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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) A. Cooper Request for Comments: 8875 Cisco Category: Informational P. Hoffman ISSN: 2070-1721 ICANN August 2020 Working Group GitHub Administration Abstract The use of GitHub in IETF working group processes is increasing. This document describes uses and conventions for working groups that are considering starting to use GitHub. It does not mandate any processes and does not require changes to the processes used by current and future working groups not using GitHub. 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 candidates for any level of Internet Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841. Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8875. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2020 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 (https://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. Table of Contents 1. Introduction 2. Administrative Process and Conventions 2.1. Creation of GitHub Organizations 2.2. Migration of an Existing Organization 2.3. Personnel Changes 2.4. Working Group Closing 2.5. Creation of Document Repository 2.6. Listing Related Repositories 3. Working Group Process 3.1. Contributions 3.2. Backing Up and Archiving GitHub Content 4. Security Considerations 5. IANA Considerations 6. Informative References Authors' Addresses 1. Introduction Many IETF working groups and participants make use of GitHub in different ways as part of their work on IETF documents. Some others are interested in having their working groups use GitHub to facilitate the development of working group documents, but they are unfamiliar with how to get started or unclear about which conventions to follow. Some other working groups use or plan to use other code- repository services such as GitLab and Bitbucket, which have different properties than GitHub. This document specifies a set of administrative processes and conventions for IETF working groups to use if they choose as a working group to use GitHub to facilitate their work. The specifications in this document are not directed at working groups or individuals that are already using GitHub to do IETF work. Practices vary among existing working groups, and some of them are not consistent with the conventions proposed here: that is fine. The goal of the specifications in this document is not to require uniformity in current practice, but to help working groups get started using GitHub in a reviewed and validated way, if desired. 2. Administrative Process and Conventions This section specifies an administrative process and conventions to support the creation and management of GitHub organizations for working groups and single-document repositories in a uniform way. The steps may be done manually by the IETF Secretariat, or they may be automated. See <https://github.com/richsalz/ietf-gh-scripts> and <https://github.com/martinthomson/i-d-template> for working examples of automation that is in use in some working groups. In this document the question of whether processes should be manual or automated is deliberately left unspecified, since these are implementation details that the IETF Secretariat and Tools Team will address. Most of the conventions below are drawn from [RFC8874]. 2.1. Creation of GitHub Organizations This document specifies that there be a facility in the IETF Datatracker (<https://datatracker.ietf.org/>) interface to allow an area director (AD) or working group chair to request the creation of a GitHub organization for a particular working group. Ideally, this facility would appear both as part of the working group chartering UI and the working group page UI. When an area director or working group chair makes a request to create a GitHub organization, the following process would be initiated: 1. Create a GitHub organization for the working group. 2. Name the organization in the format ietf-wg-<wgname>... 3. Initialize the organization by designating the IETF Secretariat and the area directors in the working group's area as owners. If the responsible AD for the working group is from another area, that AD will be an owner as well. 4. Initialize the organization with a team that has administrator access. This team will consist of the working group chairs and working group secretary, if one exists. After the organization is created, the URL for the organization would be added to the working group's page in the Datatracker. Steps 3 and 4 above imply that the GitHub identities of the organization owners and administrators are known. Recording GitHub identities in the Datatracker (see <https://trac.tools.ietf.org/tools/ietfdb/ticket/2548>) would facilitate this. The person requesting the organization would need to be notified if the GitHub identities of any of the people meant to be owners or administrators were not available. 2.2. Migration of an Existing Organization If a working group already has an organization, it would be useful to be able to make it have the same management as one would get by going through the steps in Section 2.1. That is, it would be good to be able to run Steps 3 and 4 from Section 2.1 so that the rest of the activities in this section, such as personnel changes, work the same way as for organizations that were created as specified herein. 2.3. Personnel Changes When there are personnel changes in the area or the working group, those changes would be reflected in the GitHub organization. There should be an ability in the Datatracker to specify that personnel changes have occurred. 