I think that the document is fairly good, but could use additional text. It would a good idea for the authors to review RFC 6614 (RADIUS over TLS) and RFC 7360 (RADIUS over DTLS). Those documents both "patch" RADIUS to allow for TLS / DTLS transport. The RADIUS bits are perhaps uninteresting, but it is useful to learn from previous approaches to patching legacy protocols. e.g. Section 1 of RFC 7360 says: The DTLS protocol does not add reliable or in-order transport to RADIUS. DTLS also does not support fragmentation of application-layer messages, or of the DTLS messages themselves. It may be worth using similar text in this document. Also, Section 2.1 of RFC 7360 clarifies that the standad does not change anything existing in the legacy protocol, but adding a DTLS layer may affect PMTU: We note that the DTLS encapsulation of RADIUS means that RADIUS packets have an additional overhead due to DTLS. Implementations MUST support sending and receiving encapsulated RADIUS packets of 4096 octets in length, with a corresponding increase in the maximum size of the encapsulated DTLS packets. This larger packet size may cause the packet to be larger than the Path MTU (PMTU), where a RADIUS/UDP packet may be smaller. See Section 5.2, below, for more discussion. RFC 7360 also mandates support for particular TLS cipher suites, which is lacking from this document. I suggest adding text to address this issue. There may be other TLS / DTLS issues in the RADIUS documents which apply here. For this document: 4.3.2 ... However, once encryption of the transport connection is established, the server MUST NOT utilize TLS identity for the purpose of authorizing RPC requests. It may be worth reiterating that the protocols are independent. i.e. This document does not define the *combination* of TLS and RPC, so much as RPC carried over TLS. The underlying RPC protocol is largely unaware of the encapsulating TLS information. Section 5: ... In circumstances where the users on that NFS client belong to multiple distinct security domains, it may be necessary to establish separate TLS-protected connections that do not share the same encryption parameters. IMHO that's not a "may be necessary", but a hard requirement. And the last bit of that sentence should be clearer. The users will each have their own encryption credentials and profiles, I suspect. Section 5.1: Therefore, the RECOMMENDED deployment mode is that both servers and clients have certificate material available Perhaps "configured and used" is better than "available". An certificate which is "available" may, in fact, be unused.