On Fri, Mar 16, 2012 at 2:01 PM, Octavio Alvarez <alvarezp@alvarezp.ods.org> wrote:
On Tue, 13 Mar 2012 23:22:04 -0700, Christopher Morrow <christopher.morrow@gmail.com> wrote:
NetRange: 100.64.0.0 - 100.127.255.255 CIDR: 100.64.0.0/10 OriginAS: NetName: SHARED-ADDRESS-SPACE-RFCTBD-IANA-RESERVED
Weren't we supposed to *solve* the end-to-end connectivity problem, instead of just letting it live?
ha!
Sure, this lets CGN to be more organized for operators, but those that
ghuston has a great presentation about CGN deployments, and how they essentially become permanent (or could, according to his chickenbone-readings)... It's an interesting thought experiment/discussion, and one I'm curious to see play out.
already have RFC5735 addresses implemented will not switch to 100.64/10 just because there's a new block. Only new players will actually benefit from this. It will only make it easier for new players to play in IPv4 instead of being pushed to IPv6.
are you really asking: "Why on why did we go through all this hard work for something with basically no easy to quantify return?" hell, this may get more use than SCTP does, and sctp took a LOT longer to do... -chris