<p>Since the inception of the &XSF;, the &EDITOR; has been Peter Saint-Andre. However, if he gets hit by a bus or is replaced by someone else, this document may prove useful.</p>
<p>The XMPP Extensions Editor manages the XMPP extensions process as defined in &xep0001;. In addition, the XMPP Extensions Editor functions as the XMPP Registrar as defined in &xep0053;. Read those documents first, since this README focuses on mechanics rather than philosophy.</p>
<p>Once a XEP has been published, it will be periodically updated in CVS, and sometimes those changes are significant enough to warrant a new version (e.g., version 0.2 after 0.1). Often a request to release a new version will come from the document author, sometimes from the Council (e.g., after the XEP has reached version 1.0 or version 2.0). Here is how to update a XEP.</p>
<section2topic='Deferring a XEP'anchor='deferring'>
<p>The status of a XEP shall be automatically changed to Deferred if a new version has not been released in 6 months, except if the XEP is actively in the Council queue for consideration of issuance of a Last Call. Here is the process.</p>
<li>Modify the <abstract/> element with appropriate content (see existing Retracted XEPs).</li>
<li>Add a new revision block with an incremented version number, explaining that the XEP has been Retracted and why (see existing Retracted XEPs).</li>
<li>Receive notice from the Council Chair that a Last Call shall be issued.</li>
<li>Determine the ending date, which must be at least 10 days in the future and usually is 2 weeks (sometimes 3 weeks if much discussion is expected).</li>
<li>Change the <status/> element to "Proposed" in the XML file.</li>
<li>Add the protocol namespace (if any) to the protocol namespaces registry and complete any other XMPP Registrar actions called for in the XEP (see below).</li>
<section2topic='Advancing a XEP'anchor='reg-advance'>
<p>Registry files are contained in the "registry" CVS module. In general, there are several files that may need to be updated when a XEP advances to Active or Draft. In particular, most XEPs specify one or more protocol namespaces, which need to be added to the namespaces.xml file in the "registry" module. Refer to the list of registries at http://www.xmpp.org/registrar/ in order to determine which other registries may need to be updated. The reg.ent file will probably need to be updated as well. Once the Registrar actions have been completed, update the text of the XEP's XMPP Registrar Considerations section accordingly (e.g., to change "shall include" to "includes").</p>
<p>A XEP may call for one or more new registries to be created. If so, carefully review the XMPP Registrar Considerations section of the XEP before it advances to Draft or Active in order to provide appropriate feedback to the XEP author. (Alternatively, make the changes directly in the XEP file in consultation with the author.)</p>
<p>When creating a new registry, it is best to copy the DTD, XML, and XSL files for an existing registry, then modify them in accordance with the definition of the new registry in the relevant XEP. The gen.sh script will need to be updated to reflect the existence of the new registry, as will the index file for the http://www.xmpp.org/registrar/ web page.</p>
<p>Check all your changes into CVS, update your CVS directory on the web server, and run the gen.sh script to update the XMPP Registrar web pages.</p>
<p>In order to convert XML files into HTML and other formats, the XMPP Extensions Editor currently uses the xsltproc tool, which is part of libxml2 (created by Daniel Veillard). This tool is extremely handy and it is recommended that use of xsltproc be continued, especially since the shell scripts (described below) make calls to xsltproc.</p>
<p>Most the "magic" behind creating the HTML-formatted XEPs, as well as the IETF-style reference files, is perfomed by XSL stylesheets. The main file here is xep.xsl, although ref.xsl is used to create the reference files. A future version of this README may explain these files in more depth.</p>
<p>The xep.ent file contains handy references that can be incorporated into any XEP XML document, thus providing a centralized location for various document references. The XMPP Extensions Editor must keep this file up to date (e.g., by adding all new XEPs to it), and should be the only person who makes changes to the file.</p>
<p>This script updates the database and sends a message to standards@xmpp.org when the status of a XEP is changed to Deferred. Before running this script, make sure that you modify the <status/> element in the XEP itself and run the gen.sh shell script.</p>
<p>This script announces availability of a new "proto-XEP" (i.e., a document not yet accepted as a XEP by the XMPP Council) by sending a message to standards@xmpp.org. Before running this script, place the new proto-XEP so that it is available at http://www.xmpp.org/extensions/inbox/ (normally this is done by running 'xsltproc inbox/docname.xml > /var/www/xmpp.org/extensions/inbox/docname.html' from the editor's working CVS directory on the web server).</p>
<p>This script converts all XEP XML files into HTML. Use this if the xep.xsl file changes in ways that affect all XEPs. But make sure that CVS is synced up first -- you don't want to be publishing interim versions of XEPs!</p>
<p>This script converts one XEP XML file into HTML. Run this script before announcing a new version. This script can also be used for minor edits to the current version.</p>
<p>This script updates all of the XML schemas located at <http://www.xmpp.org/schemas/>. Update this file every time a protocol XEP with an associated schema advances to Active or Draft.</p>