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RFC4052 - IAB Processes for Management of IETF Liaison Relationships

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group L. Daigle, Ed.

Request for Comments: 4052 Internet Architecture Board

BCP: 102 April 2005

Category: Best Current Practice

IAB Processes for Management of IETF Liaison Relationships

Status of This Memo

This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the

Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

Abstract

This document discusses the procedures used by the IAB to establish

and maintain liaison relationships between the IETF and other

Standards Development Organizations (SDOs), consortia and industry

fora. This document also discusses the appointment and

responsibilities of IETF liaison managers and representatives, and

the eXPectations of the IAB for organizations with whom liaison

relationships are established.

Table of Contents

1. Liaison Relationships and Personnel .............................2

2. ASPects of Liaisons and Liaison Management ......................3

2.1. Liaison Relationships ......................................3

2.2. Liaison Manager ............................................3

2.3. Liaison Representatives ....................................4

2.4. Liaison Communications .....................................4

3. Summary of IETF Liaison Manager Responsibilities ................5

4. Approval and Transmission of Liaison Statements .................6

5. Security Considerations .........................................6

6. Acknowledgements ................................................7

7. References ......................................................8

7.1. Normative References .......................................8

7.2. Informative References .....................................8

1. Liaison Relationships and Personnel

The IETF, as an organization, has the need to engage in direct

communication or joint endeavors with various other formal

organizations. For example, the IETF is one of several Standards

Development Organizations, or SDOs, and all SDOs including the IETF

find it increasingly necessary to communicate and coordinate their

activities involving Internet-related technologies. This is useful

in order to avoid overlap in work efforts and to manage interactions

between their groups. In cases where the mutual effort to

communicate and coordinate activities is formalized, these

relationships are generically referred to as "liaison relationships".

In sUCh cases, a person from the IETF is designated to manage a given

liaison relationship; that person is generally called the "IETF

liaison manager" to the other organization. When the liaison

relationship is expected to encompass a complex or broad range of

activities, more people may be designated to undertake some portions

of the communications, coordinated by the liaison manager. Often,

the other organization will similarly designate their own liaison

manager to the IETF.

This document is chiefly concerned with:

o the establishment and maintenance of liaison relationships, and

o the appointment and responsibilities of IETF liaison managers and

representatives.

The management of other organizations' liaison managers to the IETF,

whether or not in the context of a liaison relationship, is outside

the scope of this document.

The IETF has chartered the Internet Architecture Board to manage

liaison relationships. Consistent with its charter [2], the IAB acts

as representative of the interests of the IETF and the Internet

Society in technical liaison relationships with other organizations

concerned with standards and other technical and organizational

issues relevant to the worldwide Internet. Liaison relationships are

kept as informal as possible and must be of demonstrable value to the

IETF's technical mandate. Individual participants of the IETF are

appointed as liaison managers or representatives to other

organizations by the IAB.

In general, a liaison relationship is most valuable when there are

areas of technical development of mutual interest. For the most

part, SDOs would rather leverage existing work done by other

organizations than recreate it themselves (and would like the same

done with respect to their own work). Establishing a liaison

relationship can provide the framework for ongoing communications to

o prevent inadvertent duplication of effort, without obstructing

either organization from pursuing its own mandate;

o provide authoritative information of one organization's

dependencies on the other's work.

2. Aspects of Liaisons and Liaison Management

2.1. Liaison Relationships

A liaison relationship is set up when it is mutually agreeable and

needed for some specific purpose, in the view of the other

organization, the IAB, and the IETF participants conducting the work.

There is no set process or form for this; the IETF participants and

the peer organization approach the IAB, and after discussion come to

an agreement to form the relationship. In some cases, the intended

scope and guidelines for the collaboration are documented

specifically (e.g., see [3], [4], and [5]).

