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rfc:rfc6293

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) P. Hoffman Request for Comments: 6293 VPN Consortium Category: Informational June 2011 ISSN: 2070-1721

            Requirements for Internet-Draft Tracking by
               the IETF Community in the Datatracker

Abstract

 The document gives a set of requirements for extending the IETF
 Datatracker to give individual IETF community members, including the
 IETF leadership, easy methods for tracking the progress of the
 Internet-Drafts and RFCs of interest to them.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6293.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

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Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
   1.1.  Usage Scenarios  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
   1.2.  Context for This Document  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
   1.3.  Definitions Used in This Document  . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
   1.4.  Expected User Interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
 2.  Requirements for Tools Features  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
   2.1.  Lists  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
     2.1.1.  Requirement: Lists of I-Ds and RFCs can be large . . .  6
     2.1.2.  Requirement: Every Datatracker user can create one
             list . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
     2.1.3.  Requirement: Read-only views of private lists can
             be made visible to others  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
     2.1.4.  Requirement: The Datatracker must support optional
             publicly-readable lists for WGs and Area Directors . .  7
     2.1.5.  Requirement: Specifying the I-Ds and RFCs that are
             in a list must be simple . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
     2.1.6.  Requirement: Adding groups of I-Ds to a list by
             attribute must be simple . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
     2.1.7.  Requirement: Private information must not be
             exposed in lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
   2.2.  Notifications  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
     2.2.1.  Requirement: Users can be notified when an I-D
             changes status . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
     2.2.2.  Requirement: Every list has Atom feeds associated
             with it  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
     2.2.3.  Requirement: Every list has mail streams
             associated with it . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
     2.2.4.  Requirement: Notifications need to specify which
             list caused the notification . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
   2.3.  Display in the Datatracker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
     2.3.1.  Requirement: Users can define their Datatracker
             document view  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
     2.3.2.  Requirement: Users can choose which attributes to
             display  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
     2.3.3.  Requirement: Users can flag I-Ds with dates in the
             future . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
     2.3.4.  Requirement: Users can specify highlighting of
             I-Ds and RFCs with recent changes  . . . . . . . . . . 12
   2.4.  File Output  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
     2.4.1.  Requirement: Users can get their current list as a
             single file  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
 3.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 4.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
 5.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

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 Appendix A.  Possible Tracking of Other Data . . . . . . . . . . . 15
   A.1.  Tracking WG Charter Changes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
   A.2.  Tracking IANA Registry Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
   A.3.  Tracking Changes in the Liason Statement Directory . . . . 15
   A.4.  Tracking Changes in Documents Outside the IETF Sphere  . . 15
   A.5.  Tracking Additions to the IPR Statement Repository . . . . 16
 Appendix B.  Ideas that Might Be Implemented Later . . . . . . . . 16

1. Introduction

 The IETF Datatracker is used by many IETF community members to find
 the status of Internet-Drafts (I-Ds) and RFCs, and view I-Ds and RFCs
 that meet particular criteria.  The current Datatracker, found at
 <https://datatracker.ietf.org/>, allows anyone to search for active
 I-Ds and RFCs, and get a list matching the given criteria.  (The
 Datatracker also allows for expired I-Ds, but those are not relevant
 to this discussion.)
 Users can search in the Datatracker by the filename of the I-D, words
 in the I-D title, I-D author list, associated Working Group (WG),
 IETF area, the responsible Area Director (AD), or IESG status.  They
 can search for RFCs by number or words in the title.  The returned
 list of I-Ds and/or RFCs includes six columns: filename or RFC
 number, the document's title, the date it was published, its status
 in the IETF or RFC process, IPR statements, and the responsible AD
 (if any).
 Instead of using the search capability of the Datatracker to manually
 find I-Ds and RFCs of interest, users might want to create a list of
 I-Ds that they normally follow.  Some users will want to keep their
 list to themselves, but others will want to allow others to view
 their list.
 Different users in the IETF community will have different ways that
 they want to get information on I-D and RFC updates and status.  Many
 users will want to be notified immediately, such as through an Atom
 feed (see [RFC4287]) or automatically-generated email.  Many users
 will want to only find out about updates when they go to a Web page.
 Many users might want to get the data for a list as input to other
 tools.  And, of course, some users will want all three.  All of these
 assist users in tracking I-Ds through their lifecycle.

