On Mon, Jan 25, 2010 at 10:55 PM, Christopher Morrow <morrowc.lists@gmail.com> wrote:
some of what you're saying (tim) here is that you could: (one of these)
1) go to all your remote-office ISP's and get a /48 from each 2) go to *RIR's and get /<something> to cover the number of remote sites you have in their region(s) 3) keep on keepin' on until something better comes along?
This isn't really for remote offices, just our large campus sites.
2) o justification in light of 'unclear' policies for an address block of the right size. NOTE:I don't think the policies is unclear, but that could be my misreading of the policies.
For me, this seems unclear: 6.5.4.2. Assignment of multiple /48s to a single end site When a single end site requires an additional /48 address block, it must request the assignment with documentation or materials that justify the request. Requests for multiple or additional /48s will be processed and reviewed (i.e., evaluation of justification) at the RIR level. Note: There is no experience at the present time with the assignment of multiple /48s to the same end site. Having the RIR review all such assignments is intended to be a temporary measure until some experience has been gained and some common policies can be developed. In addition, additional work at defining policies in this space will likely be carried out in the near future.
o will your remote-office's ISP's accept the /48's per site? (vz/vzb is a standout example here)
Not too worried about VZ. Given that large content providers are getting end-site address space, I think they will have to adjust their stance.
o will your remote-office's have full reachability to the parts of the network they need access to? (remote ISP's filtering at/above the /48 boundary)
Remote offices aren't included in this plan.
For the Enterprise still used to v4-land ipv6 isn't a win yet... for an ISP it's relatively[0] simple.
-Chris
0: address interfaces, turn up protocols, add 'security' assign customers /48's...(yes fight bugs/problems/'why is there a colon in my ip address?"
(what if you do have 200 offices in the US which aren't connected on a private network today?)
-- Tim:> Sent from Brooklyn, NY, United States