In setting up the relationship, the IAB expects that there will be a

mutual exchange of views and discussion of the best approach for

undertaking new standardization work items. Any work items resulting

for the IETF will be undertaken in the usual IETF procedures, defined

in [1]. The peer organization often has different organizational

structure and procedures than the IETF, which will require some

flexibility on the part of both organizations to accommodate. The

IAB expects that each organization will use the relationship

carefully, allowing time for the processes it requests to occur in

the other organization, and will not make unreasonable demands.

2.2. Liaison Manager

As described above, most work on mutually interesting topics will be

carried out in the usual way within the IETF and the peer

organization. Therefore, most communications will be informal in

nature (for example, Working Group (WG) or mailing list discussions).

An important function of the liaison manager is to ensure that

communication is maintained, productive, and timely. He or she may

use any applicable businesslike approach, from private to public

communications, and bring in other parties as needed. If a

communication from a peer organization is addressed to an

inappropriate party, such as being sent to the WG but not copying the

Area Director (AD) or being sent to the wrong WG, the liaison manager

will help redirect or otherwise augment the communication.

IETF liaison managers should also communicate and coordinate with

other liaison managers where concerned technical activities overlap.

Since the IAB is ultimately responsible for liaison relationships,

anyone who has a problem with a relationship (whether an IETF

participant or a person from the peer organization) should first

consult the IAB's designated liaison manager, and if that does not

result in a satisfactory outcome, the IAB itself.

2.3. Liaison Representatives

The liaison manager is, specifically, a representative of the IETF

for the purpose of managing the liaison relationship. There may be

occasion to identify other representatives for the same relationship.

For example, if the area of mutual work is extensive, it might be

appropriate to name several people as liaison representatives to

different parts of the other organization. Or, it might be

appropriate to name a liaison representative to attend a particular

meeting.

These other liaison representatives are selected by the IAB and work

in conjunction (and close communication) with the liaison manager.

In some cases, this may also require communication and coordination

with other liaison managers or representatives where concerned

technical activities overlap. The specific responsibilities of the

liaison representative will be identified at the time of appointment.

2.4. Liaison Communications

Communications between organizations use a variety of formal and

informal channels. The stated preference of the IETF, which is

largely an informal organization, is to use informal channels, as

these have historically worked well to expedite matters. In some

cases, however, a more formal communication is appropriate, either as

an adjunct to the informal channel or in its place. In the case of

formal communications, the established procedures of many

organizations use a form known as a "liaison statement". Procedures

for sending, managing, and responding to liaison statements are

discussed in [6].

3. Summary of IETF Liaison Manager Responsibilities

While the requirements will certainly vary depending on the nature of

the peer organization and the type of joint work being undertaken,

the general expectations of a liaison manager appointed by the IAB

are as follows:

o Attend relevant meetings of the peer organization as needed and

report back to the appropriate IETF organization any material

updates.

o Carry any messages from the IETF to the peer organization, when

specifically instructed. Generally, these communications

"represent the IETF", and therefore due care and consensus must be

applied in their construction.

o Prepare occasional updates. The target of these updates (e.g.,

the IAB, an AD, a WG) will generally be identified upon

appointment.

o Oversee delivery of liaison statements addressed to the IETF,

ensuring that they reach the appropriate destination within the

IETF, and ensure that relevant responses from the IETF are created

and sent in a timely fashion.

o Work with the other organization to ensure that the IETF's liaison

statements are appropriately directed and responded to in a timely

fashion.

o Communicate and coordinate with other IETF liaison managers and

representatives where concerned technical activities overlap.

4. Approval and Transmission of Liaison Statements

It is important that appropriate leadership review be made of

proposed IETF liaison statements and that those writing such

statements, who claim to be speaking on behalf of IETF, are truly

representing IETF views.

All outgoing liaison statements will be copied to IETF Secretariat

using procedures defined in [6] or its successors.

