From f465bc8c661856cd9dc768de3278befbae554490 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rasmus Dahlberg Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2022 16:41:32 +0100 Subject: persisted pads from meeting minutes --- doc/proposals/2022-01-how-to-use-proposal-folder | 31 ++++++++++++++++++++++ doc/proposals/2022-01-no-quick-tree-head-endpoint | 32 +++++++++++++++++++++++ 2 files changed, 63 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/proposals/2022-01-how-to-use-proposal-folder create mode 100644 doc/proposals/2022-01-no-quick-tree-head-endpoint (limited to 'doc/proposals') diff --git a/doc/proposals/2022-01-how-to-use-proposal-folder b/doc/proposals/2022-01-how-to-use-proposal-folder new file mode 100644 index 0000000..941a504 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/proposals/2022-01-how-to-use-proposal-folder @@ -0,0 +1,31 @@ +Proposal: how to use the doc/proposals folder + +Background +--- +It is a bit inconsistent to have some proposals in archive and others in +doc/proposals. This happened because: + 1. Our process is to persist pads in the archive. Some proposals were pads. + 2. The proposals in doc/proposals were a bit more structured. It added + overhead that we felt was not necessary to have yet. + +Proposal +--- + 1. Move proposals that were persisted in the archive to doc/proposals as is. + To keep it simple, only move proposals that have "proposal" as part of their + persisted name. + 2. Update affected links so that they are not broken, should not be many. + 3. In the future we put all types of proposals in doc/proposal, regardless + of if they are related to the Sigsum protocol or something else (like this + document). Notably this includes pads that are to be persisted by the chair + after our weekly meets. + 4. The main criteria is that a document in doc/proposals proposes something. + There is no particular format for a proposal's content, other than being + plaintext viewable. + 5. To keep the listing clean we continue to prefix proposals with + YYYY-MM-. The date refers to when the document was initially added. + +Notes +--- +A notable pro with this is that it is easy to update a proposal if we realize +that something is missing after persisting it. Our archive is not meant to have +updates. diff --git a/doc/proposals/2022-01-no-quick-tree-head-endpoint b/doc/proposals/2022-01-no-quick-tree-head-endpoint new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3a31a04 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/proposals/2022-01-no-quick-tree-head-endpoint @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +Proposal: no quick tree-head endpoint + +Refer to + + https://git.sigsum.org/sigsum/tree/archive/2022-01-18-tree-head-endpoint-observations + +for background. + +This proposal suggests that we only have two tree head endpoints. + 1. get-tree-head-to-cosign -> signed tree head. This is the tree head that + witnesses are currently cosigning. This endpoint is only meant to be used + by witnesses. + 2. get-tree-head-cosigned -> cosigned tree head. This is the finalized tree + head that witnesses have finished cosigning. The list of cosignatures is + thus fixed. + +The to-cosign and cosigned tree heads are rotated every $n minutes. A typical +value of $n is likely going to be five (5). It might be lower if witnesses +accept to work more. + +Pros: + * Less complex API. It has fewer endpoints and no choice between a "quick" + or "slow" get-tree-head-cosigned endpoint. No choices means easier tooling, + fewer mistakes. + * It might be reasonable to speed up the "slow" endpoint by other means, see + above. + +It is also worth pointing out another pro that we already got from removing the +get-tree-head-latest endpoint. A submitter is forced to wait a bit, even for a +signed tree head. This makes it less appealing to "go with a signed tree head +because its fast". The name of the only signed tree head endpoint also +discourages usage by submitters. -- cgit v1.2.3