[ppml] IPv6>>32
Owen DeLong
owen at delong.com
Mon May 16 14:29:45 EDT 2005
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> I would classify dorms as "student hotels" and assign a /64 per floor (or > per building even) unless a student specifically asked for their own /64 > or /48. Unfortunately, I'm not sure that's permitted under existing > policy if the student is paying the university -- or if a guest is paying > a hotel -- for Internet access. > Regardless of whether they are apartments or hotels, this is, of course permitted under current policy. The policy doesn't say how you can or cannot structure your networks. What it does say is that if a subnet is justified, the minimum subnet size is /64. If multiple subnets are required and the OU in question wishes to receive a self-managed allocation visible in whois, then the minimum allocation unit is /48. If an org is to become an LIR, the minimum allocation unit is /32 and there are requirements to justify that. So, on simple request, one can receive a /48 or /64 or /128 depending on what one requests. Above that, one must meet the requirements of an LIR or provide sufficient justification to your LIR for additional /48s. > Extending this to the absurd, if the university (or other ISP) were > offering service via 802.11, would we still require them to hand out a > /48 per user/customer? Are there even any consumer-grade devices that > work in such a scenario? > No ISP is required to hand out a /48 per customer. They are, however, required to give a /48 to each customer that expresses need/desire for one. I don't think this is absurd. > The reality is that today and for the conceivable future a single human > will only have a few to a few dozen devices needing a handful of addresses > each -- and that's allowing for a lot of growth from today's norm of one > IP per user -- which is well within the realm of simple, existing, cheap > L2 technology. > Actually, that's not entirely true. I know several humans that use more IP space than that even in existing IPv4. I also know of lots of scenarios where a lot more space than that is concealed behind NAT because of IPv4 constraints. The reality is that more and more of our interdevice communication is starting to use IP for transport. The additional reality is that more and more interdevice communication is starting to be done (think ala universal remotes, or the ability of the coffee maker, oven, microwave, etc. to synchronize the completion of breakfast, etc.). The reality is that we know these things are coming. They're not speculative fruit cakes or fruit. Also, we've already seen the growing use of RFIDs and the desire of many users to have them use IP. The requirement for a /48 for every customer is absurd, but, it's also inaccurate. A customer may receive a /128, a /64, or a /48 at said customer's discretion. That's a good thing. We can argue about where those boundaries should be, but, giving each customer the ability to get a host, a network, or a collection of networks at their discretion is a good idea. > We can throw around ideas of fruit crates (or even fruits) that need their > own subnets for internal communication, but until such devices actually > appear (and IMHO, it will not be within my lifetime), we shouldn't be > wasting 80 bits of addressing on each human when only one to five bits > will be used in the vast majority of cases. > Fruit crates with IP based RFID tags do already exist. >> If the person in charge of said device says that >> a /64 is required, then I'm happy to give a /64. > > Agreed. But policy shouldn't _force_ people to deal with having their own > /64 or /48 when they're happy getting one or more /128s out of a shared > pool. > It doesn't. Nothing in the policy says you can't make that user a /128 within your /48 or allocate a /48 for such static assignments. >> Simple rules of thumb can be applied to resolve these kinds of >> issues. > > ARIN doesn't operate on simple rules of thumb; it operates on policies. > Right... The policy just specifies what you have to allocate on customer request. It doesn't say you have to allocate that to customers that don't request it. Owen -- If it wasn't crypto-signed, it probably didn't come from me. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 186 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://lists.arin.net/pipermail/ppml/attachments/20050516/1e2493be/attachment.bin
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