RFC: Difference between revisions

The educational technology and digital learning wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 10: Line 10:


Today there are over [http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/index.html 3000 RFCs]
Today there are over [http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/index.html 3000 RFCs]
(some obsolete, e.g. superceded by more recent ones).  
(some obsolete, e.g. superseded by more recent ones).  


; Standards RFCs
; Standards RFCs

Revision as of 16:41, 28 March 2007

Draft

Definition

The RFC (Request for Comments) series contains technical and organizational documents about the Internet, including the technical specifications and policy documents produced by the Internet Engineering Task Force.

Some of these are standards, some have just informational or experimental status. The publications process has been design to be fast and there is a peer control mechanism (i.e. an RFC first must be published as an Internet Draft.

Categories of RFCs

Today there are over 3000 RFCs (some obsolete, e.g. superseded by more recent ones).

Standards RFCs

Some of the most popular RFCs concern all the things that make Internet work....

  • SMTP
  • URI (URLs and URNs)
  • TCP
  • Domain Names
  • HTTP
  • MIME,
"For your Information" (FYU) RFCs

A few contain guidelines for usage/behavior, e.g.

“Read both mailing lists and newsgroups for one to two months before you post anything. This helps you to get an understanding of the culture of the group.”

Current Best Practices

These are technical documents that tell how to use standards (e.g. implement something). E.g.

For education

There are not many RFC standards that address education, since RFCs deal with rather lower technical layers of Internet.

Links

RFC Repositories
  • Internet FAQ Archives (The subtitle of this archive which also contains the RFCs is "online Education" :)
  • Request for comments at The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). I rather suggest to use the link above if you want to browse, This archive is better to search.
How-to