RFC 5657 - Guidance on Interoperation and Implementation Reports for Advancement to Draft Standard

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Network Working Group L. Dusseault
Request for Comments: 5657 Messaging Architects
BCP: 9 R. Sparks
Updates: 2026 Tekelec
Category: Best Current Practice September 2009
 Guidance on Interoperation and Implementation Reports
 for Advancement to Draft Standard
Abstract
 Advancing a protocol to Draft Standard requires documentation of the
 interoperation and implementation of the protocol. Historic reports
 have varied widely in form and level of content and there is little
 guidance available to new report preparers. This document updates
 the existing processes and provides more detail on what is
 appropriate in an interoperability and implementation report.
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 and License Notice
 Copyright (c) 2009 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 BSD License.
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
Table of Contents
 1. Introduction ....................................................2
 2. Content Requirements ............................................4
 3. Format ..........................................................5
 4. Feature Coverage ................................................6
 5. Special Cases ...................................................8
 5.1. Deployed Protocols .........................................8
 5.2. Undeployed Protocols .......................................8
 5.3. Schemas, Languages, and Formats ............................8
 5.4. Multiple Contributors, Multiple Implementation Reports .....9
 5.5. Test Suites ................................................9
 5.6. Optional Features, Extensibility Features .................10
 6. Examples .......................................................10
 6.1. Minimal Implementation Report .............................11
 6.2. Covering Exceptions .......................................11
 7. Security Considerations ........................................11
 8. References .....................................................12
 8.1. Normative References ......................................12
 8.2. Informative References ....................................12
1. Introduction
 The Draft Standard level, and requirements for standards to meet it,
 are described in [RFC2026]. For Draft Standard, not only must two
 implementations interoperate, but also documentation (the report)
 must be provided to the IETF. The entire paragraph covering this
 documentation reads:
 The Working Group chair is responsible for documenting the
 specific implementations which qualify the specification for Draft
 or Internet Standard status along with documentation about testing
 of the interoperation of these implementations. The documentation
 must include information about the support of each of the
 individual options and features. This documentation should be
 submitted to the Area Director with the protocol action request.
 (see Section 6)
 Moving documents along the standards track can be an important signal
 to the user and implementor communities, and the process of
 submitting a standard for advancement can help improve that standard
 or the quality of implementations that participate. However, the
 barriers seem to be high for advancement to Draft Standard, or at the
 very least confusing. This memo may help in guiding people through
 one part of advancing specifications to Draft Standard. It also
 changes some of the requirements made in RFC 2026 in ways that are
 intended to maintain or improve the quality of reports while reducing
 the burden of creating them.
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
 Having and demonstrating sufficient interoperability is a gating
 requirement for advancing a protocol to Draft Standard. Thus, the
 primary goal of an implementation report is to convince the IETF and
 the IESG that the protocol is ready for Draft Standard. This goal
 can be met by summarizing the interoperability characteristics and by
 providing just enough detail to support that conclusion. Side
 benefits may accrue to the community creating the report in the form
 of bugs found or fixed in tested implementations, documentation that
 can help future implementors, or ideas for other documents or future
 revisions of the protocol being tested.
 Different kinds of documentation are appropriate for widely deployed
 standards than for standards that are not yet deployed. Different
 test approaches are appropriate for standards that are not typical
 protocols: languages, formats, schemas, etc. This memo discusses how
 reports for these standards may vary in Section 5.
 Implementation should naturally focus on the final version of the
 RFC. If there's any evidence that implementations are interoperating
 based on Internet-Drafts or earlier versions of the specification, or
 if interoperability was greatly aided by mailing list clarifications,
 this should be noted in the report.
 The level of detail in reports accepted in the past has varied
 widely. An example of a submitted report that is not sufficient for
 demonstrating interoperability is (in its entirety): "A partial list
 of implementations include: Cray SGI Netstar IBM HP Network Systems
 Convex". This report does not state how it is known that these
 implementations interoperate (was it through public lab testing?
 internal lab testing? deployment?). Nor does it capture whether
 implementors are aware of, or were asked about, any features that
 proved to be problematic. At a different extreme, reports have been
 submitted that contain a great amount of detail about the test
 methodology, but relatively little information about what worked and
 what failed to work.
