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      protocol which types of systems are intended.Internet Architecture Board Standards Track                     [Page 7]RFC 2300                   Internet Standards                   May 19984.1.  Definitions of Protocol State   Every protocol listed in this document is assigned to a "maturity   level" or STATE of standardization: "standard", "draft standard",   "proposed standard", "experimental", or "historic".   4.1.1.  Standard Protocol      The IESG has established this as an official standard protocol for      the Internet.  These protocols are assigned STD numbers (see RFC-      1311).  These are separated into two groups: (1) IP protocol and      above, protocols that apply to the whole Internet; and (2)      network-specific protocols, generally specifications of how to do      IP on particular types of networks.   4.1.2.  Draft Standard Protocol      The IESG is actively considering this protocol as a possible      Standard Protocol.  Substantial and widespread testing and comment      are desired.  Comments and test results should be submitted to the      IESG.  There is a possibility that changes will be made in a Draft      Standard Protocol before it becomes a Standard Protocol.   4.1.3.  Proposed Standard Protocol      These are protocol proposals that may be considered by the IESG      for standardization in the future.  Implementation and testing by      several groups is desirable.  Revision of the protocol      specification is likely.   4.1.4.  Experimental Protocol      A system should not implement an experimental protocol unless it      is participating in the experiment and has coordinated its use of      the protocol with the developer of the protocol.      Typically, experimental protocols are those that are developed as      part of an ongoing research project not related to an operational      service offering.  While they may be proposed as a service      protocol at a later stage, and thus become proposed standard,      draft standard, and then standard protocols, the designation of a      protocol as experimental may sometimes be meant to suggest that      the protocol, although perhaps mature, is not intended for      operational use.Internet Architecture Board Standards Track                     [Page 8]RFC 2300                   Internet Standards                   May 1998   4.1.5.  Informational Protocol      Protocols developed by other standard organizations, or vendors,      or that are for other reasons outside the purview of the IESG, may      be published as RFCs for the convenience of the Internet community      as informational protocols.   4.1.6.  Historic Protocol      These are protocols that are unlikely to ever become standards in      the Internet either because they have been superseded by later      developments or due to lack of interest.4.2.  Definitions of Protocol Status      This document lists a "requirement level" or STATUS for each      protocol.  The status is one of "required", "recommended",      "elective", "limited use", or "not recommended".   4.2.1.  Required Protocol      A system must implement the required protocols.   4.2.2.  Recommended Protocol      A system should implement the recommended protocols.   4.2.3.  Elective Protocol      A system may or may not implement an elective protocol. The      general notion is that if you are going to do something like this,      you must do exactly this.  There may be several elective protocols      in a general area, for example, there are several electronic mail      protocols, and several routing protocols.   4.2.4.  Limited Use Protocol      These protocols are for use in limited circumstances.  This may be      because of their experimental state, specialized nature, limited      functionality, or historic state.   4.2.5.  Not Recommended Protocol      These protocols are not recommended for general use.  This may be      because of their limited functionality, specialized nature, or      experimental or historic state.Internet Architecture Board Standards Track                     [Page 9]RFC 2300                   Internet Standards                   May 19985.  The Standards Track   This section discusses in more detail the procedures used by the RFC   Editor and the IESG in making decisions about the labeling and   publishing of protocols as standards.5.1.  The RFC Processing Decision Table   Here is the current decision table for processing submissions by the   RFC Editor.  The processing depends on who submitted it, and the   status they want it to have.      +==========================================================+      |**************|               S O U R C E                 |      +==========================================================+      | Desired      |    IAB   |   IESG   |   IRSG   |  Other   |      | Status       |          |          |          |          |      +==========================================================+      |              |          |          |          |          |      | Standard     |  Bogus   |  Publish |  Bogus   |  Bogus   |      | or           |   (2)    |   (1)    |   (2)    |   (2)    |      | Draft        |          |          |          |          |      | Standard     |          |          |          |          |      +--------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+      |              |          |          |          |          |      |              |  Refer   |  Publish |  Refer   |  Refer   |      | Proposed     |   (3)    |   (1)    |   (3)    |   (3)    |      | Standard     |          |          |          |          |      |              |          |          |          |          |      +--------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+      |              |          |          |          |          |      |              |  Notify  |  Publish |  Notify  |  Notify  |      | Experimental |   (4)    |   (1)    |   (4)    |   (4)    |      | Protocol     |          |          |          |          |      |              |          |          |          |          |      +--------------+----------+----------+----------+----------+      |              |          |          |          |          |      | Information  |  Publish |  Publish |Discretion|Discretion|      | or Opinion   |   (1)    |   (1)    |   (5)    |   (5)    |      | Paper        |          |          |          |          |      |              |          |          |          |          |      +==========================================================+      (1) Publish.      (2) Bogus.  Inform the source of the rules.  RFCs specifying          Standard, or Draft Standard must come from the IESG, only.Internet Architecture Board Standards Track                    [Page 10]RFC 2300                   Internet Standards                   May 1998      (3) Refer to an Area Director for review by a WG.  Expect to see          the document again only after approval by the IESG.      (4) Notify both the IESG and IRSG.  If no concerns are raised in          two weeks then do Discretion (5), else RFC Editor to resolve          the concerns or do Refer (3).      (5) RFC Editor's discretion.  The RFC Editor decides if a review          is needed and if so by whom.  RFC Editor decides to publish or          not.   Of course, in all cases the RFC Editor can request or make minor   changes for style, format, and presentation purposes.   The IESG has designated the IESG Secretary as its agent for   forwarding documents with IESG approval and for registering concerns   in response to notifications (4) to the RFC Editor.  Documents from   Area Directors or Working Group Chairs may be considered in the same   way as documents from "other".5.2.  The Standards Track Diagram   There is a part of the STATUS and STATE categorization that is called   the standards track.  Actually, only the changes of state are   significant to the progression along the standards track, though the   status assignments may change as well.   The states illustrated by single line boxes are temporary states,   those illustrated by double line boxes are long term states.  A   protocol will normally be expected to remain in a temporary state for   several months (minimum six months for proposed standard, minimum   four months for draft standard).  A protocol may be in a long term   state for many years.   A protocol may enter the standards track only on the recommendation   of the IESG; and may move from one state to another along the track   only on the recommendation of the IESG.  That is, it takes action by   the IESG to either start a protocol on the track or to move it along.   Generally, as the protocol enters the standards track a decision is   made as to the eventual STATUS, requirement level or applicability   (elective, recommended, or required) the protocol will have, although   a somewhat less stringent current status may be assigned, and it then   is placed in the the proposed standard STATE with that status.  So   the initial placement of a protocol is into state 1.  At any time the   STATUS decision may be revisited.Internet Architecture Board Standards Track                    [Page 11]RFC 2300                   Internet Standards                   May 1998         |         +<----------------------------------------------+         |                                               ^         V    0                                          |    4   +-----------+                                   +===========+   |   enter   |-->----------------+-------------->|experiment |   +-----------+                   |               +=====+=====+                                   |                     |                                   V    1                |                             +-----------+               V                             | proposed  |-------------->+                        +--->+-----+-----+               |                        |          |                     |                        |          V    2                |                        +<---+-----+-----+               V                             | draft std |-------------->+                        +--->+-----+-----+               |                        |          |                     |                        |          V    3                |                        +<---+=====+=====+               V                             | standard  |-------------->+                             +=====+=====+               |                                                         |                                                         V    5                                                   +=====+=====+                                                   | historic  |                                                   +===========+   The transition from proposed standard (1) to draft standard (2) can   only be by action of the IESG and only after the protocol has been   proposed standard (1) for at least six months.   The transition from draft standard (2) to standard (3) can only be by   action of the IESG and only after the protocol has been draft   standard (2) for at least four months.   Occasionally, the decision may be that the protocol is not ready for   standardization and will be assigned to the experimental state (4).   This is off the standards track, and the protocol may be resubmitted   to enter the standards track after further work.  There are other   paths into the experimental and historic states that do not involve   IESG action.   Sometimes one protocol is replaced by another and thus becomes   historic, or it may happen that a protocol on the standards track is   in a sense overtaken by another protocol (or other events) and   becomes historic (state 5).Internet Architecture Board Standards Track                    [Page 12]RFC 2300                   Internet Standards                   May 19986.  The Protocols   Subsection 6.1 lists recent RFCs and other changes.  Subsections 6.2   - 6.10 list the standards in groups by protocol state.6.1.  Recent Changes6.1.1.  New RFCs:      2352 - A Convention For Using Legal Names as Domain Names             This is an information document and does not specify any             level of standard.      2351 - Mapping of Airline Reservation, Ticketing, and Messaging             Traffic over IP             This is an information document and does not specify any             level of standard.      2350 - Not yet issued.      2349 - TFTP Timeout Interval and Transfer Size Options             A Draft Standard protocol.      2348 - TFTP Blocksize Option             A Draft Standard protocol.      2347 - TFTP Option Extension             A Draft Standard protocol.      2346 - Making Postscript and PDF International             This is an information document and does not specify any             level of standard.      2345 - Domain Names and Company Name Retrieval             An Experimental protocol.      2344 - Reverse Tunneling for Mobile IP             A Proposed Standard protocol.Internet Architecture Board Standards Track                    [Page 13]RFC 2300                   Internet Standards                   May 1998      2343 - RTP Payload Format for Bundled MPEG             An Experimental protocol.      2342 - IMAP4 Namespace             A Proposed Standard protocol.      2341 - Cisco Layer Two Forwarding (Protocol) "L2F"             A Historic protocol.      2340 - Not yet issued.      2339 - An Agreement Between the Internet Society, the IETF, and             Sun Microsystems, Inc.  in the matter of NFS V.4 Protocols             This is an information document and does not specify any             level of standard.      2338 - Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol             A Proposed Standard protocol.      2337 - Intra-LIS IP multicast among routers over ATM using Sparse             Mode PIM             An Experimental protocol.      2336 - Not yet issued.      2335 - A Distributed NHRP Service Using SCSP             A Proposed Standard protocol.      2334 - Server Cache Synchronization Protocol (SCSP)             A Proposed Standard protocol.      2333 - NHRP Protocol Applicability Statement

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