1.1. Usage Scenarios

 The main motivation for these proposed changes to the Datatracker is
 to allow a variety of potential users to be able to track I-Ds and
 RFCs, and thus be better able to see when important events happen.  A
 few examples include:

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 o  A WG chair might want to keep a list of all the I-Ds from other
    WGs that relate to active I-Ds in his or her WG.
 o  That same WG chair might want to help WG members be able to follow
    the same I-Ds that he or she is following.
 o  Someone who cares about an established topic such as the DNS may
    want to follow the various I-Ds that might make changes to the
    DNS, as well as be aware if any of the DNS RFCs are later updated
    and/or have errata posted against them.  This would include not
    only I-Ds that are in the many WGs that directly are changing the
    DNS (DNSEXT, DNSOP, BEHAVE, and so on), but also individual
    submissions, IAB I-Ds, IRTF I-Ds, and Independent submissions.
 o  Developers who are not active in the IETF process might want to
    lightly follow I-Ds and RFCs on a particular topic to watch for
    things that might affect their implementations.
 o  An IETF "regular" might want to follow parts of the process by
    focusing on all the I-Ds that are being shepherded by a particular
    Area Director.

1.2. Context for This Document

 This document describes the requirements for extending the
 Datatracker for such capabilities.  When complete, this document may
 be used to issue an RFP for the design and development of these
 enhancements to the Datatracker.
 Some of the requirements in this document are listed as "later
 requirements".  It is expected that items listed in this document
 would be part of the initial RFP because they provide the highest
 benefit to the community; the later requirements might be part of a
 later RFP.
 The initial general requirements that led to the specific
 requirements this document described tools that include:
 o  the ability to create one or more (possibly large) lists of I-Ds
    that community members want to follow
 o  the ability to get notifications when particular I-Ds from a list
    change state
 o  the ability to see all of the state changes that have occurred on
    all the I-Ds in a list over a specified range of dates

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 o  the ability to set the granularity of the changes (such as "every
    change", "just approvals and publication", and so on)
 o  the ability to organize views of a list in many fashions that
    would be useful to different types of community members
 o  the ability to share and merge lists with other community members
 Note that [RFC2026] describes the process that I-Ds go through before
 they either become RFCs or are abandoned.  The Datatracker does not
 control this process: instead, it simply reports on the current state
 of each I-D as it goes through the process.

1.3. Definitions Used in This Document

 A "user" is an individual person who is a member of the IETF
 community.
 A "list" is an unordered set of RFCs, I-Ds, and groups of I-Ds.
 Lists are specified by users.  In some cases, the authors are role-
 based, such as a WG chair being the specifier of the list associated
 with that WG.
 An "attribute" is a feature of an I-D or RFC, such as its filename or
 RFC number, its current state in the IETF or RFC process, and so on.
 Attributes are usually displayed as columns in the Datatracker.
 A "row" is a set of attributes about a single I-D or RFC that is
 displayed in the Datatracker.
 A "significant change in status" is all approvals and disposition of
 an I-D.  Assuming that the changes to the Datatracker specified in
 [RFC6174], [RFC6175] and [ALTSTREAMS] are made, "all approvals" means
 the following:
 o  IETF stream: the WG states "Adopted by a WG", "In WG Last Call",
    "WG Consensus: Waiting for Write-up", "Parked WG document", and
    "Dead WG document"; the IESG states "Publication Requested", "In
    Last Call", "IESG Evaluation", and "Sent to the RFC Editor"
 o  IAB stream: "Active IAB Document", "Community Review", and "Sent
    to the RFC Editor"
 o  IRTF stream: "Active RG Document", "In RG Last Call", "Awaiting
    IRSG Reviews", "In IESG Review", "Sent to the RFC Editor", and
    "Document on Hold Based On IESG Request"

