I am the assigned Gen-ART reviewer for this draft. For background on Gen-ART, please see the FAQ at < http://wiki.tools.ietf.org/area/gen/trac/wiki/GenArtfaq>. Please resolve these comments along with any other Last Call comments you may receive. Document: draft-ietf-ospf-ospfv3-iid-registry-update-00 Reviewer: Ben Campbell Review Date: 2013-01-16 IETF LC End Date: 2013-01-24 Summary: This draft is not ready for publication as a proposed standard. There is a significant IANA registration issue described in the review body. Major issues: This draft carves out a significant part of a registry with an assignment policy of "standards action" for "private use". It offers very little motivation for the change. In my opinion, this sort of change should come with a clear justification. Specifically, the draft modifies the OSPFv3 Address Family Instance ID registry to carve out half of the unassigned space for "private use". The justification for this is a single sentence saying that some networks need to use IIDs to identify specific applications. I think that needs significant elaboration in order to motivate the change in a way that the reader can evaluate. My understanding from the OFPS list is that this is in support of draft-ietf-ospf-ipv4-embedded-ipv6-routing, which is an informational draft. I have to wonder why the draft under review was not simply the IANA considerations for that draft. I suggest one of two paths forward: 1) If this change is in support of that draft in particular, then this draft should say that, and include a _normative_ reference. I recognize the normative downref would complicate things--but I think that complication is reasonable under the circumstances. 2) If this change is to support a general need that goes beyond draft-ietf-ospf-ipv4-embedded-ipv6-routing, then this draft should describe that need in enough detail for people to think about it, perhaps with an informative reference to draft-ietf-ospf-ipv4-embedded-ipv6-routing as an _example_. Minor issues: -- section 3: I don't think it's appropriate to use normative language for IANA requests. Especially not "MUST". (I think the strongest thing we can do here is a polite request :-) ) I suggest recasting that to descriptive language, and removing section 2 and the RFC 2119 reference. Nits/editorial comments: None.