IEEE P1003.0 Draft 14 - November 1991 Copyright (c) 1991 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. 345 East 47th Street New York, NY 10017, USA All rights reserved as an unpublished work. This is an unapproved and unpublished IEEE Standards Draft, subject to change. The publication, distribution, or copying of this draft, as well as all derivative works based on this draft, is expressly prohibited except as set forth below. Permission is hereby granted for IEEE Standards Committee participants to reproduce this document for purposes of IEEE standardization activities only, and subject to the restrictions contained herein. Permission is hereby also granted for member bodies and technical committees of ISO and IEC to reproduce this document for purposes of developing a national position, subject to the restrictions contained herein. Permission is hereby also granted to the preceding entities to make limited copies of this document in an electronic form only for the stated activities. The following restrictions apply to reproducing or transmitting the document in any form: 1) all copies or portions thereof must identify the document's IEEE project number and draft number, and must be accompanied by this entire notice in a prominent location; 2) no portion of this document may be redistributed in any modified or abridged form without the prior approval of the IEEE Standards Department. Other entities seeking permission to reproduce this document, or any portion thereof, for standardization or other activities, must contact the IEEE Standards Department for the appropriate license. Use of information contained in this unapproved draft is at your own risk. IEEE Standards Department Copyright and Permissions 445 Hoes Lane, P.O. Box 1331 Piscataway, NJ 08855-1331, USA +1 (908) 562-3800 +1 (908) 562-1571 [FAX] P1003.0/D14 Section 6: Profiles _R_e_s_p_o_n_s_i_b_i_l_i_t_y: _F_r_i_t_z _S_c_h_u_l_z This section targets those who want to know more about what profiles are and those who are in the process of developing their own profiles. The latter group consists of those developing formal ``Standardized Profiles'' and those developing less formal profiles for their industry group (e.g., a banking trade association) or their own company or enterprise for procurement or strategic planning purposes. Those not involved in the development of profiles should read 6.2. Parts of 6.3 also may be useful, especially the earlier subclauses that give definitions of terms and explain concepts more precisely. Developers of profiles that are not formal POSIX Standardized Profiles (POSIX SPs) should read all of Section 6. Developers of profiles that are formal POSIX SPs should read all of Section 6 and Annex A. 6.1 Scope The information presented here about profiles is limited in scope to assist those needing to understand profile concepts as they apply to the POSIX Open System Environment. Covered are profiles constructed from standards (and profiles) listed within this guide (that, by design, are consistent with POSIX.1). The goal is to create a common approach and documentation scope and style for POSIX-oriented profiles. Annex A goes further by giving specific guidance to developers of formal POSIX SPs. Copyright (c) 1991 IEEE. All rights reserved. This is an unapproved IEEE Standards Draft, subject to change. 6.1 Scope 227