 This memo is intended to clarify what an implementation report should
 contain and to suggest a reasonable form for most implementation
 reports. It is not intended to rule out good ideas. For example,
 this memo can't take into account all process variations such as
 documents going to Draft Standard twice, nor can it consider all
 types of standards. Whenever the situation varies significantly from
 what's described here, the IESG uses judgement in determining whether
 an implementation report meets the goals above.
 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
 document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119].
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
2. Content Requirements
 The implementation report MUST identify the author of the report, who
 is responsible for characterizing the interoperability quality of the
 protocol. The report MAY identify other contributors (testers, those
 who answered surveys, or those who contributed information) to share
 credit or blame. The report MAY provide a list of report reviewers
 who corroborate the characterization of interoperability quality, or
 name an active working group (WG) that reviewed the report.
 Some of the requirements of RFC 2026 are relaxed with this update:
 o The report MAY name exactly which implementations were tested. A
 requirement to name implementations was implied by the description
 of the responsibility for "documenting the specific
 implementations" in RFC 2026. However, note that usually
 identifying implementations will help meet the goals of
 implementation reports. If a subset of implementations was tested
 or surveyed, it would also help to explain how that subset was
 chosen or self-selected. See also the note on implementation
 independence below.
 o The report author MAY choose an appropriate level of detail to
 document feature interoperability, rather than document each
 individual feature. See note on granularity of features below.
 o A contributor other than a WG chair MAY submit an implementation
 report to an Area Director (AD).
 o Optional features that are not implemented, but are important and
 do not harm interoperability, MAY, exceptionally and with approval
 of the IESG, be left in a protocol at Draft Standard. See
 Section 5.6 for documentation requirements and an example of where
 this is needed.
 Note: Independence of implementations is mentioned in the RFC 2026
 requirements for Draft Standard status. Independent
 implementations should be written by different people at
 different organizations using different code and protocol
 libraries. If it's necessary to relax this definition, it can
 be relaxed as long as there is evidence to show that success is
 due more to the quality of the protocol than to out-of-band
 understandings or common code. If there are only two
 implementations of an undeployed protocol, the report SHOULD
 identify the implementations and their "genealogy" (which
 libraries were used or where the codebase came from). If there
 are many more implementations, or the protocol is in broad
 deployment, it is not necessary to call out which two of the
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
 implementations demonstrated interoperability of each given
 feature -- a reader may conclude that at least some of the
 implementations of that feature are independent.
 Note: The granularity of features described in a specification is
 necessarily very detailed. In contrast, the granularity of an
 implementation report need not be as detailed. A report need
 not list every "MAY", "SHOULD", and "MUST" in a complete matrix
 across implementations. A more effective approach might be to
 characterize the interoperability quality and testing approach,
 then call out any known problems in either testing or
 interoperability.
3. Format
 The format of implementation and interoperability reports MUST be
 ASCII text with line breaks for readability. As with Internet-
 Drafts, no 8-bit characters are currently allowed. It is acceptable,
 but not necessary, for a report to be formatted as an Internet-Draft.
 Here is a simple outline that an implementation report MAY follow in
 part or in full:
 Title: Titles of implementation reports are strongly RECOMMENDED to
 contain one or more RFC number for consistent lookup in a simple
 archive. In addition, the name or a common mnemonic of the
 standard should be in the title. An example might look like
 "Implementation Report for the Example Name of Some Protocol
 (ENSP) RFC XXXX".
 Author: Identify the author of the report.
