[ppml] 2002-3: Micro-Assignments for Multihomed Networks
Forrest
forrest at almighty.c64.org
Fri Mar 21 12:01:25 EST 2003
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On Fri, 21 Mar 2003, Member Services wrote: > New text: > If an end-user is not multi-homed, the minimum block of IP > address space assigned by ARIN is a /20. If assignments > smaller than /20 are needed, end-users should contact their > upstream provider. > > If an end-user is multi-homed, and has an ARIN assigned > ASN, the minimum block of IP address space assigned by > ARIN is a /22. If assignments smaller than a /22 are > needed, end users should contact their upstream provider. I'm not sure I see the point in reducing the minimum allocation from /20 to /22. Are people going to come back 3 years from now and want the proposal changed again to make the minimum /24? One of the arguments for changing the minimum allocation is that people currently lie about their needs and uses in order to qualify for a /20. I think with this proposal, people that could get by with a /24 are going to find creative ways to waste addresses to qualify for a /22. Whether someone receives a /24 or a /22, its only one added prefix to the global routing tables, so why not give people what they REALLY need and conserve IP space. I strongly feel there needs to be a mechanism added that enables IP space to be reclaimed if an organization ceases to be multihomed. Is it possible for someone to tack on all of the discussion from 2002-7 onto this proposal. No need to rehash everything that's already been said. Forrest > > Problem Summary: > Many end-user organizations are choosing to multi-home > for reliability reasons. At the same time, many are > using technologies such as NAT, or load balancers that > reduce the need for external IP space. These groups > are forced today to take one of two actions: > > 1) Use IP space from one of their upstreams on both > connections. This can lead to load balancing > issues, and also makes the end-user more dependent > on the ISP who assigned the space. The ISP's > business problems, for instance could force downtime > and/or renumbering. > > 2) "Waste" address space (often by not using the > technologies that conserve it) in order to qualify > for a /20 under the current policy. > > In order to allow people to both conserve address > space, and reap the benefits of multi-homing the > minimum size assignment for those who do multi-home > should be made smaller. >
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