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Re: Burn Rate? Re: 202401100645.AYC Re: IPv4 address block


From: "Abraham Y. Chen" <aychen () avinta com>
Date: Sat, 13 Jan 2024 12:14:49 -0500

Hi, Niels:

0)    Your sender name is in an unusual format. It becomes just the generic NANOG address as the recipient for me to MSG send to.

1)   "  You have posted this statement like five times now in the past two days.   ":

    Perhaps so, I have been responding to numerous comments since my initial post in response to Karim Mekkaoui's inquiry. Since I have to address each individually, some from different angles, while some others are new discussions or debates, it is no surprise that the same expression has been used more than once to deal with them respectively. If you count this specific item on the sideline, you definitely will see the repeats. The important criterion here is whether any of them are out of the context? (To be honest with you, I myself feel that I have been playing broken records on this pretty simple and straightforward topic.)

2)   " Who is asking for this expansion of 100.64/10 (which you misspelled, by the way)?    ":

    Thanks for catching the typo. My understanding is that there is a general desire (human nature) to get a larger netblock than 100.64/10 in CG-NAT. This could be used for either growing market or less dynamic reassignment. The 240/4 can provide additional benefits to CG-NAT operations such as static addressing that no one has realized possible. So, I am putting the solution on the table. This is a basic process of sharing the new discoveries. Is there anything wrong with the process? On the other hand, if RFC6598 had picked 240/4 instead of 100.64/10 as the netblock, we do not need today's discussions.

Regards,

Abe (2024-01-13 12:14)


On 2024-01-12 07:34, Niels Bakker wrote:
* aychen () avinta com (Abraham Y. Chen) [Fri 12 Jan 2024, 13:09 CET]:
    EzIP proposes that 240/4 be used like 10.64/10 in CG-NAT. which is reusable for each isolated geographical area. Thus, there is no "Burn-rate" to talk about.

You have posted this statement like five times now in the past two days.

Who is asking for this expansion of 100.64/10 (which you misspelled, by the way)? Where are the claims that the amount of private space behind a CGNAT is the limiting factor in CGNAT deployments?

[five meters of superfluous quote history snipped]


    -- Niels.



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