Information about Ietf Working Group
“IETF” redirects here. For other uses, see IETF (disambiguation).
The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) develops and promotes Internet standards, cooperating closely with the W3C and ISO/IEC standard bodies; and dealing in particular with standards of the TCP/IP and Internet protocol suite. It is an open, standards organization, with no formal membership or membership requirements. All participants and leaders are volunteers, though their work is usually funded by their employers or sponsors; for instance, the current chairperson is funded by VeriSign and the U.S. government's National Security Agency.[1]
It is organized into a large number of working groups and BoFs, each dealing with a specific topic. Each group is intended to complete work on that topic and then shut down. Each working group has an appointed chair (or sometimes several co-chairs), along with a charter that describes its focus, and what and when it is expected to produce.
The working groups are organized into areas by subject matter. Current areas include: Applications, General, Internet, Operations and Management, Real-time Applications and Infrastructure, Routing, Security, and Transport. Each area is overseen by an area director (AD), with most areas having two co-ADs. The ADs are responsible for appointing working group chairs. The area directors, together with the IETF Chair, form the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG), which is responsible for the overall operation of the IETF.
The IETF is formally an activity under the umbrella of the Internet Society. The IETF is overseen by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB), which oversees its external relationships, and relations with the RFC Editor. The IAB is also jointly responsible for the IETF Administrative Oversight Committee (IAOC), which oversees the IETF Administrative Support Activity (IASA), which provides logistical, etc support for the IETF. The IAB also manages the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF), with which the IETF has a number of cross-group relations.
IETF working groups
IETF working groups operate on rough consensus, are open to all who want to participate, have discussions on an open mailing list, and may hold meetings at IETF meetings. Unlike, for instance, IEEE working groups, the mailing list consensus is the final arbiter of decision-making, and there is no voting, but rather a consensus decision-making procedure.An IETF working group is created by the IESG to work on a limited set of tasks described in its charter, and will normally be closed once the work described in its charter is finished. In some cases, the WG will instead have its charter updated to take on new tasks as appropriate.
Details of the IETF working group process can be found in RFC 2418.
IETF Trust
Traditionally, the IETF has not had any legal personality; therefore, its assets (copyright in RFCs, domain names, etc.) have been held on its behalf by either the Internet Society or CNRI. In 2006, an IETF Trust was established to hold these assets, and ISOC and CNRI as settlors transferred these assets to the Trust.The IETF Trust is described in RFC 4371 and the IETF Trust agreement
History
The first IETF meeting was on January 16, 1986, consisting of 21 U.S.-government-funded researchers. Initially, it met quarterly, but from 1991, it has been meeting 3 times a year. Representatives from non-government vendors were invited starting with the fourth IETF meeting, in October of that year. Since that time all IETF meetings have been open to anyone. The majority of the IETF's work is done on mailing lists, however, and meeting attendance is not required for contributors.The initial meetings were very small, with fewer than 35 people in attendance at each of the first five meetings and with the peak attendance in the first 13 meetings of only 120 attendees, at the 12th meeting in January of 1989. It has grown in both participation and scope a great deal since the early 90s; it had a peak attendance of almost 3000 at the December 2000 IETF held in San Diego, CA. Attendance declined with industry restructuring in the early 2000s, and is currently around 1300.
During the early 1990s the IETF changed institutional form from an activity of the U.S. government to an independent, international activity associated with the Internet Society.
The IETF has at times been ascribed nearly magical abilities by the trade press, who assumed its mechanisms were responsible for the success of the Internet because it works on the Internet's core protocols. The reality that it is a group of engineers putting together specifications so that multiple vendors' products can interoperate across networks is considerably more prosaic.
The details of its operations have changed considerably as it has grown, but the basic mechanism remains publication of draft specifications, review and independent testing by participants, and republication. Interoperability is the chief test for IETF specifications becoming standards. Most of its specifications are focused on single protocols rather than tightly-interlocked systems. This has allowed its protocols to be used in many different systems, and its standards are routinely re-used by bodies which create full-fledged architectures (e.g. 3GPP IMS).
