crocker" <dhc@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
G'day.
The RFC labeling model is to assign a unique serial number to a static document. A new version of a spec gets a new serial number. This basic model has the benefit of both simplicity and predictability.
To this we've added an overlay model, using Obsoletes/ObsoletedBy. This makes it dramatically easier to see that something has been obsoleted and to find its replacement.
However the seeing and the finding are an essentially manual process. One must go to the online older document, then notice the Obsoleted By tag and then click to follow it.
Sometimes it would be helpful for the requester to be able to say 'give me the latest' more easily.
So I'm wondering whether the IETF should consider adding a citation feature for this.
Something like:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc822/latest
would display the contents of:
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5322
by having the fetching system automatically traversing the Obsoleted By links in RFC 822 and then RFC 2822.
Some sort of display banner would flag this, to help the user see that they are getting a different version than they cited.
Thoughts?
d/
--
Dave Crocker
Brandenburg InternetWorking
bbiw.net
It sounds good, for the most part, as a quick and dirty tool (though a 30x redirect would probably be better than displaying the ultimate RFC in-place.)
Out of malign curiosity, what would you expect from: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1738/latest ?
Cheers