> From: Ronald Bonica <rbonica(_at_)juniper(_dot_)net>
> RFC 2026's very terse definition of HISTORIC. According to RFC 2026,
> "A specification that has been superseded by a more recent
> specification or is for any other reason considered to be obsolete
> is assigned to the Historic level." That's the entire definition.
> Anything more is read into it.
> ...
> A more likely interpretation is as follows:
> "the IETF is not likely to invest effort in the technology in the
> future"
> "the IETF does not encourage (or discourage) new deployments of this
> technology.
But in giving other interpretations, are you thereby not comitting the
exact error you call out above: "Anything more is read into it."?
To me, "Historic" has always (including pre-2026) meant just what the
orginal meaning of the word is (caveat - see below) - something that is
now likely only of interest to people who are looking into the history of
networking. (The dictionary definition is "Based on or concerned with
events in history".) I think "obsolete" is probably the best one-word
description (and note that 'obsolete' != 'obsolescent').
(Caveat: technically, it probably should have been 'historical', not
"historic" - "historic" actually means 'in the past, but very noteworthy',
e.g. 'CYCLADES was a historic networking design', so not every historical
protocol is historic.)
Noel
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