Because it relies on volunteers and uses "rough consensus and running code" as its touchstone, it can, however, be slow whenever the number of volunteers is either too small to make progress or so large as to make consensus difficult. For protocols like SMTP, which is used to transport e-mail for a user community in the many hundreds of millions, there is also considerable resistance to any change which is not fully backwards compatible. Work within the IETF on ways to improve its speed is ongoing but, because the number of volunteers with opinions on it is very great, consensus mechanisms on how to improve have been slow to emerge.
List of IETF chairs
The IETF Chair is selected by the NOMCOM process specified in RFC 3777 for a 2-year term, renewable.Before 1993, the IETF Chair was selected by the IAB.
- Mike Corrigan (1986)
- Phill Gross (1986–1994)
- Paul Mockapetris (1994–1996)
- Fred Baker (1996–2001)
- Harald Tveit Alvestrand (2001–2005)
- Brian Carpenter (2005–2007)
- Russ Housley (2007–)[2]
See also
- Request for Comments
- Internet standard
- Standardization
- IETF Working Group
- Internet Engineering Steering Group
- Internet Architecture Board
- Internet Research Task Force
References
1. ^ Q&A: Security top concern for new IETF chair, Carolyn Duffy Marsan, Network World, 26 July 2007, retrieved July 2007
2. ^ IETF Chairs by year. Retrieved on 2007-03-23.
2. ^ IETF Chairs by year. Retrieved on 2007-03-23.
External links
- The official IETF site
- IETF Online Proceedings
- Early IETF Proceedings (note: large pdf files, one for each volume)
- Past Meetings of the IETF
- IETF Chairs
- The Tao of the IETF: details on how IETF is organized (also as HTML)
- IAOC information
- MyIETF Personalized notification service on RFC's and drafts with full archive of old drafts etc.
IETF may refer to:
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- The Internet Engineering Task Force
- The International Engineering & Technology Fair, organized by the Confederation of Indian Industry
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An Internet standard is a specification for an innovative internetworking technology or methodology, which the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) ratified as an open standard after the innovation underwent peer review.
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World Wide Web Consortium
Consortium
Founded October 1994
Founder Tim Berners-Lee
Headquarters MIT/CSAIL in USA
ERCIM in France
Keio University in Japan
and many other offices around the world
Website www.w3.
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Consortium
Founded October 1994
Founder Tim Berners-Lee
Headquarters MIT/CSAIL in USA
ERCIM in France
Keio University in Japan
and many other offices around the world
Website www.w3.
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International Organization for Standardization (Organisation internationale de normalisation), widely known as ISO, is an international standard-setting body composed of representatives from various national standards organizations.
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The International Electrotechnical Commission[1] (IEC) is a not-for-profit, non-governmental international standards organization that prepares and publishes International Standards for all electrical, electronic and related technologies – collectively known
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The Internet protocol suite is the set of communications protocols that implement the protocol stack on which the Internet and most commercial networks run. It has also been referred to as the TCP/IP protocol suite, which is named after two of the most important protocols in it:
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The Internet protocol suite is the set of communications protocols that implement the protocol stack on which the Internet and most commercial networks run. It has also been referred to as the TCP/IP protocol suite, which is named after two of the most important protocols in it:
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A standards organization, also sometimes referred to as a standards body, a standards development organization or SDO (depending on what is being referenced), is any entity whose primary activities are developing, coordinating, promulgating, revising, amending,
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VeriSign, Inc.
Public (NASDAQ: VRSN )
Founded 1995
Headquarters Mountain View, California, USA
Key people CEO: William A. Roper Jr, Chairman: D. James Bidzos
Industry Internet, Communications
Revenue $1.
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Public (NASDAQ: VRSN )
Founded 1995
Headquarters Mountain View, California, USA
Key people CEO: William A. Roper Jr, Chairman: D. James Bidzos
Industry Internet, Communications
Revenue $1.
