[ppml] Solicing comments: IPv4 to IPv6 Migration Incentive Address Space
Owen DeLong
owen at delong.com
Tue Jun 26 16:54:15 EDT 2007
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In response to your email: Preemptively assigning space is a horribly bad idea. People who want space should apply for it and I would welcome proposals that make that process easier, especially for existing IPv4 holders. However, I will _NOT_ support any policy which proposes automatically creating unused assignments. It's just not a good idea. 1. This isn't a problem, just the next step in the evolution of the internet. It's not like IPv4 stops working when we run out of free space, we just stop being able to easily add more networks. 2. This is a problem, but, ARIN policy alone will never address it. The real solution is to simply allow it to die its natural death when IPv4 goes away as a result of overwhelming migration to IPv6. This will take several years, but, so would any meaningful solution to this stated problem, so, I think our efforts are best focused on proper and thorough IPv6 deployment instead. 3. This is a Red Herring and should be dropped. The reality is that most legacy IPv4 registrants are end-users. Do you really think that collecting $100/year from each of them is vital to ARIN or meaningful to the community? ARIN has no business relationship with these people and no standing to force them into one. In response to your actual policy proposal: I would vote NEA. First paragraph and table: This is just a bad idea altogether as stated above. This alone is enough to force a NEA vote from me. If you want to change this to ARIN shall upon request issue the following assignments to existing ARIN IPv4 recipients and/or legacy address space holders in the ARIN region: IPv4 total holdings IPv6 prefix received /22-/32 /48 or /64 at requester's discretion /8-/22 /32 /1-/8 Appropriate space determined by ARIN staff Since no single body has more than 1/2 the total IPv4 space, I don't believe a criteria for /0 is necessary. Your original table shows a fundamental misunderstanding of IPv6 prefix sizes. The intent and design of IPv6 (for better or worse) is that a single network is always a /64. An organization with more than one network gets at least a /48. An LIR which is issuing prefixes to other organizations recieves a /32 (essentially any ISP). Now for your numbered proposal paragraphs: 1. Again, bad idea... See above. 2. Bad idea... See above. 3. Bad idea... See above. Very bad idea... Giving additional space to legacy holders without contacting them and verifying that they even still exist is just plain dumb. Why bring the mistakes made in the early v4 days forward into IPv6? 4. There's no reason whatsoever to tie these things together and produce an automatic map. The RIRs are perfectly capable of issuing appropriate blocks in response to applications submitted by the existing address holders. There is no benefit to defining this "migration space" and pushing it off into some random portion of the IPv6 space that gets split up all over the globe instead of having these allocations come from the appropriate RIR blocks to begin with. Owen On Jun 26, 2007, at 1:03 PM, William Herrin wrote: > Hi Folks, > > I've prepared a policy proposal I hope to submit to ARIN entitled > "IPv4 to IPv6 Migration Incentive Address Space." Through preemptively > assigning IPv6 addresses to IPv4 holders, it seeks to address three > problems ARIN faces: > > 1. The looming exhaustion of the IPv4 space. > 2. Obsolete and incorrect legacy IPv4 registration and contact > information. > 3. Legacy IPv4 registrants don't pay their fair share. > > The current draft of the proposal is at: > > http://bill.herrin.us/arin-policy-proposal.html > > If you're willing, please read through it. I'd very much like to hear: > a. Would you vote Yea or Nay? and b. How would you improve the > proposal? > > Thanks in advance, > Bill Herrin > > Note: Resent with from address that's actually subscribed to ppml. If > the prior one slips through, my apologies for sending it twice. > > -- > William D. Herrin herrin at dirtside.com bill at herrin.us > 3005 Crane Dr. Web: <http://bill.herrin.us/> > Falls Church, VA 22042-3004 > _______________________________________________ > This message sent to you through the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List > (PPML at arin.net). > Manage your mailing list subscription at: > http://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/ppml
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