Hello, I have been selected as the Routing Directorate reviewer for this draft. The Routing Directorate seeks to review all routing or routing-related drafts as they pass through IETF last call and IESG review, and sometimes on special request. The purpose of the review is to provide assistance to the Routing ADs. For more information about the Routing Directorate, please see ​http://trac.tools.ietf.org/area/rtg/trac/wiki/RtgDir Document: draft-ietf-spring-segment-routing-13.txt Reviewer: Jon Hardwick Review Date: 12 December 2017 IETF LC End Date: 30 November 2017 Telechat date: 14 December 2017 Intended Status: Standards Track Summary No issues found. This document is ready for publication. Comments This document is very well written and is easy to understand. It serves as a good introduction to, and overview of, the segment routing architecture. It includes a guide to the operation of the control plane and the MPLS and IPv6 data planes and gives references to the appropriate documents which standardize the necessary control and data plane extensions. I found no issues and believe the document is ready to be published. I noted one minor clarification which the ADs may wish to make to the document before it is published – see below. Major Issues No major issues found. Minor Issues Section 3.1 discusses the prefix SID. Section 3.1.1 introduces the concept of an algorithm that is to be used by an SR-capable router in selecting the correct next hop to use when executing a forwarding instruction on a Prefix SID. Section 3.1.2 explains how per-algorithm forwarding is to be applied in the MPLS data plane, but section 3.1.3 does not mention per-algorithm forwarding in the context of IPv6. It would be better to have an explicit statement in 3.1.3, as currently the reader may wonder whether per-algorithm forwarding is intended to be applied in the IPv6 data plane. Also, section 3.1.3 says “any remote IPv6 node will maintain a plain IPv6 FIB entry for any prefix, no matter if the represent a segment or not. This allows forwarding of packets to the node which owns the SID even by nodes which do not support Segment Routing.” Clearly, a node that does not understand that an IPv6 address represents a SID will be unable to apply per-algorithm forwarding reliably. In my opinion, section 3.1.3 could note this restriction more clearly. Nits Note also the nit in the section 3.1.3 text I quoted above: “no matter if the represent a segment or not” -> “whether or not the prefix represents a segment”.