On Sun, 18 Oct 1998, Patrick Greenwell wrote:
On 17 Oct 1998, Michael Shields wrote:
In article <4.0.1.19981016224901.00de6240@pariah.cncx.com>, I Am Not An Isp <patrick@ianai.net> wrote:
FACT: RFC1918 space does not break PMTU discovery. Deal with it.
If you use RFC 1918 space on the Internet, PMTU very well may not work for you. You can place fault on whatever standard you like but that doesn't change the *operational* issue.
1) There is nothing inherient in the use of RFC 1918 space that will break PMTU.
The only point I am trying to make is that while there is absolutely nothing in using address space as defined in RFC-1918 that will break PMTU-D, using 1918 addresses for public router interfaces which send packets to public networks (in this case, the Internet) from that address is outside the scope of what 1918 permits and can break things when combined with other entirely legitimate and correct practices. As a result, it is unwise to encourage people to use 1918 addresses in such an inappropriate way. Since everyone agrees on this, hopefully this thread can now rest.