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 o  ISE stream: "Submission Received", "In ISE Review", "In IESG
    Review", "Sent to the RFC Editor", and "Document on Hold Based On
    IESG Request"
 o  All streams: in addition to the above, the disposition states
    "Approved", "RFC Published", and "Dead" are also included
 An "update to an RFC" is the announcement of a newer RFC that updates
 or obsoletes the base RFC, an in-place change to the RFC's maturity
 level, the RFC's status being changed to historic, or an announcement
 of an errata posted for the base RFC.

1.4. Expected User Interactions

 When a user wants to follow a group of I-Ds and/or RFCs, he or she
 goes to the Datatracker and creates a new list.  The requirements for
 lists are given in Section 2.1.  After a list is created, the user
 has three ways that he or she might see when I-Ds and/or RFCs in the
 list are updated:
 o  By going to the Datatracker page for the list (see Section 2.3)
 o  By subscribing to the Atom feed for the list (see Section 2.2.2)
    in a feed reader that automatically fetches updates
 o  By subscribing to the mail stream for the list (see Section 2.2.3)
    and reading the mail stream in their mail reader

2. Requirements for Tools Features

 This section defines the requirements for the tool described earlier
 in this document.  The eventual tool, if implemented, may have more
 features than are listed here; however, before this document is
 finished, it should contain as many requirements as possible upon
 which the IETF community can agree.

2.1. Lists

2.1.1. Requirement: Lists of I-Ds and RFCs can be large

 An active IETF participant might want to follow the status of
 hundreds of I-Ds and dozens of RFCs; for example, some ADs have 100
 I-Ds in their area.  Additionally, they may also want to follow I-Ds
 outside their area that affect documents in their area.

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2.1.2. Requirement: Every Datatracker user can create one list

 When a user gets a Datatracker account, that account comes with an
 empty list pre-defined.  The list can normally be modified only by
 the owner of the account, although the Secretariat can also modify
 the list as part of its support role for the Datatracker.  Each
 Datatracker user is restricted to having one list.
 In order for this requirement to be met, it must be easy for any
 community member to get a Datatracker account.  Account setup must
 not involve any direct action on the part of the Secretariat.
 However, the Secretariat will be responsible for support of
 Datatracker accounts (lost passwords, odd interactions, and so on),
 so this addition of more Datatracker accounts will potentially
 increase the amount of work the Secretariat must do.
 The only person who can edit the contents of a private list is the
 person who knows the password to the account with which the list is
 associated.

2.1.3. Requirement: Read-only views of private lists can be made

      visible to others
 Some users will want to make available a read-only view of their
 list.  Each private list will have a URL that leads to the
 Datatracker view of the list; that URL must be able to be shared
 without giving others the ability to edit the list.  Similarly, the
 Atom feed associated with a private list must be able to be shared
 without giving others the ability to edit the list.

2.1.4. Requirement: The Datatracker must support optional publicly-

      readable lists for WGs and Area Directors
 It is common in the IETF for users to follow the work of an entire
 WG, not just single I-Ds and RFCs within a WG.  It is also very
 common that some work that is related to a WG happens outside the WG,
 either in other WGs or as individual efforts.  Many WG chairs monitor
 this outside-the-WG activity for various reasons.
 A smaller number of community members follow an entire Area's worth
 of topics.  Again, these topics often happen within the WGs of an
 area, but not always; for example, some topics related to the
 Security Area happen in WGs in the Applications Area.
 Because of this, it would be useful for community members to be able
 to find a list that corresponds to the WGs or Areas in which they are
 interested.  The WG lists could be maintained by the WG chairs; the
 Area lists would likely be maintained by the ADs.  Note that such

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 lists are not mandatory; for example, a WG chair might not choose to
 maintain such a list for a WG whose topic is extremely broad.
 Both Working Group chairs and Area Directors currently already have
 Datatracker accounts, so fulfilling this requirement only involves
 associating those accounts with the role that controls the list.

