I see that you have submitted two drafts for IPv6 router IDs in ISIS and OSPF, 
noting that the existing router ID is only 4 octets. This has also come up in 
IDR for BGP. The authors of that draft are copied. I’ll give you a similar set 
of feedback to what I gave them -

It is important to distinguish between places where a unique identifier is 
needed, and by convention an IPv4 address assigned to the device has been used 
to provide that unique ID, vs. places where the actual IP address has some sort 
of importance to the protocol (I.e. That information must be available to take 
action on).
In other words, is the protocol requirement that the ID be unique across some 
domain, but that the actual value does not matter, or is the protocol 
requirement that the value must correspond to something on the router? In many 
of the former cases, the fact that the value isn’t relevant has been used to 
make recommendations that are easier for humans to deal with (I.e. Tying the 
router ID to an IP address) but that value as a human-readable set of info does 
not necessarily justify  changes to the protocol to support that convention as 
we move to IPv6.
I would argue that the router ID used in routing protocols must merely be 
unique, but it doesn’t have to be an IP address at all. Thus it is not strictly 
necessary to create a new field to carry IPv6 addresses when operating without 
IPv4 addresses on a network. If you believe otherwise, the justification needs 
to be documented in the draft.

There are many places in IETF protocols where a 32 bit unique identifier is 
needed, and by convention an IPv4 address has been used. It would be far more 
useful to write a general draft identifying this problem and discussing several 
solutions, including simply generating unique IDs manually, systematically 
generating a random ID, etc.  the place for such a draft may be in Sunset4, 
either as a part of the existing gap analysis draft or as another standalone 
draft.

There was rather a long discussion about this on IDR, thread here: 
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/search/?qdr=a&email_list=idr&q=%22%5Bidr%5D+%5Bv6ops%5D+BGP+Identifier%22&as=1&gbt=1

And in the IDR meeting, minutes:
http://www.ietf.org/proceedings/89/minutes/minutes-89-idr (see page 11)

I’d encourage the authors of these drafts to work together on this.

Thanks,

Wes George

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