[ppml] 2005-1 status
Michael.Dillon at btradianz.com
Michael.Dillon at btradianz.com
Mon Feb 6 05:01:02 EST 2006
> > Secondly, according to the existing IPv6 policy, if McDonalds were to
> > go to an ISP and ask for IPv6 connectivity for their network of 12,300
> > restaurants, the ISP would assign them 12,300 /48 address blocks.
> > That is the policy ...
>
> No, the current policy is that the LIR can assign a single /48 or
forward
> the request for more (with justification) to ARIN.
>
> You're confusing "end site" with "location". According to the NRPM:
>
> 6.2.9. End site
>
> An end site is defined as an end user (subscriber) [...]
>
> So, a single end user organization counts as one "end site" regardless
of
> the number of physical locations it has.
Well, it seems like the policy needs more work to change
this silliness. IPv6 addressing was intended to assign a
/48 to a single end-site meaning more-or-less a single
location. My apartment, your house, the Walgreen's store
on the corner.
RIPE has started to correct this with a policy proposal
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/policies/proposals/2005-4.html
to clarify the wording.
Let's face it, McDonald's Restaurants is never going to
buy an IPv6 connection to the IPv6 Internet if they already
have a private network connecting all the restaurants.
We are not supposed to be scrimping and saving on IPv6
address space by wringing our hands over whether or not
a site DESERVES a /48.
--Michael Dillon
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