 Summary: Attest that the standard meets the requirements for Draft
 Standard and name who is attesting it. Describe how many
 implementations were tested or surveyed. Quickly characterize the
 deployment level and where the standard can be found in
 deployment. Call out, and if possible, briefly describe any
 notably difficult or poorly interoperable features and explain why
 these still meet the requirement. Assert any derivative
 conclusions: if a high-level system is tested and shown to work,
 then we may conclude that the normative requirements of that
 system (all sub-system or lower-layer protocols, to the extent
 that a range of features is used) have also been shown to work.
 Methodology: Describe how the information in the report was
 obtained. This should be no longer than the summary.
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
 Exceptions: This section might read "Every feature was implemented,
 tested, and widely interoperable without exception and without
 question". If that statement is not true, then this section
 should cover whether any features were thought to be problematic.
 Problematic features need not disqualify a protocol from Draft
 Standard, but this section should explain why they do not (e.g.,
 optional, untestable, trace, or extension features). See the
 example in Section 6.2.
 Detail sections: Any other justifying or background information can
 be included here. In particular, any information that would have
 made the summary or methodology sections more than a few
 paragraphs long may be created as a detail section and referenced.
 In this section, it would be good to discuss how the various
 considerations sections played out. Were the security
 considerations accurate and dealt with appropriately in
 implementations? Was real internationalization experience found
 among the tested implementations? Did the implementations have
 any common monitoring or management functionality (although note
 that documenting the interoperability of a management standard
 might be separate from documenting the interoperability of the
 protocol itself)? Did the IANA registries or registrations, if
 any, work as intended?
 Appendix sections: It's not necessary to archive test material such
 as test suites, test documents, questionnaire text, or
 questionnaire responses. However, if it's easy to preserve this
 information, appendix sections allow readers to skip over it if
 they are not interested. Preserving detailed test information can
 help people doing similar or follow-on implementation reports, and
 can also help new implementors.
4. Feature Coverage
 What constitutes a "feature" for the purposes of an interoperability
 report has been frequently debated. Good judgement is required in
 finding a level of detail that adequately demonstrates coverage of
 the requirements. Statements made at too high a level will result in
 a document that can't be verified and hasn't adequately challenged
 that the testing accidentally missed an important failure to
 interoperate. On the other hand, statements at too fine a level
 result in an exponentially exploding matrix of requirement
 interaction that overburdens the testers and report writers. The
 important information in the resulting report would likely be hard to
 find in the sea of detail, making it difficult to evaluate whether
 the important points of interoperability have been addressed.
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
 The best interoperability reports will organize statements of
 interoperability at a level of detail just sufficient to convince the
 reader that testing has covered the full set of requirements and in
 particular that the testing was sufficient to uncover any places
 where interoperability does not exist. Reports similar to that for
 RTP/RTCP (an excerpt appears below) are more useful than an
 exhaustive checklist of every normative statement in the
 specification.
 10. Interoperable exchange of receiver report packets.
 o PASS: Many implementations, tested UCL rat with vat,
 Cisco IP/TV with vat/vic.
 11. Interoperable exchange of receiver report packets when
 not receiving data (ie: the empty receiver report
 which has to be sent first in each compound RTCP packet
 when no-participants are transmitting data).
 o PASS: Many implementations, tested UCL rat with vat,
 Cisco IP/TV with vat/vic.
 ...
 8. Interoperable transport of RTP via TCP using the
 encapsulation defined in the audio/video profile
 o FAIL: no known implementations. This has been
 removed from the audio/video profile.
 Excerpts from
 http://www.ietf.org/iesg/implementation/report-avt-rtp-rtcp.txt
 Consensus can be a good tool to help determine the appropriate level
 for such feature descriptions. A working group can make a strong
 statement by documenting its consensus that a report sufficiently
 covers a specification and that interoperability has been
 demonstrated.
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
5. Special Cases
5.1. Deployed Protocols
 When a protocol is deployed, results obtained from laboratory testing
 are not as useful to the IETF as learning what is actually working in
 deployment. To this end, it may be more informative to survey
 implementors or operators. A questionnaire or interview can elicit
 information from a wider number of sources. As long as it is known
 that independent implementations can work in deployment, it is more
 useful to discover what problems exist, rather than gather long and
 detailed checklists of features and options.
