Re: IPv6 Advertisements

From: Iljitsch van Beijnum (no email)
Date: Sat Jun 02 2007 - 12:22:01 EDT

  • Next message: Paul Vixie: "Re: NANOG 40 agenda posted"

    On 2-jun-2007, at 17:25, Ross Vandegrift wrote:

    > Am I under some misconceptions about IPv6 routing policies here?

    There are no IPv6 routing policies. Everyone gets to decide which
    prefixes to accept and which to reject on their own. However, unlike
    IPv4, there are currently pretty much only two flavors: /32 and /48.
    So if you have a /32 and start announcing a bunch of /36s, or you
    have a /48 and start announcing /52s, it's likely that at least some
    people out there aren't going to accept those. (Nor /48s in blocks
    that are carved up as /32.)

    So I expect people who are in your position to start requesting
    blocks larger than /32 or /48 in order to be able to deaggregate, or
    even request multiple independent PI blocks. It will be interesting
    to see what this means for the number of PI requests and speed at
    which the global IPv6 routing table grows.

    It would be nice if rather than fight about how difficult it should
    be to occupy a slot in the routing table, with both "too difficult"
    and "too easy" having painful consequences, we could work something
    out using regional address blocks or something so it's not necessary
    for a router on one side of the globe to have all the more specifics
    that are only relevant on the opposite side of the globe. Obviously
    we don't want metro addressing with mandatory interconnection all
    over the place, but common sense suggests that there is some middle
    ground where it's possible to have address space that's at least
    portable within a certain region, but we get to prune the routing
    tables elsewhere.


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