[ppml] IPv6>>32
Howard, W. Lee
L.Howard at stanleyassociates.com
Tue May 10 12:45:49 EDT 2005
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> -----Original Message----- > From: owner-ppml at arin.net [mailto:owner-ppml at arin.net] On > Behalf Of Michael.Dillon at radianz.com > Sent: Tuesday, May 10, 2005 6:32 AM > To: ppml at arin.net > Subject: RE: [ppml] IPv6>>32 > > > > People > > need a way to switch providers without concern that they > will have to > change > > their subnet plan. > > Some people will switch providers on a daily basis. Maybe > even more than once per day. Consider a Vehicle Area Network > installed in a refrigerated van filled with crates of > vegetables. Each vegetable crate has it's own > subnet. The refrigeration systems have several subnets for > motors, motor control, coolant monitoring, circulation > control. Then there are the > various > normal systems found in any vehicle, the driver's own Personal Area > Network > and his links into the corporate VPN. This will be a complex > subnet plan more complex than found in most small businesses > today. This VAN needs to be able to roam from one provider to > another without resubnetting and in the evening when it is > parked in the company facility, again, it needs to fit in as > a node in the vast corporate network. What size assignment do you advocate for a produce crate? Please extrapolate the lifetime of IPv6 if consumables get subnets. > > In any case it is wrong for an ISP to assume that the device at the > > end > of a > > particular link is an endpoint handset. > > I think this is the fundamental challenge of networking in > this century. The current IPv4 network is rather small and > can often be visualized as a hierarchy from Tier1 to provider > core to pop to end site. Today this is a workable > simplification in many instances. But the small IPv4 > networks > common today will be dwarfed by the scale and complexity of > networks 50 years from now. In 50 years, it will be difficult > to identify end-sites because many traditional end-sites will > become gateways to other networks > at least part of the time. What kind of addressing policy and routing system would you propose to scale to that kind of network? > > > FUD simply states that we are wasting space because we are > allocating > more > > than we have in the past. > > I think we are allocating less than in the past. In IPv4 we give > a new ISP 20 bits of address space. In IPv6 we give him 32 > bits in his prefix. Therefore the IPv6 ISP is getting a much > smaller fraction of the total address space than the IPv4 > ISP. These people who talk about waste simply do not > understand IPv6 fundamentals. Either that, or their > definition of "waste" doesn't match what I read in the dictionary. A smaller fraction for ISPs, but as you point out, there are many different kinds of entities that could get assignments. It seems to me that most arguments assume a higher rate of growth than the current curve. Lee > > --Michael Dillon >
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