On Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 3:17 PM, Fernando Gont <fernando@gont.com.ar> wrote:
On 03/02/2011 10:07 a.m., Rob Evans wrote:
You must be kiddin'... You're considering going through this mess again in a few decades?
I'm mildly surprised if you think we're going to be done with *this* mess in a few decades.
I fully agree. But planning/expecting to go through this mess *again* is insane. -- I hope the lesson has been learned, and we won't repeat history.
There is not yet a consensus understanding of what the problems are; that's a prerequisite to avoiding repeats. IPv4 was patched (well enough) to handle all the problems it encountered, until we hit address exhaustion. Some of the next couple of decades' problems may require another new protocol, hitting a non-address-exhaustion problem. That new problem could come out of various topology changes, inherent mobility, lots of other things. It could even come from address management (we won't likely exhaust 128 bits, but could hit configurations we can't route). Or from out of left field. -- -george william herbert george.herbert@gmail.com