Hello, I have reviewed draft-ietf-6man-addr-select-opt 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. draft-ietf-6man-addr-select-opt defines address selection options for DHCPv6 that allow a network administrator to effect some control over address selection behavior of nodes on their sites. This sounds like a reasonably straightforward problem but as I read the draft it seemed like it might be have interoperability issues. I don't believe this draft is ready for advancement until these issues are resolved. For instance, while I think I understand the policy override of RFC 6724, having the Automatic Row Additions Flag be part of the address selection options seems problematic. If it is set to zero, then what are the semantics of such a message? "Here's an address selection option but don't you dare use it!"? What is the point? Me, as a node, can have this as part of my policy state which would allow me to ignore such an update but to have the bit be part of the option to update does not seem to make much sense. The semantics of the message needs to be explained much more clearly, or the bit needs to be removed from the message. Section 3.3 says, "Even if the received policy from one source is merged with one from another source, the effect of both policy are more or less changed." I don't understand how both policies are changed. And what does "more or less" mean? 3.3 also says, "It also should be noted that absence of the distributed policy from a certain network interface should not be treated as absence of policy itself, because it may mean preference for the default address selection policy." So I use the default address selection policy then, is that it? This whole section (3.3) screams out for some normative language since it sounds like it refers to behavioral changes on the node. There is an "Implementation Consideration" mentioning that the label is passed as an unsigned integer. But it then goes on to say, "DHCPv6 clients SHOULD convert this label to a representation appropriate for the local implementation (e.g., string)." This has interoperability implications because it is not solely a local matter. The node may represent these things differently than the network administrator and the preference will not be done properly. RFC 6724 does not really define what the label is from what I can tell. It's used to just allow for policies to prefer a particular source address, S, with a particular destination address, D, if "Label(S) = Label(D)". But to pass a value over a network, and have it be used by the recipient, means that a canonical representation of "label" has to be defined. An appendix with examples would be most helpful! Spelling nit: section 3.1 "The choice a SHOULD be default, as far as the policy table is not configured by the user." There's an extra word in there somewhere, or maybe there's some words missing, it's hard to understand what is being implied. regards, Dan.