nanog mailing list archives

Re: [serval-project-dev] Re: Adding GPS location to IPv6 header


From: Eugen Leitl <eugen () leitl org>
Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2012 08:12:47 +0100

----- Forwarded message from Jeremy Lakeman <jeremy () servalproject org> -----

From: Jeremy Lakeman <jeremy () servalproject org>
Date: Tue, 27 Nov 2012 11:10:26 +1030
To: serval-project-developers () googlegroups com
Subject: Re: [serval-project-dev] Re: Adding GPS location to IPv6 header
Reply-To: serval-project-developers () googlegroups com

Allocate an IPv6 private network range using a scheme like this;
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-hain-ipv6-geo-addr-01
Probably with around 36 bits (100m) of precision, leaving the rest of
the /64 to flag that it's private and geographically based.

Internet gateways have their own "real" /64. Internet traffic would be
routed to the correct gateway based on the network of the source
address.

If each device uses the same 64bit host id on each network. Local mesh
route calculations can be based on a single main address per device,
with an additional routing entry added for each network we believe
that host should have.

A protocol like SCTP will also allow both parties to change networks
without needing to re-establish links.

Then the biggest scalability problem for routing packets world-wide to
an individual is a directory service for publishing and resolving
current network locations.

On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 9:40 AM, Eugen Leitl <eugen () leitl org> wrote:
----- Forwarded message from George Herbert <george.herbert () gmail com> -----

From: George Herbert <george.herbert () gmail com>
Date: Mon, 26 Nov 2012 14:51:57 -0800
To: William Herrin <bill () herrin us>
Cc: Eugen Leitl <eugen () leitl org>, nanog () nanog org
Subject: Re: Adding GPS location to IPv6 header

The utility of this is somewhat moderated by limited geographical
mobility while a phone's active in a single session.  One rarely
drives from San Francisco to LA typing all the way on their smartphone
data connection, for example.

To the extent that you may apply IP ranges to wider geographical
areas, and limit the search space to a few % of the total, beyond
which devices get a new address pushed as they travel, this is
entirely manageable without the new header.

Some services dislike the endpoint renumbering like that, and some
connections go kerfluey, but most web based activities handle the
endpoint getting a new IP just fine; this is what cookies are for.
Your SSH connections will remind you that you should be using screen,
or not type and drive.  But the CHP and road hazards will already do
that.

Eventually being allowed to use air-to-ground cell data on airliners
will be slightly worse, but again, most protocols shrug at this
problem.


-george

On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 2:36 PM, William Herrin <bill () herrin us> wrote:
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 10:20 AM, Eugen Leitl <eugen () leitl org> wrote:
On Mon, Nov 26, 2012 at 12:56:52PM -0200, Carlos M. Martinez wrote:
Just for redundancy's sake: No, L3 is **not** the place for this kind of
information. L3 is supposed to be simple, easy to implement, fast to

I agree. You need to put it into L2, and the core usage would
be for wireless meshes. Consider cases like Serval or cjdns,
which run on Android headsets and equivalent embeddeds.
Technically you wouldn't need GPS everywhere if you could
do ~m scale time domain reflectometry in free space.
It is possible to build a local contiguous map via
mutual time of flight triangulation (actually, just visibility
gives you a very good hint).

Actually, I think you just articulated the first use for Ammar's idea
that's not either wrong, absurd on its face or obviously better
handled at a different location within the protocol stack.

Suppose you have a large single-owner mesh network, such as a folks
walking around with cell phones. If you want them to have a stable
layer 3 address (and you do) then you're handling what amounts to /128
routes for tens of millions of devices. If you can guarantee that any
packet *to* that address also contains a rough geographic location
then you can discard any routes internally once they're more than a
short geographic distance from the origin and route on the geography
until you're close enough to find a specific /128 route. Tens of
millions of routes is no problem if no single router needs to know
more than a few thousand of them.

By putting geographic location at layer 3, you're also handling it end
to end which means you don't need a stateful border device to track
the current location of all of those /128 routes. The device itself
doesn't need to add location if it doesn't have the data; it's good
enough for the receiving tower to attach a rough location.

There are some assumptions in this model which are problematic. Key ones are:

1. Only valid as an interior gateway protocol (IGP). Geographic
routing has been proven false for an EGP because it induces traffic to
cross links for which neither source nor destination has permitted
access.

2. Requires the application at the landed end to copy the IP option
information into the outbound packets as well. This behavior is not
presently guaranteed.

3. Assumes that the device will originate communication, receiving
only replies from the landed end, or will use some intermediary to
communicate current geographic information if inbound origination is
required.


At any rate, I think that discussion of adding a geographic option
header to IPv6 should be tied up in the discussion of a routing
protocol which critically depends on its presence and can't reasonably
be built another way. Otherwise when a needful use case finally comes
along, you'll discover that the option's rules of operation don't
adequately enable it.

Regards,
Bill Herrin



--
William D. Herrin ................ herrin () dirtside com  bill () herrin us
3005 Crane Dr. ...................... Web: <http://bill.herrin.us/>
Falls Church, VA 22042-3004




--
-george william herbert
george.herbert () gmail com

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