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Last Call Review of draft-ietf-appsawg-multipart-form-data-08
review-ietf-appsawg-multipart-form-data-08-secdir-lc-lonvick-2015-04-02-00

Request Review of draft-ietf-appsawg-multipart-form-data
Requested revision No specific revision (document currently at 11)
Type Last Call Review
Team Security Area Directorate (secdir)
Deadline 2015-04-06
Requested 2015-03-19
Authors Larry M Masinter
I-D last updated 2015-04-02
Completed reviews Genart Last Call review of -08 by Roni Even (diff)
Secdir Last Call review of -08 by Chris M. Lonvick (diff)
Opsdir Last Call review of -08 by Bert Wijnen (diff)
Assignment Reviewer Chris M. Lonvick
State Completed
Request Last Call review on draft-ietf-appsawg-multipart-form-data by Security Area Directorate Assigned
Reviewed revision 08 (document currently at 11)
Result Has issues
Completed 2015-04-02
review-ietf-appsawg-multipart-form-data-08-secdir-lc-lonvick-2015-04-02-00


Hi,




I have reviewed this document as part of the security directorate's 
ongoing effort to review all IETF documents being processed by the 
IESG.  These comments were written primarily for the benefit of the 
security area directors.  Document editors and WG chairs should treat 
these comments just like any other last call comments.

I only got a chance to skim through the document but the Security 
Considerations section looks to be consistent with RFC 2388, which it 
intends to replace.

I would suggest placing the last paragraph of the Security Considerations
section at the top of the section.  That paragraph seems to be the most
comprehensive in these considerations, and the other paragraphs seem to
augment and give specific details.  It just seems to me that it would
provide a better flow to reading that section.

Also, I'm just not sure that I'm following the second paragraph of
Appendix B:
   More problematic is the ambiguity introduced because implementations
   did not follow [

RFC2388

] because it used "may" instead of "MUST" when
   specifying encoding of field names, and for other unknown reasons, so
   now, parsers need to be more complex for fuzzy matching against the
   possible outputs of various encoding methods.
Please correct me if I'm off base here, but it sounds like the ambiguity
set in because implementations WERE following RFC 2388 by making
choices on their own (due to the "may"s) rather than being directed to
make uniform choices which would have been mandated if that RFC had used
"MUST"s.


Finally, I usually advocate giving directions to implementers about what
to do if they find implementations using the older, outdated spec.  As
an example, what should a receiver do if it gets a ContentType that does
not have a "boundary" parameter?  However, as I'm not really familiar 
with this technology, and as the document says there are many ways to
do all of this, then I'm not sure that could or should be discussed.  If
it is something that would better define behavior then I would suggest
providing some guidance here.

Best regards,
Chris