2.1.5. Requirement: Specifying the I-Ds and RFCs that are in a list

      must be simple
 When a user creates a new list, it must be easy to add single I-Ds
 and RFCs to the list.  This could be done using the Datatracker's
 current search facility, and simply adding an "add to list" option to
 the display of searched-for I-Ds.  Further, when editing an existing
 list, it must be easy to add additional I-Ds and RFCs, and it must be
 easy to remove I-Ds and RFCs from a list.

2.1.6. Requirement: Adding groups of I-Ds to a list by attribute must

      be simple
 I-Ds have many attributes, and some users might want to follow all of
 the I-Ds that have a particular attribute.  Some, but not all,
 attributes have values that make sense in specifying lists.  It
 should be easy to add each of the following attributes when adding to
 or editing a list:
 o  All I-Ds associated with an particular WG
 o  All I-Ds associated with all WGs in an particular Area
 o  All I-Ds with a particular responsible AD
 o  All I-Ds with a particular author
 o  All I-Ds with a particular document shepherd
 o  All I-Ds that have a reference to a particular RFC
 o  All I-Ds that have a reference to a particular I-D
 o  All I-Ds that are referenced by a particular RFC
 o  All I-Ds that are referenced by a particular I-D
 o  All I-Ds that contain a particular text string

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 These attributes are dynamic, and thus the list of I-Ds that have a
 particular attribute will change after the user adds that attribute
 to a list.  The Datatracker should update lists with dynamic
 attributes as often as is sensible for the server environment, such
 as once an hour or more.
 Note that some of these attributes are based on heuristics derived by
 programs that parse I-Ds, and are therefore inherently not completely
 reliable.

2.1.7. Requirement: Private information must not be exposed in lists

 Any private information in the Datatracker must be excluded from any
 displays of the lists or mail streams.  This private information
 includes private notes in the IESG balloting for an I-D, and probably
 other data that currently is restricted to being seen by certain
 members of the IETF leadership.

2.2. Notifications

2.2.1. Requirement: Users can be notified when an I-D changes status

 Some users do not want to go to the Datatracker's display page to
 find out when an I-D or RFC has been updated.  Instead, they want to
 be notified immediately after the change.  The Datatracker needs to
 support this type of immediate notification, where "immediate" means
 within an hour of a change to any I-D or RFC in the list.  This
 requirement can be met with Atom feeds and mail streams, as described
 in the next two sections.
 The Datatracker might create a generic "notifications engine" that
 can be used to generate the Atom feeds and mail streams.  This engine
 can then be used to later add other notification types, such as a
 Jabber feed.

2.2.2. Requirement: Every list has Atom feeds associated with it

 The list will have two Atom feeds that are generated from the changes
 to the list: one for every change in status and another for
 significant change of status.  Each Atom feed will have a stable URL
 that can be used by feed readers.
 Many IETF users are already using Atom feeds created by the IETF
 Tools Team for single I-Ds.  Using the new feeds for lists described
 here will allow them to have better selection capabilities to reduce
 the number of feeds they need to follow.

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2.2.3. Requirement: Every list has mail streams associated with it

 A user can subscribe to two mail streams that are generated from the
 changes to the list: one for every change in status, and another for
 significant change of status.
 Note that the mail streams are for each change; they are not batched
 (such as one message per day).  Users who want less frequent but
 batched notifications need to use the Atom feeds instead of the mail
 streams.

