Network File System version 4 (NFSv4) is an IETF standard for file sharing. To maintain NFS Version 4's utility and currency, the NFSv4 working group is chartered to maintain the existing NFSv4.0, NFSv4.1, and NFSv4.2 protocols and specifications of related ONC components, such as those defining RPC, XDR, and RPCSECGSS. The NFSv4 working group is also responsible for maintenance and extension of the RDMA protocols originally developed by the now-concluded RDDP WG (RFCs 5040-5045, e.g., RDMAP, DDP and MPA) , whose maintenance and extension were previously handled by the now-concluded STORM WG. In addition, extensions will be developed, as necessary, to correct problems with the protocols as currently specified, to accommodate needed file system semantics, and to respond to technological developments in the areas of networking and persistent storage/memory. Maintenance The working group's experience has been that, as NFSv4 implementations mature and deployments continue, clarifications and corrections to existing RFCs are needed. These specification updates help vendors in delivering high-quality and interoperable implementations. The NFSv4 working group is chartered with vetting reported issues and determining correctness of submitted errata. In addition, some areas may need more concentrated work to correct the specifications already published, to deal with unanticipated interactions between features, or to respond to evolving expectations with regard to areas such as security. Since necessary changes in such cases are generally not appropriate for the errata system, the working group will assist in publication of new RFCs that provide implementation guidance, editorial modification or technical updates to existing RFCs. Since the new NFSv4 versioning framework has been approved, these technical updates to NFSv4 minor versions could include limited XDR changes. Extensions The NFSv4 protocol is designed to allow extension by the definition of new operations, new attributes, and new Parallel NFS layout types, as well as the creation of minor versions. Similarly, associated ONC protocol components that have a versioning/ extension framework can be incrementally extended, when necessary. The working group will discuss proposals for such extensions and assure that they have adequate technical review, including discussion of their interaction with existing features, before adopting them as working group items and helping to draft specification documents. Some likely motivations for such extensions would be to: * Maximize NFS performance on advanced network fabrics. * Accommodate new storage technologies. * Provide facilities useful in management of NFS-accessed storage in large-scale virtualization environments. * Provide more effective NFS response to security challenges. New milestones that fall within the scope specified in this charter can be added to the list below after working group consensus and upon approval by the responsible Area Director. The WG will extend RDMA to enhance the Memory Placement operations such as Flush, Atomic Write and Validation using Integrity Signatures.