On 28/06/2017 17:20, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:
Hi Ondrej,
I agree with our first proposed change.
However, I think you didn’t got the other one. The IPv4 model is NAT, so the addresses inside the customer network aren’t affected by non-persistent CPE WAN addressing, because internally is not “seen”.
Jordi, Ondrej is right. That sentence reads as that we are applying the "IPv4 prefix delegation" model to IPv6. Now, or we do it as Ondrej suggested (I like his proposal), or we make sure that "IPv4 model" says that that is a NAT model - and maybe even add Ondrej's suggestion as an additional information. Cheers, Jan
Regards, Jordi
-----Mensaje original----- De: ipv6-wg <ipv6-wg-bounces@ripe.net> en nombre de Ondřej Caletka <Ondrej.Caletka@cesnet.cz> Responder a: <Ondrej.Caletka@cesnet.cz> Fecha: miércoles, 28 de junio de 2017, 16:42 Para: <ipv6-wg@ripe.net> Asunto: Re: [ipv6-wg] IPv6 Prefix delegation BCOP version 3 is out...
Hi,
thanks for the effort put into this document. I have two bugreports:
In section 4.1.1:
If we decide to use /127 for each point to point link, then it is also advisable to allocate a /64 for each link and use just one /127 out of it to prevent the Neighbor Discovery exhaustion attack (RFC6583).
My understanding of this sentence is that allocating /64 somehow prevents Neighbor Discovery exhaustion attack.
It could be solved by splitting those two pieces of information into two separate sentences:
Using /127 for each point to point link can, on the other hand, prevent the Neighbor Discovery exhaustion attack (RFC6583). To avoid possible renumbering in the future, it is always advisable to allocate a /64 for each link and use just one /127 out of it.
In section 5.1:
Bear in mind that end customers with an IPv4 subnet behind their CPE never got “non-persistent” assigned IPv4 prefixes as this would require reconfiguration of all hosts on their network every few hours or days. By contrast, every IPv6 customer gets an IPv6 subnet so it is unnecessary to apply this “IPv4 model” to IPv6.
I don't really understand the last sentence. Which "IPv4 model" is unnecessary to apply to IPv6? The model of static leases?
I would propose something like:
By contrast, every IPv6 customer gets an IPv6 subnet, so keeping customer's IPv6 subnet persistent follows perfectly the "IPv4 model".
Cheers,
-- Ondřej Caletka CESNET
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