2.2.4. Requirement: Notifications need to specify which list caused the

      notification
 Users might have feeds and/or subscriptions to multiple lists.  In
 order to disambiguate duplicate notifications from multiple lists,
 the body of the message in the Atom feed or mail stream needs to say
 which list generated the notification.  (Ideally, a user who wants
 notifications will make one list based on multiple lists, but if they
 subscribe to multiple lists, this requirement will at least suggest
 to them that they want to limit their overlapping subscriptions.)

2.3. Display in the Datatracker

2.3.1. Requirement: Users can define their Datatracker document view

 There are many ways that a user might want to see the Datatracker's
 HTML view of a list.  For example, a user might want the view
 displayed in alphabetical order by the I-Ds' filenames and RFC
 numbers, but after the user is off the net for a week, he or she
 might want the view displayed in order of changes of status so that
 those I-Ds and RFCs changed recently appear at the top.
 The default is to list I-Ds in alphabetical order by I-D filename,
 with RFCs at the end.  When displaying a list, the Datatracker should
 allow easy sorting of the I-Ds with the following collation orders:
 o  Alphabetical by I-D filename and RFC number
 o  Alphabetical by document title
 o  Alphabetical by associated WG
 o  Date of publication of current version of the document
 o  Date of most recent change of status of any type
 o  Date of most recent significant change of status

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 In displays, a particular I-D or RFC should only be included once;
 for example, if someone manually adds
 draft-ietf-cuteacronym-sometopic to his list and also specifies that
 all I-Ds from the "cuteacronym" WG are included in the list, that I-D
 should only appear once in the display.  The column saying which
 included list(s) contain this I-D helps alleviate this loss of
 information.
 The user might also want to group the I-Ds using the groupings in the
 list, such as "all I-Ds from this WG" and "all I-Ds that contain this
 word in the title".
 The Datatracker should save the last-chosen sorting for display with
 the definition of the list.

2.3.2. Requirement: Users can choose which attributes to display

 There are many attributes that might be displayed, and different
 users will have different information that they want to see.  Also,
 users will have different display technologies: someone might
 normally use a Web browser on a large screen, but at other times use
 the browser on their phone.
 Choosing which attributes should be displayed should be simple for
 the user.  The Datatracker should save the last-chosen set of
 attributes for display with the definition of the list.  The default
 is to display the I-D filename or RFC number, document title, date of
 current I-D or RFC publication date, status in the RFC queue or RFC
 process, the associated stream (IETF WG, IRTF RG, IAB, or ISE),
 whether it was changed within the last 7 days, and included list(s)
 that contain this I-D.
 The Datatracker should support display of the following attributes:
 o  I-D filename
 o  I-D title
 o  Date of current I-D
 o  Status in the IETF process
 o  Associated WG or RG
 o  Associated AD, if any
 o  Changed within the last 1 day

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 o  Changed within the last 2 days
 o  Changed within the last 7 days
 There is some leeway for how the Datatracker might display these
 attributes.  For example, the "changed within" attributes might be
 shown with a check mark or a colored box.

2.3.3. Requirement: Users can flag I-Ds with dates in the future

 When tracking I-Ds, some users want to be able to say "tell me if
 this I-D has not changed state by a particular date" such as when an
 I-D is starting a two-week last call or an I-D author has promised a
 new version by the end of the week.  This feature gives the user a
 "dashboard" style capability.
 For each I-D, the user should be able to set a marker date by which
 an update is expected.  The Datatracker display will provide a visual
 indication if the marker date has passed but no change in status has
 occurred.  It must be very easy for the user to remove these update-
 expected markers.

2.3.4. Requirement: Users can specify highlighting of I-Ds and RFCs

      with recent changes
 The Datatracker cannot easily keep track of when a user last looked
 at the page for a particular list.  Thus, it instead needs to let a
 user say which range of dates they are most interested in.  To that
 end, the user needs to be able to easily specify the amount of time
 they consider recent, either as "the past nnn hours", "the past nnn
 days", or "since this particular date".