2.4. Working Group Closing When a working group is closed, the team with administrative access would be removed, and the owner list would be returned to the Secretariat and current ADs at the time of closing. The organization summary and the repositories within the organization would be updated to indicate that they are no longer under development. Later, the owner list could become just the Secretariat, or it might include others chosen by the Secretariat or the IESG. 2.5. Creation of Document Repository There are many different scenarios and configurations where it might be useful to have automation or established administrative conventions for repositories within WG organizations, such as: * Creating a new repository for an individual draft (at the discretion of the WG chair); * Creating a new repository for an already adopted working group draft; * Migrating an existing document repository into the WG organization; and * Creating a new repository that contains multiple drafts. As an incremental step, this document specifies that there be a facility in the Datatracker interface to allow an administrator of an ietf-wg-<wgname> organization to request the creation of a new repository within that organization for a single document. The document authors would be identified as collaborators. The repository name would be the draft name. Ideally, the repository would be configured with a skeleton draft file, default CONTRIBUTING, LICENSE, and README files, and continuous integration support, in the vein of <https://github.com/martinthomson/i-d-template>. Performing this step would automatically inform the IETF Secretariat that this repository should be backed up as described in Section 3.2. 2.6. Listing Related Repositories The IETF Datatracker should allow users to add links to repositories (for GitHub and other repository services) on working group, document, and user pages. At the time of this writing, this feature was under development. 3. Working Group Process [RFC8874] contains discussion of the different possible ways that a working group can use GitHub and the large number of decisions associated with doing so. This section specifies a basic set of administrative policies for working groups to follow and the administrative support needed to carry out those policies. 3.1. Contributions At a minimum, every repository created in a working group organization needs to incorporate into its CONTRIBUTING file the boilerplate text at <https://trustee.ietf.org/license-for-open- source-repositories.html> from the IETF license file for open-source repositories. The CONTRIBUTING file can contain other information as well (see <https://github.com/ietf/repo-files/tree/master/ contributing-samples> for examples). It would be useful if the user data in the Datatracker could list (at a minimum) the GitHub account of the user so that their contributions could be tracked more easily. Some working groups choose to have more than one draft in a repository, particularly for drafts that are tightly linked with significant cross-references. In such a case, the README for the repository needs to say so clearly, so that a participant understands that changes might be made to multiple drafts at once. 3.2. Backing Up and Archiving GitHub Content IETF working group mailing lists are automatically backed up by the IETF Secretariat, and the archives are publicly available. All official interactions in a WG must be archived. Working group GitHub content also needs to be backed up and publicly archived. This document specifies using the Git protocol [git-protocol] itself for both of these tasks. Every IETF working group repository on GitHub will have a mirror repository of the same name on a server maintained by the IETF Secretariat. Every hour, a service will use the "git fetch" command on every GitHub repository that is being tracked. The mirror repository will allow anyone to read the repository. Note that this system will not back up GitHub issues or pull requests. These should be backed up as well; the GitHub API allows for this. The IETF Secretariat should back up those at the same time as it is backing up the GitHub repositories. The steps in Section 2.5 inform the IETF Secretariat which repositories should be backed up. Working group chairs and area directors should also be able to request that the IETF Secretariat back up additional repositories that are related to IETF working groups. 4. Security Considerations An attacker who can change the contents of Internet-Drafts, particularly late in a working group's process, can possibly cause unnoticed changes in protocols that are eventually adopted. There is a risk of data loss due to centralization of data in one service. This is recognized and mitigated by the plan described in Section 3.2. 5. IANA Considerations This document has no IANA actions. 6. Informative References [git-protocol] Chacon, S. and B. Straub, "Git on the Server - The Protocols", in Pro Git, 2014, <https://git- scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-on-the-Server-The-Protocols#The- Git-Protocol>. [RFC8874] Thomson, M. and B. Stark, "Working Group GitHub Usage Guidance", RFC 8874, DOI 10.17487/RFC8874, August 2020, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8874>. Authors' Addresses Alissa Cooper Cisco Email: alcoop@cisco.com Paul Hoffman ICANN Email: paul.hoffman@icann.org