This is the working area for the Individual internet-draft, "Offline Server Configuration for Zero Round Trip Transport Layer Security".
- Editor's copy
- [Individual Draft] (https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-thomson-tls-offline-config)
Before submitting feedback, please familiarize yourself with our current issues list and review the working group documents and mailing list discussion. If you're new to this, you may also want to read the Tao of the IETF.
Be aware that all contributions to the specification fall under the "NOTE WELL" terms outlined below.
-
The best way to provide feedback (editorial or design) and ask questions is sending an e-mail to our mailing list (info). This will ensure that the entire Working Group sees your input in a timely fashion.
-
If you have editorial suggestions (i.e., those that do not change the meaning of the specification), you can either:
a) Fork this repository and submit a pull request; this is the lowest friction way to get editorial changes in.
b) Submit a new issue to Github, and mention that you believe it is editorial in the issue body. It is not necessary to notify the mailing list for editorial issues.
c) Make comments on individual commits in Github. Note that this feedback is processed only with best effort by the editors, so it should only be used for quick editorial suggestions or questions.
- For non-editorial (i.e., design) issues, you can also create an issue on Github. However, you must notify the mailing list when creating such issues, providing a link to the issue in the message body.
Note that github issues are not for substantial discussions; the only appropriate place to discuss design issues is on the mailing list itself.
Formatted text and HTML versions of the draft can be built using make
.
$ make
This requires that you have the necessary software installed. There are several other tools that are enabled by make, check the Makefile for details, including links to the software those tools might require.
Mac users will need to install
XCode to get make
, see
this answer for instructions.
Windows users will need to use Cygwin to get make
.
All systems require xml2rfc. This
requires Python. The easiest way to get
xml2rfc
is with pip
.
Using a virtualenv
:
$ virtualenv --no-site-packages venv
# remember also to activate the virtualenv before any 'make' run
$ source venv/bin/activate
$ pip install xml2rfc
To your local user account:
$ pip install --user xml2rfc
Or globally:
$ sudo pip install xml2rfc
xml2rfc depends on development versions of libxml2 and
libxslt1. These packages are named libxml2-dev
and
libxslt1-dev
(Debian, Ubuntu) or libxml2-devel
and libxslt1-devel
(RedHat,
Fedora).
If you use markdown, you will also need to install kramdown-rfc2629
,
which requires Ruby and can be installed using the roby package
manager, gem
:
$ gem install kramdown-rfc2629
Some other helpful tools are listed in config.mk
.
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- The IESG, or any member thereof on behalf of the IESG
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- Any IETF working group or portion thereof
- Any Birds of a Feather (BOF) session
- The IAB or any member thereof on behalf of the IAB
- The RFC Editor or the Internet-Drafts function
- All IETF Contributions are subject to the rules of RFC 5378 and RFC 3979 (updated by RFC 4879).
Statements made outside of an IETF session, mailing list or other function, that are clearly not intended to be input to an IETF activity, group or function, are not IETF Contributions in the context of this notice.
Please consult RFC 5378 and RFC 3979 for details.
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