2.4. File Output

2.4.1. Requirement: Users can get their current list as a single file

 Some users have their own tools for displaying and otherwise
 processing lists of I-Ds and RFCs.  To make this easier, users should
 be able to get a machine-parsable file that has a well-known format
 and syntax that contains all the data that was used to create the
 current display.  The order of the records in the file is not
 important because it is assumed that the user's program will sort the
 results themselves.  All attributes will be included because it is
 assumed that the user's programs will only deal with the ones the
 user cares about.

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 When a list is marshaled into a data file, each record in the file
 format represents a single I-D or RFC.  In a file, a particular I-D
 or RFC is only included once; for example, if someone manually adds
 draft-ietf-cuteacronym-sometopic to his list and also specifies that
 all I-Ds from the "cuteacronym" WG are included in the list, that I-D
 only appears once.
 This feature will allow anyone to create mash-ups of their own and
 create their own Web sites based on the IETF data.  This is
 significantly easier than adding features to the Datatracker, and is
 able to cater to narrow audiences.  The format of this file has yet
 to be determined.

3. Security Considerations

 A tool for tracking the status of I-Ds and RFCs can affect the
 privacy of its users.  Someone could possibly determine relevant
 information about a user if they knew what that user was tracking.
 Web applications, particularly those that store data on a Web server,
 are a common source of security issues such as cross-site scripting
 attacks.  The tool described in this document might also use access
 control for lists, and access control and authentication also cause
 security issues if not implemented properly.

4. Acknowledgements

 Ideas used in this document were contributed by Scott Bradner, Leslie
 Daigle, Spencer Dawkins, Aaron Falk, Russ Housley, Tero Kivinen,
 Barry Leiba, John Levine, Henrik Levkowetz, Kurtis Lindqvist, Andy
 Malis, Ray Pelletier, Blake Ramsdell, Julian Reschke, Jim Schaad,
 Yaron Sheffer, Robert Sparks, Andrew Sullivan, and Sean Turner.

5. Informative References

 [ALTSTREAMS]  Hoffman, P., "Data Tracker States and Annotations for
               the IAB, IRTF, and Independent Submission Streams",
               Work in Progress, May 2011.
 [RFC2026]     Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process --
               Revision 3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.
 [RFC4287]     Nottingham, M., Ed. and R. Sayre, Ed., "The Atom
               Syndication Format", RFC 4287, December 2005.
 [RFC6174]     Juskevicius, E., "Definition of IETF Working Group
               Document States", RFC 6174, March 2011.

Hoffman Informational [Page 13] RFC 6293 Datatracker Community Tracking Reqs June 2011

 [RFC6175]     Juskevicius, E., "Requirements to Extend the
               Datatracker for IETF Working Group Chairs and Authors",
               RFC 6175, March 2011.
 [RFC6292]     Hoffman, P., "Requirements for a Working Group Charter
               Tool", RFC 6292, June 2011.

Hoffman Informational [Page 14] RFC 6293 Datatracker Community Tracking Reqs June 2011

Appendix A. Possible Tracking of Other Data

 It is not at all clear if any of these will be a requirement, a later
 requirement, or a non-requirement.  Further, even if one or more of
 these non-I-D items is made a requirement, it is not clear whether
 they will be included in the same lists with I-Ds.  That is, if
 tracking IANA registry changes are considered a requirement, it is
 not clear whether a user would include the registries in a list that
 also contains I-Ds, or whether they would need to create two lists,
 one for I-Ds and one for IANA registries.

A.1. Tracking WG Charter Changes

 It will soon be easier to track changes in WG charters and
 milestones; see [RFC6292] for more information.  Someone subscribing
 to the mail stream for a WG would be able to see each of these
 changes.  With the expected changes, the Datatracker would be able to
 update WGs in a list without any polling.

