I have reviewed draft-ietf-lsr-anycast-flag-08. I have ticked "has issues" since there is no "I have questions" choice - and what follows may just show my lack of familiarity with OSPF. While the abstract clearly states the purpose of the document ('defines a new flag in the OSPFv2 Extended Prefix TLV Flags to advertise the anycast property'), the introduction does not really do that but it goes right into technical details before stating the purpose of the document. (And as a first time reader, I was not sure why all these details matter - but more on that later). Anyway, this is entirely stylistic. I was not sure what the N-bit is, which is discussed in section 2. I guess routing people know the N-bit by heart but for the less informed reader, it may help to spell out what it is and where it is defined. Perhaps also explain why it is a bad idea to set both the N-bit and the new AC-flag. It seems that the words 'bit' and 'flag' are used interchangeably here, but perhaps refer to things defined as -bit always as bit and things defined as -flag always as flag? Again, this is stylistic. While searching for the definition of the N-bit, I ended up looking into RFC 9513 and I found that there is also an AC-bit define where I spotted an N-bit. Since this I-D also defines an AC-flag, can this name clash lead to confusion? I guess I am bit lost on the context as I am not deeply familiar with OSPF specifications. I guess this is what the text in the introduction tried to explain. So probably it all makes sense but on first read I did not get it. Anyway, what happens to the older AC bit, is it they still needed? Can there be situations where AC-bit and AC flag come together and may disagree? The new YANG leaf 'anycast-flag' is augmenting an ospf interface. The description says "Sets the prefix as an anycast address." Is it clear which prefix is meant? From an operational perspective, what is the effect of setting the AC-flag on an anycast address versus not setting it (which is likely the current behavior)? Does setting this flag cause other routers to change their behavior? What should an operator do if some of the routers support the new AC-flag but others don't?