[ppml] question on 2006-2 v6 internal microallocation
Michael.Dillon at btradianz.com
Michael.Dillon at btradianz.com
Thu Aug 24 05:04:18 EDT 2006
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> 1. Are you in favor or opposed to this policy? I support the policy to give micro-allocations for internal infrastructure. > 2. You mention that you can guarantee that there will be zero impact on > the public Internet routing table. I think you misunderstand. In the past, whenever anyone proposes smaller than normal sized allocations, many people object that this will result in a large number of new entries in the global routing table. I was merely pointing out one situation that exists today where allocations from ARIN or other RIRs do not end up in the global routing table. In other words, there is not a direct relationship between RIR allocations and the number of entries in the public Internet routing table. RIR policies need to support the needs of *ALL* users of Internet Protocol (IP) networking technology, not just the people who peer in the default-free zone of the public Internet. > The original policy had some text saying that this micro-allocation MUST > not be routed. But there were objections about ARIN not setting routing > policy. So this text was completely dropped from the current policy > proposal. Very right. ARIN does not set policy for the routing table and the routing table does not decide ARIN's policies. > Do you think 2006-2 is better with or without text on if the > micro-allocation for internal infrastructure should not be routed in > the global Internet? If you think text should be added to 2006-2 about > routing this space, do you prefer weaker or stronger text? ARIN is not the Internet mummy. Why should ARIN policy say what should or should not be done outside the scope of its authority? On the other hand, there is nothing wrong with the statement: Due to the fact that these address blocks will be used for blahditty-blahditty-blah, it is expected that they will not be announced in the default-free zone of the public Internet. One of ARIN's duties is education and it is entirely appropriate for policies to be clearly written and include explanations of the context in which the policy was created. This is why charters and other such legal documents have something called "the preamble". People have always felt that laws, contracts, and other legal agreements should have a clear context. --Michael Dillon
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