[ppml] Legacy /24s
William Herrin
arin-contact at dirtside.com
Mon Sep 3 10:27:14 EDT 2007
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On 9/3/07, Owen DeLong <owen at delong.com> wrote: > Most internet-oriented technology needs to be refreshed on a 2-4 year > life-cycle, actually. I generally get better results from my equipment buy YMMV. > > The number of routes and ASes in the DFZ implies that there are > > somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000 routers in the DFZ. > > > Here, I think you go off the rails with a big hand-wave. How, exactly > do you think you can correlate the routes+ASs in the DFZ to the > number of routers participating in the DFZ? As I said before, its a SWAG. Some of the better educated responders suggest that I'm around 50k too high here with the actual number in the 150k-250k range. > Why is an IPv6 prefix 2x an IPv4 prefix? That's what Cisco is claiming in their documentation. 1M IPv4 routes or 500k IPv6 routes. I assume this probably means they're stashing the first 64 bits into the TCAM and bouncing it up to the software if you need a route more specific than /64. Sounds sloppy to me but I'm not Cisco. > > So, with any proposal to expand the availability of IPv6 PI, the > > question that should be asked is: "Does the proposed use in the > > expansion justify asking the rest of the world to pay $17k?" > > Since that's 17k divided amongst 30k or so organizations, you're > really asking each other org. to foot a $0.50 bill per prefix. 26109 AS's according to the latest routing table report yielding closer to $0.65. But that's a false way of looking at problem. Some AS's have one DFZ router. Some have many. None interact with the problem in terms of individual routes; they have to deal with the whole route count. Looking at the cost of an individual route is useful in terms of the whole systemic cost accross the entire DFZ. > > My opinion is that in the case of a multihomed content provider, the > > answer is yes. Why should he receive poor treatment in IPv6 merely > > What about a multihomed content consumer? Why should they > be treated any worse than a multihomed content provider? Because non-PI multihoming solutions for the NATed content consumer are relatively trivial to build. > Nobody really cares about the $100/yr. Proposals to waive that > have been targeted at providing what little incentive we can towards > other behaviors for the common good. Yet the original posters in this thread brought it up as a complaint. Regards, Bill Herrin -- William D. Herrin herrin at dirtside.com bill at herrin.us 3005 Crane Dr. Web: <http://bill.herrin.us/> Falls Church, VA 22042-3004
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