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-dime-rfc4005bis-11 Reviewer: David L. Black Review Date: September 17, 2012 IETF LC End Date: September 18, 2012 IESG Telechat date: (if known) Summary: This draft is on the right track but has open issues, described in the review. This draft is part of a set of drafts that updates the DIAMETER protocol; this draft specifies the application of DIAMETER to AAA for network access. The draft is heavily based on RFC 4005, which it obsoletes, and requires significant DIAMETER familiarity (including familiarity with its companion drafts, starting with the rfc3588bis draft) for complete understanding. The draft is in good shape and reads well. I found one major open issue, a few minor issues, and several nits. Major issues: This draft makes significant use of UTF-8 in its formats (some subsections of sections 4.2, 4.4 and 4.5) for strings that are intended to be compared for equality or processed by protocol participants, but does not contain considerations for Unicode processing that are sufficient to support this usage. Examples of UTF-8 usage in this draft include: - 4.2.5 and 4.2.6: The NAS server may perform authorization based on the Called-Station-Id and Calling-Station-Id AVPs under some circumstances. - 4.4.3: The Callback-Id AVP is intended to be interpreted by the NAS. All use of UTF-8 in this draft relies upon the specification of the UTF8String format in the rfc3588bis draft. That specification is insufficient to support the usage in the above examples, and there are no Unicode considerations in this draft. Even binary comparison of Unicode strings for equality generally requires specification of string preparation (e.g., normalization) in order for string comparison to work as expected. The variety of Unicode strings in this draft makes it important to lay out the Unicode requirements and considerations for each AVP. I see at least 5 classes of possible Unicode requirements/considerations: 1) String preparation so that tests for equality work as expected. This may suffice for the Called-Station-ID AVP (4.2.5) and Calling-Station-ID AVP (4.2.6) if the internal structure of those strings is not used in authorization. 2) Detailed string format for a string that is processed by a protocol participant, e.g., the Callback-ID AVP (4.4.3). 3) Restriction of the string to ASCII-only, e.g., as already stated for the Framed-Route AVP (4.4.10.5.3). 4) Specification that the string is for display to human users only, e.g., as already stated for the Reply-Message AVP (4.2.9). 5) Statement that the string contains an FQDN, as stated for one case of the Tunnel-Client-Endpoint AVP in 4.5.4. That specific statement is incomplete, as it needs to be accompanied by a normative reference to a document that specifies the format of internationalized domain names, and probably needs to also state which types of labels (e.g., A-label, U-label) are allowed. Every use of UTF8String in this draft needs to be checked, and most of them are likely to need some attention. The ongoing work in the precis WG may help with some of this, and I would suggest talking to the APP ADs, especially Pete Resnick (hi Pete) before embarking on significant work in this area in order to avoid wasted or duplicated efforts. Minor Issues: [1] End of Section 2 on p.8: As a result, service cannot be started as a result of a response to an authorization-only request without introducing a significant security vulnerability. Please explain what to do about this - a simple rewrite with a "SHOULD NOT" would suffice, e.g.: As a result, service SHOULD NOT be started as a result of a response to an authorization-only request because that may introduce a significant security vulnerability. This should also be noted in the Security Considerations section. [2] In the message formats in Section 3, QoS-Filter-Rule is inconsistently capitalized. Also the use of QoSFilterRule as the format for the QoS-Filter-Rule AVP in Section 4.1.1 is potentially confusing. Please add a sentence in 4.1.1 to say that QoSFilterRule is the format for the QoS-Filter-Rule AVP. [3] Section 4.2.1. In this and the other AVP Flag Rules tables, please explain what the values in the MUST and MUST NOT columns mean. [4] Based on this text in 4.4.9: The use of this AVP is NOT RECOMMENDED; the AVPs defined by Korhonen, et al. [RFC5777] SHOULD be used instead. I would have expected RFC5777 to be a Normative Reference, not an Informative Reference. Nits/editorial comments: After the command table in Section 3 and other similar tables, please add a sentence to say that the -Request and -Answer commands in each similarly-named command pair are distinguished by the value of the 'R' bit in the Command Flags field of the command. This is already stated in the command definitions, but the sentence should be added after the table for clarity because each command pair shares a Command Code. idnits 2.12.13 found a few potential nits: == There are 7 instances of lines with non-RFC5735-compliant IPv4 addresses in the document. If these are example addresses, they should be changed. That can probably be ignored, as these instances are likely generated by text such as cross-references to Section 4.4.10.1 == Missing Reference: 'BASE' is mentioned on line 219, but not defined That's definitely a problem. Was [I-D.ietf-dime-rfc3588bis] intended? -- Possible downref: Non-RFC (?) normative reference: ref. 'ANITypes' That reference would be: [ANITypes] NANPA Number Resource Info, "ANI Assignments", <http://www.nanpa.com/ number_resource_info/ ani_ii_assignments.html>. Is that reference sufficiently stable (e.g., IANA-class or better management)? My guess is that it is sufficiently stable, but I'm not the expert. -- Obsolete informational reference (is this intentional?): RFC 1334 (Obsoleted by RFC 1994) That reference may be intentional, as it's cited exactly once: 263 PAP (Password Authentication Protocol) 264 A deprecated PPP authentication process, but often used for 265 backward compatibility [RFC1334]. Thanks, --David ---------------------------------------------------- David L. Black, Distinguished Engineer EMC Corporation, 176 South St., Hopkinton, MA 01748 +1 (508) 293-7953 FAX: +1 (508) 293-7786 david.black@xxxxxxx Mobile: +1 (978) 394-7754 ----------------------------------------------------