I have reviewed this document as part of the security directorate's ongoing effort to review all IETF documents being processed by the IESG. These comments were written primarily for the benefit of the security area directors. Document editors and WG chairs should treat these comments just like any other last call comments. This document defines a new variation of MPLS for multipoint to multipoint communication. The document does not state why anyone would prefer this new variation over the existing one, though I can guess a few reasons. The new variation is less efficient in that packets sent travel over many links twice instead of once and packet delivery has longer latency in that most packets travel over more links from their original source to ultimate destination. The two advantages I can imagine are (1) in almost all cases, all packets will arrive at all destinations in the same order (in the original protocol, packets from different sources could arrive at different destinations in different orders); and (2) the root of the multicast tree could filter messages - for example, to throttle the total volume of messages from a single source. A third possible use that seems to be disavowed by the document is to allow members of the multicast group to signal their status only to the root node. It would be nice if the document was more explicit about what this protocol was for, but it doesn't affect security considerations. The document correctly notes that there are no new security considerations beyond those discussed in the protocol that this competes with. That protocol is defined in RFC6388 and RFC6425. Nits: Last sentence of abstract reads "The communication among the leaf nodes are not allowed." I believe the grammar is incorrect, but more importantly I believe it should read "Direct communication among the leaf nodes is not allowed." because communication among the leaf nodes is supported by this protocol with all packets being relayed by the root node. Near the end of the introduction is the phrase "except that it follows the node of reverse downstream path of the tree". I believe the word 'node' is incorrect here, though I don't know what was intended. Page 11: "In some scenario," should be "In some scenarios," --Charlie