[ppml] Policy regarding subnets smaller than /64
Brian Dickson
briand at ca.afilias.info
Fri Nov 16 16:26:18 EST 2007
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Scott Leibrand wrote: > Brian Dickson wrote: >> >> The problem I'm illustrating is the hammer/nail problem. >> If it is not *possible* to do any kind of bit-mapped plan, then we >> are not supporting those who *might* choose to (or need to) do so. > > Ok. I'm not opposed to allowing the use of subnets longer/smaller > than /64, although I do oppose your earlier policy proposal to > encourage it via ARIN guidelines. > >> This is neither about encouraging, nor about requiring, a particular >> plan. It is about *allowing* it, by providing the essential tools to >> support it. >> The only tool needed, currently, is the ability to register >> allocations >/64 - something I perceive the current policy to >> prohibit. (And now we stray into discussions about policy, rather >> than about the use cases.) > > Ok, let's discuss the policy then, as this is the public policy > mailing list. :-) > > IMO it's entirely appropriate to use subnets smaller/longer than /64 > for certain use cases, like the one you outlined. I do not believe it > is appropriate to allocate anything smaller/longer than a /64 to a > downstream customer, as doing so limits their ability to grow as > needed. In order to support your subnetting scheme, I believe an LIR > should reassign an appropriately sized netblock (/64, /56, or /48), > and the recipient network should subnet that assignment as needed to > support their need for variably-sized subnets. If they don't need an > entire /64, then they can reserve the rest of it for future growth. > As long as the ability to do assignments within the allocated block below the /64 exist, I don't have a big problem with making a /64 the smallest aggregate available for assignment. (I do think it would be reasonable to assign longer prefixes, but I acknowledge that those of us who feel that way are currently in the minority, or are primarily lurkers on the ppml.) > What other "essential tools" do you believe are missing from current > policy? > > -Scott None that I am aware of. Can anyone else think of requirements that would affect ARIN policy? Or requirements of any kind? (The development of dual-stack address management tools is left as an exercise for the LIRs and/or their customers. :-)) Brian
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