On Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 12:13 PM, Bill Bogstad <bogstad@pobox.com> wrote:
On Thu, Apr 22, 2010 at 11:03 AM, David Conrad <drc@virtualized.org> wrote:
On Apr 21, 2010, at 10:48 PM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
So what happens when you change providers? How are you going to keep using globals that now aren't yours? use pi space, request it from your local friendly RIR.
And don't forget to invest in memory manufacturers and router vendors :-)
Only required if those addresses are advertised to the Internet. Which is apparently NOT what people want to do with it. In addition, it seems like the RIRs frown on not publishing your IPv6 PI allocations. If you go this
this is commonly held up as a reason that getting allocations is hard, but the infrastructure micro-allocations are never to be seen in the global table. It woudl be super nice if some kind RIR people could comment here, I believe in the ARIN region all you NEED to do is provide a spreadsheet showing your utilization, checking for the routes in the 'DFZ' (bmanning-summons) isn't relevant for additional requests.
route, be sure to 'justify' as large an allocation as you could ever possibly imagine using because you'll only get one bite from that apple.
see previous comment, I believe this is a red-herring.
Or maybe someone could offer to advertise these deliberately unreachable addresses for a small fee and then null route any stray packets that happen to want to get there. Would this satisfy the letter (if not the spirit) for justifying PI space?
you still have to provide SWIP, RWHOIS or some other accounting of the usage (spreadsheet/csvfile seems to be historically acceptable) -chris
Bill Bogstad