| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187 | Filename: 001-process.txtTitle: The Tor Proposal ProcessVersion: $Revision$Last-Modified: $Date$Author: Nick MathewsonCreated: 30-Jan-2007Status: MetaOverview:   This document describes how to change the Tor specifications, how Tor   proposals work, and the relationship between Tor proposals and the   specifications.   This is an informational document.Motivation:   Previously, our process for updating the Tor specifications was maximally   informal: we'd patch the specification (sometimes forking first, and   sometimes not), then discuss the patches, reach consensus, and implement   the changes.   This had a few problems.   First, even at its most efficient, the old process would often have the   spec out of sync with the code.  The worst cases were those where   implementation was deferred: the spec and code could stay out of sync for   versions at a time.   Second, it was hard to participate in discussion, since you had to know   which portions of the spec were a proposal, and which were already   implemented.   Third, it littered the specifications with too many inline comments.     [This was a real problem -NM]       [Especially when it went to multiple levels! -NM]         [XXXX especially when they weren't signed and talked about that          thing that you can't remember after a year]How to change the specs now:   First, somebody writes a proposal document.  It should describe the change   that should be made in detail, and give some idea of how to implement it.   Once it's fleshed out enough, it becomes a proposal.   Like an RFC, every proposal gets a number.  Unlike RFCs, proposals can   change over time and keep the same number, until they are finally   accepted or rejected.  The history for each proposal   will be stored in the Tor Subversion repository.   Once a proposal is in the repository, we should discuss and improve it   until we've reached consensus that it's a good idea, and that it's   detailed enough to implement.  When this happens, we implement the   proposal and incorporate it into the specifications.  Thus, the specs   remain the canonical documentation for the Tor protocol: no proposal is   ever the canonical documentation for an implemented feature.   (This process is pretty similar to the Python Enhancement Process, with   the major exception that Tor proposals get re-integrated into the specs   after implementation, whereas PEPs _become_ the new spec.)   {It's still okay to make small changes directly to the spec if the code   can be   written more or less immediately, or cosmetic changes if no code change is   required.  This document reflects the current developers' _intent_, not   a permanent promise to always use this process in the future: we reserve   the right to get really excited and run off and implement something in a   caffeine-or-m&m-fueled all-night hacking session.}How new proposals get added:  Once an idea has been proposed on the development list, a properly formatted  (see below) draft exists, and rough consensus within the active development  community exists that this idea warrants consideration, the proposal editor  will officially add the proposal.  To get your proposal in, send it to or-dev.  The current proposal editor is Nick Mathewson.What should go in a proposal:   Every proposal should have a header containing these fields:     Filename, Title, Version, Last-Modified, Author, Created, Status.   The Version and Last-Modified fields should use the SVN Revision and Date   tags respectively.   These fields are optional but recommended:     Target, Implemented-In.   The Target field should describe which version the proposal is hoped to be   implemented in (if it's Open or Accepted).  The Implemented-In field   should describe which version the proposal was implemented in (if it's   Finished or Closed).   The body of the proposal should start with an Overview section explaining   what the proposal's about, what it does, and about what state it's in.   After the Overview, the proposal becomes more free-form.  Depending on its   the length and complexity, the proposal can break into sections as   appropriate, or follow a short discursive format.  Every proposal should   contain at least the following information before it is "ACCEPTED",   though the information does not need to be in sections with these names.      Motivation: What problem is the proposal trying to solve?  Why does        this problem matter?  If several approaches are possible, why take this        one?      Design: A high-level view of what the new or modified features are, how        the new or modified features work, how they interoperate with each        other, and how they interact with the rest of Tor.  This is the main        body of the proposal.  Some proposals will start out with only a        Motivation and a Design, and wait for a specification until the        Design seems approximately right.      Security implications: What effects the proposed changes might have on        anonymity, how well understood these effects are, and so on.      Specification: A detailed description of what needs to be added to the        Tor specifications in order to implement the proposal.  This should        be in about as much detail as the specifications will eventually        contain: it should be possible for independent programmers to write        mutually compatible implementations of the proposal based on its        specifications.      Compatibility: Will versions of Tor that follow the proposal be        compatible with versions that do not?  If so, how will compatibility        be achieved?  Generally, we try to not drop compatibility if at        all possible; we haven't made a "flag day" change since May 2004,        and we don't want to do another one.      Implementation: If the proposal will be tricky to implement in Tor's        current architecture, the document can contain some discussion of how        to go about making it work.      Performance and scalability notes: If the feature will have an effect        on performance (in RAM, CPU, bandwidth) or scalability, there should        be some analysis on how significant this effect will be, so that we        can avoid really expensive performance regressions, and so we can        avoid wasting time on insignificant gains.Proposal status:   Open: A proposal under discussion.   Accepted: The proposal is complete, and we intend to implement it.      After this point, substantive changes to the proposal should be      avoided, and regarded as a sign of the process having failed      somewhere.   Finished: The proposal has been accepted and implemented.  After this      point, the proposal should not be changed.   Closed: The proposal has been accepted, implemented, and merged into the      main specification documents.  The proposal should not be changed after      this point.   Rejected: We're not going to implement the feature as described here,      though we might do some other version.  See comments in the document      for details.  The proposal should not be changed after this point;      to bring up some other version of the idea, write a new proposal.   Draft: This isn't a complete proposal yet; there are definite missing      pieces.  Please don't add any new proposals with this status; put them      in the "ideas" sub-directory instead.   Needs-Revision: The idea for the proposal is a good one, but the proposal      as it stands has serious problems that keep it from being accepted.      See comments in the document for details.   Dead: The proposal hasn't been touched in a long time, and it doesn't look      like anybody is going to complete it soon.  It can become "Open" again      if it gets a new proponent.   Needs-Research: There are research problems that need to be solved before      it's clear whether the proposal is a good idea.   Meta: This is not a proposal, but a document about proposals.   The editor maintains the correct status of proposals, based on rough   consensus and his own discretion.Proposal numbering:   Numbers 000-099 are reserved for special and meta-proposals.  100 and up   are used for actual proposals.  Numbers aren't recycled.
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