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<p>I am wondering the real numbers behind this discussion.</p>
<p>How many missions/space agencies there are in the works or in
planning that justifies the time spent with such discussion to
have something specific ? I imagine it is a pretty small number
because of obvious reasons: high cost, complexity, low number of
space agencies and projects running from time to time. What stops
or what is so difficult for space agencies, to simply ask for IP
space for their respective RIR, as it always have been, and use
that IP space on whatever projects or missions they justify for ?
Why do we need to differentiate this usage for such a supposed low
amount of cases.</p>
<p>IP addressing to other planets ? Come on !<br>
We barely have missions with few equipment on the Moon, Mars and
few other places.<br>
The way it looks like, it seems in the next years there will be a
mesh network of point to point links between all planets of solar
system.</p>
<p>Fernando</p>
<div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 3/24/2026 7:21 PM, Tony Li wrote:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:C35B470F-C1DD-4D71-B142-3B8D24F22BA7@tony.li">
<pre wrap="" class="moz-quote-pre">
Hi Joe,
</pre>
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<pre wrap="" class="moz-quote-pre">Considering appendix A of deepspace-ip-assessment, why
does this policy speak to IPv4 at all?
</pre>
</blockquote>
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Because there are some other pragmatic issues that I think that we’ve touched on before.
Today, space agencies are already using IPv4 addresses for all of the usual legacy reasons. They have IPv4 infrastructure, and some of that may not be easily upgradeable.
IPv4 also has a significant advantage in bandwidth overehead. Deep space links are extremely low bandwidth. Voyager (admittedly not IP) gets about 160bps. Mars rovers, when transmitting directly to Earth, get 500bps. The extra size of IPv6 does make a significant difference at these rates.
Mission planners are going to be pragmatic, not dogmatic. For them, IP is a tool and they will pick the best tool available to meet their mission goals. While we might like them to pick IPv6, their decisions will be based on their mission requirements, and bandwidth is always going to rank high in their decision criteria.
We do not get to dictate to them. We have no authority over them. The best that we can do is to advocate for our preferred solution. If they choose to use IPv4, and we do not provide addressing infrastructure, then they will simply use legacy prefixes and routing in space will be chaotic. That is a pragmatic tactical outcome that will have deleterious strategic consequences, which we should avoid.
On the other hand, if we provide addressing infrastructure for both IPv4 and IPv6, we enable sane routing in both the short and long term, regardless of the version selected.
When mission planners are thinking more strategically, working on missions that lead to permanent installations, then the strategic benefits of IPv6 become more apparent, especially in cases where there is higher bandwidth.
Mission planners are going to be the ones evaluating the tradeoffs and making the decision. We should support them to provide the best pragmatic solution available, regardless of what they choose.
Regards,
Tony
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