--- 1/draft-ietf-v6ops-ipv4survey-subip-02.txt 2006-02-05 02:07:57.000000000 +0100 +++ 2/draft-ietf-v6ops-ipv4survey-subip-03.txt 2006-02-05 02:07:57.000000000 +0100 @@ -1,16 +1,16 @@ Network Working Group Philip J. Nesser II -draft-ietf-v6ops-ipv4survey-subip-02.txt Nesser & Nesser Consulting +draft-ietf-v6ops-ipv4survey-subip-03.txt Nesser & Nesser Consulting Internet Draft Andreas Bergstrom Ostfold University College - August 2003 - Expires January 2004 + September 2003 + Expires February 2004 Survey of IPv4 Addresses in Currently Deployed IETF Sub-IP Area Standards This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Status of this Memo Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering @@ -57,35 +57,35 @@ 8. Security Consideration 9. Acknowledgements 10. References 11. Authors Addresses 12. Intellectual Property Statement 13. Full Copyright Statement 1.0 Introduction This document is part of a document set aiming to document all usage of -IPv4 addresses in IETF stanadards. In an effort to have the information +IPv4 addresses in IETF standards. In an effort to have the information in a manageable form, it has been broken into 7 documents conforming to the current IETF areas (Application, Internet, Manangement & Operations, Routing, Security, Sub-IP and Transport). For a full introduction, please see the intro[1] draft. 2.0 Document Organization The rest of the document sections are described below. Sections 3, 4, 5, and 6 each describe the raw analysis of Full, Draft, and Proposed Standards, and Experimental RFCs. Each RFC is discussed in its turn starting with RFC 1 and ending with RFC 3247. The comments -for each RFC is "raw" in nature. That is, each RFC is discussed in a +for each RFC are "raw" in nature. That is, each RFC is discussed in a vacuum and problems or issues discussed do not "look ahead" to see if the problems have already been fixed. Section 7 is an analysis of the data presented in Sections 3, 4, 5, and 6. It is here that all of the results are considered as a whole and the problems that have been resolved in later RFCs are correlated. 3.0 Full Standards Full Internet Standards (most commonly simply referred to as @@ -199,24 +199,24 @@ his partner in all ways, Wendy M. Nesser. The editor, Andreas Bergstrom, would like to thank Pekka Savola for guidance and collection of comments for the editing of this document. 10.0 References 10.1 Normative -[1] Philip J. Nesser II, Andreas Bergstrom. "Introduction to the Survey of - IPv4 Addresses in Currently Deployed IETF Standards", - draft-ietf-v6ops-ipv4survey-intro-02.txt IETF work in progress, - August 2003 +[1] Philip J. Nesser II, Andreas Bergstrom. "Introduction to the + Survey of IPv4 Addresses in Currently Deployed IETF Standards", + draft-ietf-v6ops-ipv4survey-intro-04.txt IETF work in progress, + September 2003 11.0 Authors Addresses Please contact the author with any questions, comments or suggestions at: Philip J. Nesser II Principal Nesser & Nesser Consulting 13501 100th Ave NE, #5202