On Oct 25, 2010, at 8:25 PM, Leo Vegoda wrote:
Hi Seb,
On 25 Oct 2010, at 8:44, Sebastien Lahtinen wrote:
On Mon, 25 Oct 2010, Leo Vegoda wrote:
The kind of requirements we anticipated were things like:
- 24/7 NOC - Assigned a unique AS Number - Assigned or allocated address space - Routing policy published in an IRR database
It was not intended that the requirements be onerous. The goal was to make sure that membership was available to network operators in general rather than being available to an elite clique.
I haven't been involved in this discussion, but just to bring an outside perspective into it..
Why should an exchange run a 24x7 NOC or not be entitled to restrict who can peer over it? I realise most European exchanges are mutual (and I hope it stays that way), but we shouldn't be making it more difficult for someone to either start an exchange nor restrict their ability to run it. Having IRR registered routes is far more important than how a business wants to run its internal affairs.
I think I may not have been clear. The requirements I listed above (as examples only) were the kind of thing I expected exchanges to require of prospective members. Of course, an exchange might decide that 24/7 NOC isn't sufficiently important to be a requirement but as long as its policy didn't impose it on some (potential) members but not others that would be fine.
The language was written at a time where there was no policy allowing IPv6 PI space and there was a concern that IXP prefixes might be seen as an alternative. But now there is an IPv6 PI policy it makes sense to revisit the language and make it less onerous if it is causing problems for groups starting new IXPs.
I've read the proposed change and it seems reasonable to me but I'm certainly not an IXP expert.
The definition of an Exchange goes back to a discussion in June 2001. http://www.ripe.net/ripe/maillists/archives/eix-wg/2001/msg00029.html The intention of the "clear and open" was to make sure that the rules to join the exchange were there for everyone, whatever the rules were. Wether you needed an AS number or the existing membership had to vote for new members to join or whatever. As long as this was written down somewhere for everyone to take notice of. As far as I am concerned the definition is clear and should not have been an obstacle for denying IPv6 address space to an Exchange. However if leaving out the word "open" as proposed in the change makes applying the policy less sensitive to the arbitrary ruling of a hostmaster it makes sense to do so. - Henk Steenman