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 Although these comments are primarily for the use of the Routing ADs, it would be helpful if you could consider them along with any other IETF Last Call comments that you receive, and strive to resolve them through discussion or by updating the draft. Document: draft-ietf-pce-association-diversity-08.txt Reviewer: Emmanuel Baccelli Review Date: 12/08/2019 Intended Status: Standards Track Summary of comments: The procotol extension is simple, and its operation is documented pretty well. The document is concise, and clear from my point of view. See below a couple of remarks that could be considered prior to publication. Major Issues: No major issues found. Minor Issues: In Section 5 (Security): If I understand correctly, dynamically adding a new LSP to an existing disjoint association affects the (re)computation and the (re)characterization of all LSPs in this association. In this case, is it entirely obvious to me that there is no specific threat using the attack vector of adding an LSP to an existing association, when flag T is set? What is the state of other LSPs in an existing association after another LSP was added, which resulted in the required disjointness now fails? Nits: In Section 3 (Motivation): In my opinion, this section might benefit from being split in two: a pure motivation section, and an applicability section. In Section 4.1: it is stated that "a PCE may be limited in the number of LSPs it can take into account when computing disjointness" [...] "the PCE may provide no path, a shortest path, or a constrained path based on relaxing disjointness, etc. The disjoint status is informed to the PCC." Here, it would be useful to forward reference to section 4.6. In section 4.6: the spec seems to suppose that there exists an absolute order ranking different levels of disjointness, such that a PCE can simply take the decision to "reduce disjointness" to the next best level. I suspect that this is not always easy to rank in complex cases, if at all possible. Are some more flags foreseen (tbd in section 6.2 ?) for more fine-grained characterization of "relaxed disjointness" in complex cases e.g. when adding an LSP to an already-large disjoint association ? I assume the answer is "not really". Assuming the above, without becoming too ugly, specification could be more explicit about ranking levels of disjointness which relaxing decisions should be made, when flag T is unset. Else, the spec could add a clarifying sentence on the difficulty of ordering absolutely many different levels of disjointness for many LSPs, in the same association.