nanog mailing list archives

Re: Addressing plan exercise for our IPv6 course


From: Joe Maimon <jmaimon () ttec com>
Date: Fri, 23 Jul 2010 14:48:47 -0400



Owen DeLong wrote:

On Jul 22, 2010, at 9:51 PM, Joe Maimon wrote:





Funny how so much concern is given to eliminating the possibility of end users returning for more space, yet for ISP's 
we have no real concern with what will happen when they near depletion of their /32 what with /48s to some thousands 
customers, aggregation, churn, what have you.

There's no need to give it a lot of concern because that process is pretty well understood and not particularly 
different from the current process in IPv4.

There are a whole lot of organizations who do not view getting IPv4 from ARIN as particularly easy or well understood. Whether IPv6 requests will be better or worse for more or less of the population is completely unpredictable at this time.

My point is that very little concern is being given to them and all of it to the end user, who all understand how to contact their service provider to request more service.



When an ISP runs out, they apply for more from either their upstream, or, their RIR. Just that simple.

When an end user runs out, they apply for more from either their upstream, or, their RIR. Just that simple.


The effort and cost of that on the organization is hard to predict, especially as how it may vary from size to size, 
organization to organization. Furthermore, everyone else pays with a DFZ slot.

Yeah, but, the number of DFZ slots consumed by this in IPv6 will be so much smaller than IPv4 that I really find it 
hard to take this argument seriously.

Early days yet. And each IPv6 is worth four of IPv4. We are already proposing doubling the allocation rate for transitional mechanisms.


Additionally, it's not necessarily true due to allocation by bisection.

/48 per customer gives the customer as many potential subnets as you have potential customers.

You say that like it is a bad thing.

I say it as if it is a curious thing worthy of real consideration whether we are indeed following the wisest course of action.



With more address space than we need, the value we get is addressing
convenience (just like we've had in Ethernet addressing since 1982).
There is no need to make IPv6 addressing artificially precious and as
costly as IPv4 addressing is.

A balance should be struck and for that to happen, weight must be given to both sides.

And it has. /32 is merely the default minimum allocation to an ISP. Larger blocks
can be given,
and, now that the RIRs are allocating by bisection, it should even
be possible in most cases for that additional space to be an expansion of the
existing allocation without changing the number of prefixes.

e.g. 2001:db8::/32 could be expanded to 2001:db8::/28

16 times as much address space, same number of DFZ slots.

Owen


Yes, the one saving grace of this system.

Joe



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