[ppml] Proposed Policy: Proposal to amend ARIN IPv6 assignment and utilisation requirement
Rich Emmings
rich at nic.umass.edu
Thu Sep 8 13:29:52 EDT 2005
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On Thu, 8 Sep 2005, David Conrad wrote: > > In theory, true. In reality, I suspect developers will take shortcuts where > they can. If there is a commandment that "thou shalt always have /48 or > shorter", I suspect retrofitting longer prefixes will break lots of embedded > stuff. One of the things that I feel will be true. CIDR or not in IPv4, there's a lot of classful legacy code out there that is still alive and living in your network, even in classless protocols. I can see 32 and/or 48 bit memory locations showing up in hardware based FIB's with some sort of punt when it's not an expected boundary. > >> There's a lot of space out there. I don't think many people fathom the >> concepts of 2^128. > > And I don't think people understand that IPv6 is not really 2^128. > Currently, it is between 2^48 and 2^64. Yes, both are still very, very large > numbers however the RIRs are, even at this very early stage of deployment and > before the promises of ubiquitous Internet connected devices is anywhere near > reality, allocating /19s and /20s according to current policies. Obviously, > there are the same number of /19s and /20s in IPv6 as there are in IPv4. > Agreed on both, and one of the things I try and remember is to subtract that /64 from the /prefix to get real numbers. Nevertheless, 2^64 is not only twice 2^32, and even with the reserved space is removed, there's still a very large amount of space out there. Nevertheless, pending rewrite of autoconfiguration, a /64 is what's gone. Even with that, 2^64 is a very large number -- if it was milliseconds, I'm not sure the universe has been around that long. To some extent, the proposal is a proponent of more free space available for the future, vs more free space available now. Someone with a /56 may possibly grow to a larger block or set of /56's. I would intuit that a /48 likely means single assignments for most everyone. Maybe the 0.001% mentioned elsewhere is the difference between /56's and /48's. > >> No system will be perfect, we have room to adjust it later, and there's >> enough space out there that we're not at risk of running out over the short >> term. >> >> Perhaps table things for a year, or, until we need to think about issuing >> 4000::/3, and see what real world experiences suggest then? > > As a person who has personally and repeatedly experienced first hand the > repercussions of "historical inequities" in IPv4 addressing, I'm not sure it > makes sense to repeat that particular IPv4 mistake. I've seen that too, however, we're less than 50% on 2000::/3 and haven't broached into the other 6 /3's that would be available at some point. We have more room to make adjustments than with IPv4 space. If the finite space was just 2000::/3 and were approaching 50%, allocation size would be a more important factor than getting things more set in concrete. I run into issues with rollout related to "Well, they're still changing things, let's wait" I'm willing to accept a less than perfect initial system that has room to be moved into a more perfect state at a later date.
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