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- Filename: 001-process.txt
- Title: The Tor Proposal Process
- Version: $Revision$
- Last-Modified: $Date$
- Author: Nick Mathewson
- Created: 30-Jan-2007
- Status: Meta
- Overview:
- 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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