Hi all, My first idea was submitting a PI IPv6 policy proposal next Monday to RIPE and the rest of the regions, trying to get a consensus for a "global" policy on this, but as this thread is being followed up in several mail exploders, to avoid a long cross-posting, I think it will be better to start some discussion already in a mailing list which is global, and actually I think we have the right one ... global-v6@lists.apnic.net So, if you aren't subscribed in the global-v6@lists.apnic.net, and you're interested in this thread, please subscribe at http://mailman.apnic.net/mailman/listinfo/global-v6 If you're late because the Eastern, the archives are also available at http://www.apnic.net/mailing-lists/global-v6/ Regards, Jordi
De: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <jordi.palet@consulintel.es> Responder a: <jordi.palet@consulintel.es> Fecha: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 13:39:07 +0200 Para: "v6ops@ops.ietf.org" <v6ops@ops.ietf.org>, "ppml@arin.net" <ppml@arin.net>, "shim6@psg.com" <shim6@psg.com> Conversación: [ppml] PI addressing in IPv6 advances in ARIN Asunto: Re: [ppml] PI addressing in IPv6 advances in ARIN
Hi Owen,
You said it: If somebody find the good solution, it will be attractive to the people to go for it. Otherwise, you always have the chance to become an LIR. My proposal actually is already considering this point and a way to avoid a need for renumbering if that happens.
I just want to make sure that we have a way-out if it becomes necessary, but avoid a showstopper now. I think is it possible.
I don't have a technical solution yet (and agree with your views on this in the email below in general), but I'm confident we will have. If it will take 4 years from now, or just 2, who knows, so my proposal is ensuring that we have those 4 years+3 for allowing the people either to return the block, or become an LIR and avoid renumbering an any changes in their network.
By the way, it may happen, and I'm hoping so, that the technical solution don't make necessary to return the PI block anymore, and in that case, we will be even able to remove at that time the "temporarily" point in the policy (if it becomes accepted).
Regards, Jordi
De: Owen DeLong <owen@delong.com> Responder a: <owen@delong.com> Fecha: Fri, 14 Apr 2006 03:48:34 -0700 Para: <jordi.palet@consulintel.es>, "v6ops@ops.ietf.org" <v6ops@ops.ietf.org>, "ppml@arin.net" <ppml@arin.net>, "shim6@psg.com" <shim6@psg.com> Asunto: Re: [ppml] PI addressing in IPv6 advances in ARIN
--On April 14, 2006 12:20:06 PM +0200 JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <jordi.palet@consulintel.es> wrote:
[snip]
However, I want to balance this with the medium-long term implications created in the routing table and with the time needed to build and deploy a better technical solution (or several) which is accepted by the community.
I think we first need to define what we consider a solution... See below.
So my proposal basically is about having PI now everywhere (once ARIN adopt it, is unfair not having it in other regions), but those PI allocations for multihoming should be temporary and those address blocks returned to the RIRs some time (lets say 3 years) after the new technical solution is declared as a valid one.
I would not actually support this idea. The whole point of having PI space is to have the addresses for a long-term. Having a timeframe for return would simply restore the same barrier to entry that existed prior to passing the policy.
Other RIRs are free to implement whatever v6 PI policy they feel is appropriate for their region. I would support a globally standardized v6 PI policy along the lines of ARIN 2005-1.
However, I would like to argue that if the new technical solution will benefit from the return of this address space, it is most likely not truly a solution, but, instead, another clever hack piled on top of the existing set of hacks.
I suppose if someone found the magic bullet to make geotopological addressing really work, that might qualify. However, I have very low expectations in that area.
Absent that, any true solution will involve making the size of the routing table independent of the number of PI (or even PA) blocks issued by the RIRs or will make the size of the routing table practically irrelevant.
I know this isn't the easy solution, but, we need to look long and hard at the way we do things. I think that solving these problems is going to require a significant paradigm shift. Assuming that we can use IP addresses for both end system identification and for routing topology indicators is how we created this problem. I don't see solving it without breaking that assumption, at least at the interdomain level.
At this way, on the long-run, we will not have routing table implications, but we allow now the people that want to move ahead only if they have a multihoming solution doing so.
If you think there is a possible solution (a real solution, not just a hack that postpones the inevitable at the expense of usability like CIDR did), then I'd like to hear what you are thinking.
This 3-years time for getting a multihoming network back to the new technical solution (once adopted) is enough time, I think (it could be changed to 5 years if needed, or whatever), so nobody today see the temporarily of the proposal as a showstopper to go for it now.
I think you underestimate the momentum and requirements of the modern enterprise if you believe that to be true. Any capability available in v4 that is not available on at least equal or better terms in v6 is a deterrent to v6 deployment.
The ability to get permanent addresses which do not have to be returned when you switch providers or renumbered on a schedule determined by some external organization is a major example of such a capability.
Owen
-- If it wasn't crypto-signed, it probably didn't come from me.
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********************************************** The IPv6 Portal: http://www.ipv6tf.org Barcelona 2005 Global IPv6 Summit Slides available at: http://www.ipv6-es.com This electronic message contains information which may be privileged or confidential. The information is intended to be for the use of the individual(s) named above. If you are not the intended recipient be aware that any disclosure, copying, distribution or use of the contents of this information, including attached files, is prohibited.