I am the assigned Gen-ART reviewer for this draft. The General Area Review Team (Gen-ART) reviews all IETF documents being processed by the IESG for the IETF Chair. Please treat these comments just like any other last call comments. For more information, please see the FAQ at < http://wiki.tools.ietf.org/area/gen/trac/wiki/GenArtfaq>. Document: draft-ietf-mptcp-experience-06 Reviewer: Dan Romascanu Review Date: 9/6/16 IETF LC End Date: 9/13/16 IESG Telechat date: 9/15/16 Summary: Ready with issues A very useful and well written document, which gathers implementation and deployment experience and expands the list of the Multipath TCP Use Cases. A few minor issues described below, if addressed, could improve the clarity and usability of the document. Major issues: Minor issues: 1. The 'Introduction' section starts with the statement: > Multipath TCP was standardized in [RFC6824] and five independent implementations have been developed. Saying 'was standardized' seems misleading to me, as RFC 6824 is an experimental RFC, so not even standards-track (this putting aside the discussions whether RFCs are standards). Actually at no point this document mentions that Multipath TCP is Experimental, this seems odd. 2. It would be useful to clarify the statement about the iOS implementation of Multipath TCP in the Introduction by mentioning what 'single application' is referred. > However, this particular Multipath TCP implementation is currently only used to support a single application.' 3. I am questioning whether the 'Multipath TCP proxies' section really belongs to the use cases or rather to operational experience. After all it's about a strategy of deployment of Multipath TCP in cases where clients and/or servers do not support Multipath TCP but the need exists probably because of the combination of one or several other use cases. 4. In section 3.5: >There have been suggestions from Multipath TCP users to modify the implementation to allow the client to use different destination ports to reach the server. This suggestion seems mainly motivated by traffic shaping middleboxes that are used in some wireless networks. In networks where different shaping rates are associated to different destination port numbers, this could allow Multipath TCP to reach a higher performance. As of this writing, we are not aware of any implementation of this kind of tweaking. Beyond the potential problems described in the following paragraph, is such a 'tweak' consistent with the protocol definition, or would it need to cause changes in the protocol as defined now? A clear recommendation seems to be needed here. 5. A more clear recommendation would be useful also in 3.8. It is not clear here whether the segment size selection is a design or a tuning issue that can/should be added to applications. Nits/editorial comments: 1. Section 3.12 contains a timed statement 'As of September 2015 ...' which should be updated or maybe edited to make it less time-dependent. 2. It seems to me that [RFC6824] and [RFC6181] should be Normative References as they describe the protocol extensions, and the initial list of use cases which is expanded by this document. Without reading these two documents, this one does not make too much sense.