A.2. Tracking IANA Registry Changes

 Developers may need to get values from IANA registries for their
 software/hardware implementations.  They might want to know when the
 registry changes, such as additional entries or updates to current
 entries.  Thus, being able to be notified when a registry changes
 would be valuable to them.
 Adding this functionality may be tricky for some registries.  For
 example, if a developer cared about DKIM signature tags, they would
 have to subscribe to
 <http://www.iana.org/assignments/dkim-parameters/> which (currently)
 covers a handful of registries, all related to DKIM.  Thus, a change
 to the DKIM hash algorithms would trigger a message showing that the
 registry had changed, even though the DKIM signature tags registry
 had not.

A.3. Tracking Changes in the Liason Statement Directory

 Users might want to know when a new liaison statement is sent by the
 IETF or when one is received by the IETF.

A.4. Tracking Changes in Documents Outside the IETF Sphere

 Users might want to track documents that relate to IETF activities
 but are produced by other standards development organizations (SDOs)
 such as the W3C, the IEEE, the Unicode Consortium, the ITU, and
 others.  In order for the tracker to track these documents, it would
 need to poll occasionally and possibly scrape listings from HTML.

Hoffman Informational [Page 15] RFC 6293 Datatracker Community Tracking Reqs June 2011

A.5. Tracking Additions to the IPR Statement Repository

 Users might want to know when a new IPR statement is submitted.

Appendix B. Ideas that Might Be Implemented Later

 The following are ideas for the new tool that are not currently being
 considered for the first round of development, but are being
 documented for possible future use.  Items from this list may move to
 the list of requirements that are expected to be integrated during
 the first round of development.
 o  The Datatracker could list all of the publicly-readable lists (or
    certainly at least the ones associated with IETF activities), and
    have links from WG pages in the Datatracker to the publicly-
    readable lists maintained by the WG chairs.
 o  Draft versions of this RFC included a requirement to be able to
    include other lists.  While this may still be desired, it was
    decided that implementing this in a safe and understandable way
    would be too difficult.  In particular, there was a concern about
    detecting and handling loops.  Later versions of the Datatracker
    might include this feature.
 o  In public lists, it might be useful for someone to be able to
    understand why particular I-Ds and/or groups are added.  Allowing
    the user who put together the list to add a comment field would
    help someone else understand the motivation.
 o  The Datatracker might remove lists if it seems that storing them
    on the Datatracker is taking too many resources.  The Datatracker
    can periodically send mail to the user reminding them to delete
    lists that are no longer needed.
 o  The normal Datatracker display could have a button to add a
    particular I-D to the user's personal list.
 o  Allow each user to determine what "significant change in status"
    is for the list they create.  This could be done by a series of
    check boxes for every possible status change.
 o  A list creator can add a list-level comment about who might be
    interested in following the list.
 o  If the agendas for an upcoming meeting are scraped for I-D names,
    it would be possible to add an attribute to an I-D that lists that
    WG agenda(s) on which it appears.

Hoffman Informational [Page 16] RFC 6293 Datatracker Community Tracking Reqs June 2011

 o  In the section on "Adding groups of I-Ds to a list by attribute",
    add an attribute for "all I-Ds that are referenced by any I-D in a
    particular list".
 o  Make it possible to add all I-Ds that have a certain section to a
    list (non-trivial IANA considerations, ASN.1 modules in
    appendices, MIBs, ABNF, XML modules, ...).
 o  Even though Atom feeds have been around for years, they are new to
    many Internet users, and even experienced users only know how to
    use them in limited ways.  The Datatracker should have at least a
    few paragraphs explaining how the Atom feeds that it provides can
    be used in different tools such as dedicated feed readers, online
    feed-display services, and so on.

Author's Address

 Paul Hoffman
 VPN Consortium
 EMail: paul.hoffman@vpnc.org

Hoffman Informational [Page 17]

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