5.2. Undeployed Protocols
 It is appropriate to provide finer-grained detail in reports for
 protocols that do not yet have a wealth of experience gained through
 deployment. In particular, some complicated, flexible or powerful
 features might show interoperability problems when testers start to
 probe outside the core use cases. RFC 2026 requires "sufficient
 successful operational experience" before progressing a standard to
 Draft, and notes that:
 Draft Standard may still require additional or more widespread
 field experience, since it is possible for implementations based
 on Draft Standard specifications to demonstrate unforeseen
 behavior when subjected to large-scale use in production
 environments.
 When possible, reports for protocols without much deployment
 experience should anticipate common operational considerations. For
 example, it would be appropriate to put additional emphasis on
 overload or congestion management features the protocol may have.
5.3. Schemas, Languages, and Formats
 Standards that are not on-the-wire protocols may be special cases for
 implementation reports. The IESG SHOULD use judgement in what kind
 of implementation information is acceptable for these kinds of
 standards. ABNF (RFC 4234) is an example of a language for which an
 implementation report was filed: it is interoperable in that
 protocols are specified using ABNF and these protocols can be
 successfully implemented and syntax verified. Implementations of
 ABNF include the RFCs that use it as well as ABNF checking software.
 Management Information Base (MIB, [RFC3410]) modules are sometimes
 documented in implementation reports, and examples of that can be
 found in the archive of implementation reports.
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
 The interoperability reporting requirements for some classes of
 documents may be discussed in separate documents. See [METRICSTEST]
 for example.
5.4. Multiple Contributors, Multiple Implementation Reports
 If it's easiest to divide up the work of implementation reports by
 implementation, the result -- multiple implementation reports -- MAY
 be submitted to the sponsoring Area Director one-by-one. Each report
 might cover one implementation, including:
 identification of the implementation;
 an affirmation that the implementation works in testing (or
 better, in deployment);
 whether any features are known to interoperate poorly with other
 implementations;
 which optional or required features are not implemented (note that
 there are no protocol police to punish this disclosure, we should
 instead thank implementors who point out unimplemented or
 unimplementable features especially if they can explain why); and
 who is submitting this report for this implementation.
 These SHOULD be collated into one document for archiving under one
 title, but can be concatenated trivially even if the result has
 several summary sections or introductions.
5.5. Test Suites
 Some automated tests, such as automated test clients, do not test
 interoperability directly. When specialized test implementations are
 necessary, tests can at least be constructed from real-world protocol
 or document examples. For example:
 - ABNF [RFC4234] itself was tested by combining real-world examples
 -- uses of ABNF found in well-known RFCs -- and feeding those
 real-world examples into ABNF checkers. As the well-known RFCs
 were themselves interoperable and in broad deployment, this served
 as both a deployment proof and an interoperability proof.
 [RFC4234] progressed from Proposed Standard through Draft Standard
 to Standard and is obsoleted by [RFC5234].
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
 - Atom [RFC4287] clients might be tested by finding that they
 consistently display the information in a test Atom feed,
 constructed from real-world examples that cover all the required
 and optional features.
 - MIB modules can be tested with generic MIB browsers, to confirm
 that different implementations return the same values for objects
 under similar conditions.
 As a counter-example, the automated WWW Distributed Authoring and
 Versioning (WebDAV) test client Litmus
 (http://www.webdav.org/neon/litmus/) is of limited use in
 demonstrating interoperability for WebDAV because it tests
 completeness of server implementations and simple test cases. It
 does not test real-world use or whether any real WebDAV clients
 implement a feature properly or at all.
5.6. Optional Features, Extensibility Features
 Optional features need not be shown to be implemented everywhere.
 However, they do need to be implemented somewhere, and more than one
 independent implementation is required. If an optional feature does
 not meet this requirement, the implementation report must say so and
 explain why the feature must be kept anyway versus being evidence of
 a poor-quality standard.
