Other SDOs can and follow the work in IETF through the RFCs we publish. They do 
not follow wiki’s, unless the document itself says, “here are the guidelines, 
but if you are looking for the latest, go to this wiki”. I therefore would 
support the proposal outlined below. It gives the SDO a stable point of 
reference with a document, which gets updated occasionally, but also allows 
them to peak at what is coming down the pipeline.

Thanks.

> On Nov 15, 2017, at 6:53 PM, Robert Wilton <rwil...@cisco.com> wrote:
> 
> I liked the suggestion from Chris Hopps:
> 
> I think that it was along the lines of ...
> 
> The RFC contains a reference at the top that states that updates to the 
> guidelines is available on a wiki at ....
> 
> Every few years the guidelines on the wiki can be folded into a latest 
> version of the guidelines draft.
> 
> 6087bis looks to be 3.5 years old.  Should folks, e.g. at BBF,, IEEE, or MEF 
> be using the latest draft guidelines, or should then use the published RFC 
> until 6087bis is actually republshed?
> 
> Thanks,
> Rob
> 
> 
> On 15/11/2017 10:14, Martin Bjorklund wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> There was a proposal in the meeting today to have the guidelines for
>> tree diagrams in a wiki, instead of having them in 6087bis or in the
>> tree diagram document.
>> 
>> Was the proposal really to have a wiki for just the tree guidelines,
>> or was the proposal to withdraw 6087bis from the process and instead
>> publish all guidelines as a wiki?
>> 
>> If it is the former, is it really worth it?
>> 
>> Advantages with a wiki:
>> 
>>   +  It can be updated more easily
>> 
>> Some drawbacks:
>> 
>>   -  It can be updated more easily
>>      (meaning they are less stable)
>> 
>>   -  Wikis tend to not be alive after some time, and are not that
>>      easy to find.  Just try to find the various YANG-related wikis
>>      we've tried to maintain over the years.
>> 
>>   -  Links in RFCs also have problems.  Sites are re-orginized etc.
>>      As an example, the link to the security guidelines template in
>>      RFC 6087 doesn't work anymore.
>> 
>>   -  People that are looking for a stable reference will have problems
>>      (I think Rob mentioned that IEEE still refer to RFC 6087 (which
>>      is understandable; that's the published version).
>> 
>>   -  Who maintains the Wiki, and what are the rules for updating it?
>> 
>> 
>> I suggest we have the tree-related guidelines (actually just a few
>> sentences) in the tree draft, and since 6087bis already refers to this
>> document it is not a big problem that guidelines are spread out over
>> several documents that are difficult to find.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> /martin
>> 
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>> 
> 
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Mahesh Jethanandani
mjethanand...@gmail.com

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