[arin-ppml] IPv6 End-User Initial Assignment Policy (or: Pleasedon't me make do ULA + NAT66)

Bill Woodcock woody at pch.net
Tue Feb 17 11:31:41 EST 2015


The point isn't the size of the block, it's the cost of the route.  

    
                -Bill


> On Feb 17, 2015, at 08:23, Steven Ryerse <SRyerse at eclipse-networks.com> wrote:
> 
> Your point is valid and I agree that IPv6 doesn’t need those needs tests except maybe for large blocks.  The routing table is always an issue, but if we want IPv6 to become the standard we should follow Jon Postel’s model of making it easy to get IPv6 resources.  Since there is a yearly fee to get IPv6, organizations will only purchase what they need since they can get more and that is all of the needs testing needed for smaller blocks of IPv6.  My two cents. 
>  
>  
> Steven Ryerse
> President
> 100 Ashford Center North, Suite 110, Atlanta, GA  30338
> www.eclipse-networks.com
> 770.656.1460 - Cell
> 770.399.9099- Office
>  
> <image001.jpg>℠ Eclipse Networks, Inc.
>         Conquering Complex Networks℠
>  
> From: arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net [mailto:arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net] On Behalf Of Gary T. Giesen
> Sent: Tuesday, February 17, 2015 10:37 AM
> To: arin-ppml at arin.net
> Subject: [arin-ppml] IPv6 End-User Initial Assignment Policy (or: Pleasedon't me make do ULA + NAT66)
>  
> PPML,
>  
> I’d like to discuss what I perceive as a gap in the IPv6 End User policy.
>  
> Under the NRPM Section 4.3, there are virtually no requirements for an initial IPv4 assignment to end users, other than the minimum allocation size is a /24 and a 50% (128 addresses) within one year.  Under the analogous IPv6 section (6.5.8), an End User can only quality for a direct assignment from ARIN if they meet one of the following criteria:
>  
> a.    Having a previously justified IPv4 end-user assignment from ARIN or one of its predecessor registries, or;
> b.   Currently being IPv6 Multihomed or immediately becoming IPv6 Multihomed and using an assigned valid global AS number, or;
> c.    By having a network that makes active use of a minimum of 2000 IPv6 addresses within 12 months, or;
> d.   By having a network that makes active use of a minimum of 200 /64 subnets within 12 months, or;
> e.   By providing a reasonable technical justification indicating why IPv6 addresses from an ISP or other LIR are unsuitable.
>  
>  
> The IPv4 policy has no multihoming requirement, and a vastly lower minimum host count. While the IPv6 policy does try to address some of the economic pain of renumbering, I don’t think it goes far enough.
>  
> Real life scenario:
>  
> 1)      Customer with 50 locations (IPVPN) spread across the country/continent
> 2)      10 staff per location (average; 500 total)
> 3)      20 devices per location (average; 1000 total)
> 4)      2 subnets (voice & data) per location (average, 100 total)
> 5)      Not multihomed
> 6)      Currently using RFC1918 IPv4 space + NAT
>  
>  
> You may think my example is contrived, but is actually my typical customer. Based on my reading of the NRPM, this customer does not qualify for a direct allocation from ARIN. I’d argue, however that the economic costs to this customer renumbering are far greater than another customer who has 2000 staff or 200 subnets located within a few locations in the same metro area.
>  
> Now I suppose the simple answer is for my customer is to go get an IPv4 /24 (which would automatically qualify them for an IPv6 allocation under 6.5.8.1 (a)), but I think that’s a waste of time and resources when:
>  
> a)      We’ve accepted NAT in the IPv4 world is a fact of life, but in IPv6 it’s the exception rather than the norm
> b)      IPv4 is the constrained resource, yet it seems to be more readily available to end users
> c)       We’re hinging IPv6 deployments on IPv4 deployments, which seems counter-intuitive to me (we should be making IPv6 more accessible than IPv4 to encourage adoption, rather than the other way around)
>  
>  
> I’m actively engaged in convincing my customers to adopt IPv6 (rather than waiting for them to ask for it), but it’s a tough sell already without the problem of them having to renumber their entire network should they no longer be my customer. The only alternative left to me is ULA addressing (which still doesn’t guarantee uniqueness) + NAT66 (which is still very poorly supported in applications – meaning a poor user experience). I believe it is commonly held  amongst this community that IPv6 is supposed to restore the end-to-end principle of the Internet (that is my belief as well), but IPv6 won’t get deployed in this fashion if it’s going to be too painful to deploy or move.
> 
> So here’s my proposed solution: Make direct assignments available to any end user who qualifies for at least a /40 (13+ sites).  I think this addresses most problems with routing table growth (by not handing out a direct /48 to every mom and pop shop out there), addresses most of my customers’ concerns with having to renumber dozens of sites, and doesn’t force customers to get IPv4 /24’s just to get the IPv6 resources they need.
>  
> Thoughts/criticisms/questions/concerns?
>  
> GTG
>  
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