Hi,

It seems rather fundamental that the members of a standards development
organization
understand the difference between a standard under development and a
standard
published for use.


Andy


On Mon, Dec 21, 2015 at 6:47 AM, Juergen Schoenwaelder <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I believe the model we have agreed on in RFC 6020 is this:
>
> - YANG modules in I-Ds are 'development' modules and not 'published'
>   modules.
>
> - It helps a lot during module development if 'development' modules
>   are actually implemented. Note that implementations of 'development'
>   modules are not intended to be 'deployed'.
>
> - A 'published' module (something appearing in an RFC in the IETF)
>   will be subject to YANG update rules.
>
> - 'Published' modules are expected to be 'implemented' and 'deployed'.
>
> - IETF WGs need to take care of the maintenance and interoperability
>   of what has been 'published', hence the module update rules.
>
> - Obviously, it is good to detect major flaws during 'development' and
>   hence the importance of early 'implementation' experience.
>
> Note that there are no formal module name or namespace assignements
> until a module has been published as an RFC. A WG might put in a best
> guess what the names might be but assignment and registration via IANA
> happens during the publication process.
>
> Perhaps it helps to clarify in RFC6020bis that the updates rules apply
> to published modules and not to modules under development.
>
> /js
>
> --
> Juergen Schoenwaelder           Jacobs University Bremen gGmbH
> Phone: +49 421 200 3587         Campus Ring 1 | 28759 Bremen | Germany
> Fax:   +49 421 200 3103         <http://www.jacobs-university.de/>
>
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