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-soc-overload-control-14.txt Reviewer: Brian Carpenter Review Date: 2013-12-15 IETF LC End Date: 2013-12-23 IESG Telechat date: Summary: Almost ready -------- Comments: --------- Note: http://datatracker.ietf.org/ipr/1364/ Minor Issues: ------------ " The normative statements in this specification as they apply to SIP clients and SIP servers assume that both the SIP clients and SIP servers support this specification. If, for instance, only a SIP client supports this specification and not the SIP server, then follows that the normative statements in this specification pertinent to the behavior of a SIP server do not apply to the server that does not support this specification." I don't find the second sentence useful. A useful sentence would be a summary of what might go wrong if one side supports this specification and the other doesn't. (As detailed in 5.10.2 for example.) "5.6. Forwarding the overload control parameters Overload control is defined in a hop-by-hop manner. Therefore, forwarding the contents of the overload control parameters is generally NOT RECOMMENDED and should only be performed if permitted by the configuration of SIP servers. This means that a SIP proxy SHOULD strip the overload control parameters inserted by the client before proxying the request further downstream." I think the reader should be reminded at this point that the proxy also behaves as a client, so will immediately re-insert its own "oc" parameters. (In fact it would be very odd if the proxy supported overload control upstream but not downstream.) "13.2. Informative References" I am not convinced that I-D.ietf-soc-overload-rate-control is correctly classified as an Informative reference; for example see the citation in section 5.3. It seems to me that an implementor would need to consult the reference. Ditto I-D.ietf-soc-load-control-event-package (section 8). Nit: ---- I hope this is a nit: the Last Call says it's for "Internet Standard" but surely it's intended to be "Proposed Standard"?