[ppml] [address-policy-wg] Re: article about IPv6 vs firewalls vs NAT in arstechnica (seen on slashdot)

JORDI PALET MARTINEZ jordi.palet at consulintel.es
Fri May 11 04:54:10 EDT 2007


If we want to avoid other entities acting as a central registry for
ULA-central, then it is clear that the RIRs should do that, and for that,
the only way is thru a policy.

Regards,
Jordi




> De: Owen DeLong <owen at delong.com>
> Responder a: <address-policy-wg-admin at ripe.net>
> Fecha: Thu, 10 May 2007 23:12:21 -0700
> Para: "william(at)elan.net" <william at elan.net>
> CC: Tony Hain <alh-ietf at tndh.net>, <vixie at vix.com>, <ppml at arin.net>,
> "address-policy-wg at ripe.net" <address-policy-wg at ripe.net>
> Asunto: [address-policy-wg] Re: [ppml] article about IPv6 vs firewalls vs NAT
> in arstechnica (seen on slashdot)
> 
> ULA Central is intended so that some subset of the internet can reliably
> use it to interconnect while not being "globally" routed.
> 
> The problem I have with this theory is that the delta between a
> collection
> of networks routing by mutual agreement and the internet is:
> 
> A. Fuzzy
> B. Non-Existant
> C. There is no difference
> D. Meaningless
> E. Any and/or All of the above
> 
> Pick your favorite answer from the above and you've pretty much got it.
> If ULA central were limited to not exiting the local AS (in some
> meaningful
> way, like routers won't forward routes or traffic to ULA addresses to
> external
> adjacencies), then, I might see it as something other than an end-run on
> the RIR process.  However, in it's current state of "license for
> anyone who
> wants to run a competing RIR for networks that choose to interoperate
> on this basis" I think it's a pretty bad idea.
> 
> Owen
> 
> 
> On May 11, 2007, at 12:03 AM, william(at)elan.net wrote:
> 
>> 
>> I don't understand your point about why ULA need to be registered if
>> its not going to be globally routed. Also PI is not the same as ULA -
>> PI do come from RIRs and in IPv6 there was no way to get PI (except
>> in a few special cases) until recent ARIN's micro-allocation policy.
>> 
>> On Fri, 11 May 2007, Tony Hain wrote:
>> 
>>> I agree that this will help inform the debate, and while Iljitsch
>>> did a good
>>> job of outlining the issue, he left out a significant point:::
>>> People explicitly chose to be in the state of "as there is
>>> currently no
>>> obvious way to make services only available locally" by insisting
>>> that the
>>> local-scope addressing range have a global-scope as far as
>>> application
>>> developers were concerned. Now the application developers are
>>> complaining
>>> about the consequences of their choice, because the alternative to
>>> 'no
>>> routing path for an attack' is to insert a device that has to make
>>> policy
>>> decisions with limited information.
>>> 
>>> The current ULA-central discussions will be directly involved in
>>> this issue.
>>> It is critical that all of the RIR's have policies establishing a
>>> mechanism
>>> for registering ULA-central prefixes & PI. For those who don't
>>> recall, the
>>> reason ULA-central was tabled was that it was seen as a potential
>>> end-run to
>>> acquire PI space in the absence of appropriate policy to do so out
>>> of a
>>> range recognized for global routing.
>>> 
>>> The need for keeping some things local while others are global is
>>> real, and
>>> the lack of appropriate mechanisms to accomplish that through the
>>> routing
>>> system that is designed to deal with path selection leads to entire
>>> industries for fragile work-arounds along with their increased
>>> complexity.
>>> 
>>> Tony
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>> From: ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:ppml-bounces at arin.net] On
>>>> Behalf Of
>>>> vixie at vix.com
>>>> Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2007 9:59 PM
>>>> To: ppml at arin.net
>>>> Subject: [ppml] article about IPv6 vs firewalls vs NAT in
>>>> arstechnica
>>>> (seen on slashdot)
>>>> 
>>>> i think that this article will help inform the debate around the
>>>> ipv6
>>>> transition:
>>>> 
>>>> http://arstechnica.com/articles/paedia/ipv6-firewall-mixed-
>>>> blessing.ars
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> 




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