For a liaison statement generated on behalf of an IETF WG, the WG

chair(s) must create a statement based on appropriate discussions

within the WG to ensure working group consensus for the position(s)

presented. The chair(s) must have generated or must agree with the

sending of the liaison statement, and must advise the AD(s) that the

liaison statement has been sent by copying the appropriate ADs on the

message.

For a liaison statement generated on behalf of an IETF Area, the

AD(s) must have generated or must agree with the sending of the

liaison statement. If the liaison statement is not sent by the ADs,

then their agreement must be oBTained in advance and confirmed by

copying the ADs on the message.

For a liaison statement generated on behalf of the IETF as a whole,

the IETF Chair must have generated or must agree with the sending of

the liaison statement. If the liaison statement is not sent by the

IETF Chair, then his or her agreement must be obtained in advance and

confirmed by copying the IETF Chair on the message.

For a liaison statement generated by the IAB, the IAB Chair must have

generated or must agree with the sending of the liaison statement.

If the liaison statement is not sent by the IAB Chair, then his or

her agreement must be obtained in advance and confirmed by copying

the IAB Chair on the message.

In cases where prior agreement was not obtained as outlined above,

and the designated authority (AD, IETF Chair, or IAB Chair) in fact

does not agree with the message, the designated authority will work

with the liaison manager to follow up as appropriate, including

emitting a revised liaison statement if necessary. Clearly, this is

a situation best avoided by assuring appropriate agreement in advance

of sending the liaison message.

5. Security Considerations

The security of the Internet is not threatened by these procedures.

6. Acknowledgements

This document was developed as part of a conversation regarding the

management of [6], and the authors of that document contributed

significantly to it. Also, this version of the document has been

improved over its predecessor by several suggestions from Stephen J.

Trowbridge, Peter Saint-Andre, Michael Patton, Bert Wijnen, Fred

Baker, Scott Bradner, Scott Brim, Avri Doria, Allison Mankin, Thomas

Narten, Russ Housley and Dan Romasanu.

Members of the IAB at the time of approval of this document were:

Bernard Aboba

Harald Alvestrand (IETF chair)

Rob Austein

Leslie Daigle (IAB chair)

Patrik Faltstrom

Sally Floyd

Jun-ichiro Itojun Hagino

Mark Handley

Bob Hinden

Geoff Huston (IAB Executive Director)

Eric Rescorla

Pete Resnick

Jonathan Rosenberg

7. References

7.1. Normative References

[1] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3", BCP

09, RFC 2026, October 1996.

[2] Internet Architecture Board and B. Carpenter, "Charter of the

Internet Architecture Board (IAB)", BCP 39, RFC 2850, May 2000.

7.2. Informative References

[3] Rosenbrock, K., Sanmugam, R., Bradner, S., and J. Klensin,

"3GPP-IETF Standardization Collaboration", RFC 3113, June 2001.

[4] Bradner, S., Calhoun, P., Cuschieri, H., Dennett, S., Flynn, G.,

Lipford, M., and M. McPheters, "3GPP2-IETF Standardization

Collaboration", RFC 3131, June 2001.

[5] Fishman, G. and S. Bradner, "Internet Engineering Task Force and

International Telecommunication Union - Telecommunications

Standardization Sector Collaboration Guidelines", RFC 3356,

August 2002.

[6] Trowbridge, S., Bradner, S., and F. Baker, "Procedure for

Handling Liaison Statements Between Standards Bodies",

June 2004.

Authors' Addresses

Leslie Daigle

Editor

Internet Architecture Board

IAB

EMail: iab@iab.org

Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions

contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors

retain all their rights.

This document and the information contained herein are provided on an

"AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS

OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET

ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,

INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE

INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED

WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Intellectual Property

The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any

Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to

pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in

this document or the extent to which any license under such rights

might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has

made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information

on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be

found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any

assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an

attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of

such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this

specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at

http://www.ietf.org/ipr.

The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any

copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary

rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement

this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-

ipr@ietf.org.

Acknowledgement

Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the

Internet Society.

 
 
 
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