Hi Ray, The question of the DC is much more complex. I think. For example, is the same if the "hardware" (the real servers) are from the assignment holder or from third parties? (hosting vs housing). I think hosting will be ok from the perspective of both the original IPv6 PI policy and the actual one. However, housing is at least, "in the limit" of what was intended originally ("not to be sub-assigned to other parties "). With the actual policy both are allowed, but housing seems to be allowed only if dynamic ("connecting a server or appliance to an assignment holder's network") according to the impact analysis. This doesn't make sense, because if I'm setting up a server or appliance, it is not (in most of the cases) a "temporary" thing. Also, the use of dynamic, may be confusing vs "persistent" (as we used in RIPE-690), as it may confuse regarding the usage of DHCP or something else, etc. I think this must be allowed, even if static/persistent, because I may need a service company coming to my network with their own devices, for example, installing IP video-cameras for surveillance. It doesn't make sense that they can't use my addresses, because that increase the complexity of the infrastructure, etc., even may force to have different networks. Regards, Jordi -----Mensaje original----- De: address-policy-wg <address-policy-wg-bounces@ripe.net> en nombre de Jetten Raymond <raymond.jetten@elisa.fi> Fecha: jueves, 17 de enero de 2019, 14:03 Para: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <jordi.palet@consulintel.es> CC: "address-policy-wg@ripe.net" <address-policy-wg@ripe.net> Asunto: Re: [address-policy-wg] suggestions from the list about IPv6 sub-assignment clarification Hello All, I have a maybe very strange opinion on this, so i'll share it with you. I agree with Jordi that the current situation is confusing and could be clearer... IPv6 PI should be used as very originally was intended, and it should not be subnetted or subdelegations should be made of it to other instances than the obtainer at all. Before you turn on the grill, what should be changed or made allowed or understood as intention, compared to the very original intention of PI IPv6 is that the temporary use as in f.ex your guest wlan, (the enduser will not get these ip:s with him/her when leaving the building, it’s a WLAN infrastructure that can be used as a "client" in this case even temporary). In a DC, as long as the infra and servers are used or more precisely accessed by clients, they also do not get the ip:s assigned, but use them to access these platforms. In these cases the ip subnets belong to the provider, not to the customer. (VPN is a service right?) If a customer of a DC needs an assigned block for whatever reason, they can obtain a normal v6 block , or if PI v6 is needed, its still available, apply for a PI v6 subnet from Ripe. (or even become a member). I hope this helps Rgds, Ray -----Original Message----- From: address-policy-wg <address-policy-wg-bounces@ripe.net> On Behalf Of JORDI PALET MARTINEZ via address-policy-wg Sent: 17. tammikuuta 2019 14:13 To: address-policy-wg <address-policy-wg@ripe.net> Subject: [address-policy-wg] suggestions from the list about IPv6 sub-assignment clarification Hi all, As you know, I've been working on different versions of a clarification to 2016-04 (https://www.ripe.net/participate/policies/proposals/2016-04). This proposal allows a single IP to be sub-assigned, and the author explained (not just in the policy proposal text, but also in the justification and in different emails), that the case they have is to make sure that the policy allows it for: 1) Datacenter services. 2) Interconnections (VPN, PNI, p2p, etc.). 3) Guess visitors (employees, hotspot users, etc.). The policy text doesn't mention those examples, but the summary talks about them: "Intended use cases for IPv6 PI space in the spirit of this policy proposal are the use in (public) WIFI networks (like the WIFI at RIPE meetings), as transfer networks on PNIs or other PTP-links/VPNs to users or customers, or for housing/hosting for servers in data centres. The use of IPv6 PI space for DSL/cable/FFTH/etc. subscribers is explicitly not an intended use case for this policy proposal." On the other side, the impact analysis indicates: "It is the RIPE NCCs understanding that assignments as described above are dynamic in nature, either by varying the prefix or interface identifier (IID) over time. Any permanent and static assignments of a prefix would still be considered a sub-assignment as per clause 2.6, “Assign” of the IPv6 address allocation and assignment policy. Consequently the RIPE NCC will not provide IPv6 PI assignments for such deployment plans." I don't think this is very clear, because 1) DC addresses usually are static. 2) Interconnections usually are static (p2p links at least). On the other side, as explained in my previous versions, I think that it is a valid case (in a hotspot, DC, etc.), instead of providing a single address, provide a full prefix (for example /64), so the host can have Virtual Machines running on different addresses of the same prefix. So, in my understanding we really need to clarify this text and for that, we need to decide what we want to be allowed and what not. So my questions are: 1) Do we agree that only dynamic should be allowed, or static is also ok? 2) According to 1 above, should the DataCenter case be alllowed? Thanks! Regards, Jordi ********************************************** IPv4 is over Are you ready for the new Internet ? http://www.theipv6company.com The IPv6 Company This electronic message contains information which may be privileged or confidential. 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