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National Security Agency/Central Security Service (NSA/CSS) is the United States government's cryptologic organization that was officially established on November 4, 1952. Responsible for the collection and analysis of foreign communications, it coordinates, directs, and performs
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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) develops and promotes Internet standards, cooperating closely with the W3C and ISO/IEC standard bodies; and dealing in particular with standards of the TCP/IP and Internet protocol suite.
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Working Group can mean:
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- Working group, an interdisciplinary group of researchers; or
- Working Group (dogs), kennel club designation for certain purebred dog breeds; or
- The Working Group, an underground resistance group working under the Judenrat
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The Internet Engineering Steering Group is a body composed of the Internet Engineering Task Force Chair and Area Directors:
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- Applications Area (app)
- Internet Area (int)
- Operations & Network Management Area (ops)
- Routing Area (rtg)
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The Internet Society or ISOC is an international organization that promotes Internet use and access. It states that its mission is:
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- to assure the open development, evolution and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people throughout the world.
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The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) is the committee charged with oversight of the technical and engineering development of the Internet by the Internet Society (ISOC).
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Request for Comments (RFC) documents are a series of memoranda encompassing new research, innovations, and methodologies applicable to Internet technologies.
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The IETF Administrative Oversight Committee (IAOC) is part of the support organization for the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
The Committee, whose purpose and organization is given in RFC 4071 (BCP 101), oversees the IETF secretariat and related functions.
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The Committee, whose purpose and organization is given in RFC 4071 (BCP 101), oversees the IETF secretariat and related functions.
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The IETF Administrative Support Activity (IASA) is an activity housed within the Internet Society (ISOC).
The IASA is described by RFC 4071, an IETF Request for Comments document, released in April, 2005.
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The IASA is described by RFC 4071, an IETF Request for Comments document, released in April, 2005.
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The Internet Research Task Force (IRTF) is a sister group to the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Its stated mission is “To promote research of importance to the evolution of the future Internet by creating focused, long-term and small Research Groups working on topics
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Working Group can mean:
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- Working group, an interdisciplinary group of researchers; or
- Working Group (dogs), kennel club designation for certain purebred dog breeds; or
- The Working Group, an underground resistance group working under the Judenrat
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Rough consensus is a term used in consensus decision-making to indicate the "sense of the group" concerning a particular matter under consideration. It has been defined as the "dominant view" of a group as determined by its chairperson.
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An electronic mailing list, a type of Internet forum, is a special usage of e-mail that allows for widespread distribution of information to many Internet users. It is similar to a traditional mailing list — a list of names and addresses — as might be kept by an
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Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Type Professional Organization
Founded January 1, 1963
Origins Merger of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Institute of Radio Engineers
Key people Leah H.
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Type Professional Organization
Founded January 1, 1963
Origins Merger of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the Institute of Radio Engineers
Key people Leah H.
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Consensus decision-making is a decision-making process that not only seeks the agreement of most participants, but also to resolve or mitigate the objections of the minority to achieve the most agreeable decision.
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The Internet Society or ISOC is an international organization that promotes Internet use and access. It states that its mission is:
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- to assure the open development, evolution and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people throughout the world.
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January 16 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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Events
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19th century - 20th century - 21st century
1950s 1960s 1970s - 1980s - 1990s 2000s 2010s
1983 1984 1985 - 1986 - 1987 1988 1989
Year 1986 (MCMLXXXVI
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1950s 1960s 1970s - 1980s - 1990s 2000s 2010s
1983 1984 1985 - 1986 - 1987 1988 1989
Year 1986 (MCMLXXXVI
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The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) is a collaboration between groups of telecommunications associations, to make a globally applicable third generation (3G) mobile phone system specification within the scope of the International Mobile Telecommunications-2000
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The IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) is an architectural framework for delivering internet protocol (IP) multimedia to mobile users. It was originally designed by the wireless standards body 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), and is part of the vision for evolving
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The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) is the committee charged with oversight of the technical and engineering development of the Internet by the Internet Society (ISOC).
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