Document: draft-pillay-esnault-ospf-flooding-07.txt Reviewer: Joel M. Halpern Date: 12 september 2004 This draft is on the right track but has open issues, described in the review. 1) There is no description of what kind of information is "stable", how a router would decide what is "stable", or even for a human being what kinds of criteria ought to be applied to select information to be flooded in accordance with this draft. (I realize that there are skilled practitioners who believe that there is no need for refreshes of unchanged material. But if the goal is to change the base behavior of OSPF, rather more explanation for the existing behavior and why it is reasonable to change it would be required. The draft states that it applies only to "stable" information.) 2) The document is inconsistent about whether this is a router behavior or an interface behavior. Most of the description indicates that an originating router decides to flood some information with the "do not age" bit set. However, there are multiple references to "flood-reduction interfaces. Since a router may not send different versions of the same LSA on different interfaces, and since the description of forwarding of LSAs must be insensitive to the DNA bit (and is correctly described as such), it is not clear what the interface setting is intended to accomplish. 3) As a minor point, the description of "forced flooding" leaves the reader to guess what is intended (probably, refresh even when there is no change at an interval larger than the normal refresh interface.) This should be explicitly described.