Colleagues Over the years we have made many changes to the status values. For the INETNUM status we added 'LIR-PARTITIONED PA' and 'LIR-PARTITIONED PI', then later removed 'LIR-PARTITIONED PI'. We added and then later removed another status similar to the partitioned (can't remember the name now). We deprecated 'ALLOCATED PI'. We changed the rules on 'LEGACY' so that the whole hierarchy became 'LEGACY'. We changed the rules on assignments to prevent hierarchies of assignments. For the INET6NUM I think 'ASSIGNED PI' was not available originally and was added later. We added "status:" as a new attribute to the AUT-NUM object with three values. I don't remember discussions about anything breaking with any of these changes we made over the years. So can Nick, or anyone, tell us what will break now, that didn't break before, if we add a new status value 'ALLOCATED-ASSIGNED PA'? cheers denis co-chair DB-WG On Mon, 4 Apr 2022 at 22:19, Nick Hilliard via db-wg <db-wg@ripe.net> wrote:
Leo Vegoda via db-wg wrote on 04/04/2022 20:50:
Why do they need to register this assignment? Why can the allocation not be left as it is and assumed to be used by the organisation holding it?
What am I missing?
it's a fly in the ointment.
There are three options to handle this situation, possibly more:
1. don't allow an allocation + an assignment to encompass exactly the same space. This is a function of the data model, which states that inetnum: is the primary key. This stops organisations from having a 1:1 mapping between their internal assignment databases and the public ripedb view. This is what we have at the moment.
2. change the ripedb data model to key on inetnum+status. This would allow an assignment and an allocation to have the same inetnum, which would allow organisations to have a 1:1 mapping between their internal assignment databases and the public ripedb view.
3. use a different status: value for inetnum objects which are both allocations and assignments. This is, I understand, what Denis was proposing.
I.e. the choice is about which fly in the ointment is the least problematic, rather than whether there's a fly in the ointment.
Nick
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