 Extensibility points and versioning features are particularly likely
 to need this kind of treatment. When a protocol version 1 is
 released, the protocol version field itself is likely to be unused.
 Before any other versions exist, it can't really be demonstrated that
 this particular field or option is implemented.
6. Examples
 Some good, extremely brief, examples of implementation reports can be
 found in the archives:
 http://www.ietf.org/iesg/implementation/report-ppp-lcp-ext.html
 http://www.ietf.org/iesg/implementation/report-otp.html
 In some cases, perfectly good implementation reports are longer than
 necessary, but may preserve helpful information:
 http://www.ietf.org/iesg/implementation/report-rfc2329.txt
 http://www.ietf.org/iesg/implementation/report-rfc4234.txt
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
6.1. Minimal Implementation Report
 A large number of SMTP implementations support SMTP pipelining,
 including: (1) Innosoft's PMDF and Sun's SIMS. (2) ISODE/
 MessagingDirect's PP. (3) ISOCOR's nPlex. (4) software.com's
 post.office. (5) Zmailer. (6) Smail. (7) The SMTP server in
 Windows 2000. SMTP pipelining has been widely deployed in these
 and other implementations for some time, and there have been no
 reported interoperability problems.
 This implementation report can also be found at
 http://www.ietf.org//iesg/implementation/report-smtp-pipelining.txt
 but the entire report is already reproduced above. Since SMTP
 pipelining had no interoperability problems, the implementation
 report was able to provide all the key information in a very terse
 format. The reader can infer from the different vendors and
 platforms that the codebases must, by and in large, be independent.
 This implementation report would only be slightly improved by a
 positive affirmation that there have been probes or investigations
 asking about interoperability problems rather than merely a lack of
 problem reports, and by stating who provided this summary report.
6.2. Covering Exceptions
 The RFC2821bis (SMTP) implementation survey asked implementors what
 features were not implemented. The VRFY and EXPN commands showed up
 frequently in the responses as not implemented or disabled. That
 implementation report might have followed the advice in this
 document, had it already existed, by justifying the interoperability
 of those features up front or in an "exceptions" section if the
 outline defined in this memo were used:
 VRFY and EXPN commands are often not implemented or are disabled.
 This does not pose an interoperability problem for SMTP because
 EXPN is an optional features and its support is never relied on.
 VRFY is required, but in practice it is not relied on because
 servers can legitimately reply with a non-response. These
 commands should remain in the standard because they are sometimes
 used by administrators within a domain under controlled
 circumstances (e.g. authenticated query from within the domain).
 Thus, the occasional utility argues for keeping these features,
 while the lack of problems for end-users means that the
 interoperability of SMTP in real use is not in the least degraded.
7. Security Considerations
 This memo introduces no new security considerations.
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RFC 5657 Implementation Report Guidance September 2009
8. References
8.1. Normative References
 [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
 Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
8.2. Informative References
 [METRICSTEST] Bradner, S. and V. Paxson, "Advancement of metrics
 specifications on the IETF Standards Track", Work
 in Progress, July 2007.
 [RFC2026] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process --
 Revision 3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.
 [RFC3410] Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D., and B. Stewart,
 "Introduction and Applicability Statements for
 Internet-Standard Management Framework", RFC 3410,
 December 2002.
 [RFC4234] Crocker, D., Ed. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for
 Syntax Specifications: ABNF", RFC 4234, October 2005.
 [RFC4287] Nottingham, M., Ed. and R. Sayre, Ed., "The Atom
 Syndication Format", RFC 4287, December 2005.
 [RFC5234] Crocker, D. and P. Overell, "Augmented BNF for Syntax
 Specifications: ABNF", STD 68, RFC 5234, January 2008.
Authors' Addresses
 Lisa Dusseault
 Messaging Architects
 EMail: lisa.dusseault@gmail.com
 Robert Sparks
 Tekelec
 17210 Campbell Road
 Suite 250
 Dallas, Texas 75254-4203
 USA
 EMail: RjS@nostrum.com
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