At 10:17 AM 9/10/2005, Joe Abley wrote:
On 10-Sep-2005, at 09:18, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
[Perhaps this thread should migrate to Multi6?]
multi6 hasn't existed for some time. The "level-3 shim" approach to multi-homing that was the primary output of multi6 is being discussed in shim6.
Suppose they not only have no plan but couldn't really put together a plan to support 200 customers? Does this mean Google, or any other content provider, is "unworthy" of globally routeable space?
Yes, according to the current RIR policies. [So the determination of "unworthy" above has been made, in effect, by RIR members.]
IPv6 is a nice idea, and as soon as people realize that ISPs are not the only organizations who have a need to multi-home - and I mean really multi-home, not stupid work-arounds - then it might actually start to happen.
It's not as though this line of thinking hasn't been followed many, many times before. The counter-argument goes like this:
1. There is more v6 space than there is v4 space, by virtue of the fact that the address is 96 bits wider.
Could the IPv6 proponents get their stories straight? On the one hand, the talk is of 128 bit address space, then on the other hand the talk is of security-by-obscurity by handing out /48's to everyone and having networks really sparsely populated. So given the address space is so massive that 1/2 of the bits are effectively a local subaddress, perhaps the talk should be of doubling the number of bits, not quadrupling. Yes, I understand you can slice and dice however desired, but it sure seems like the proponents play fast and loose with the numbers when making their arguments, and it's tiresome.
2. Because there is vastly more v6 space than v4 space, if entitlement to PI space in v6 was opened up the chances are many more people would have v6 PI space than currently have v4 PI space.
The rules today have not resulted in and overly huge number of multihomers. The IPv6 crowd evangelists on the one hand insist there's no need for NAT, while on the other hand provided no solution to multihoming, and what's been evolving in the various "fixes" for that are less palatable than running a multiport NAT box. The choice is simple: live with NAT or provide portable address space. The marketplace is not likely, IMO, to accept shim6. End systems should not be making decisions on where packets go beyond the local network segment. This has been tried before. It was called Token Ring Source Route Bridging. It was a bad idea then, and it's a bad idea now to have end stations deal with routing. SRB came into being to save the network elements from the burden of keeping track of the functioning of the network. Then Ethernet switches came along, spanning tree, and so forth.
3. Every PI assignment/allocation takes up a routing slot in every router in the DFZ.
That's true today. Router memory complement has increased over time. So what? Cost of processing power and memory are a tiny fraction of what they were when the routing table was in the 20,000 prefix range.
4. Given 2 and 3, there is potential for the amount of state in the DFZ to exceed the capabilities of the network to hold and process it (e.g. enormous RIBs, soaring processor requirements for dealing with updates, etc).
Processors in current routers are well below the fastest on the market. There's plenty of horsepower headroom. There's plenty of opportunity to expand the amount of memory.
It's possible that the number of PI assignments might not be that high, and the scaling properties in practice might not be so bad. However, you only get to find this out after you've opened the floodgates, and if it turns out that it doesn't scale, it's hard to push the water back into the reservoir.
What floodgates? Are we flooded today? The rules today for getting portable space are NOT all that difficult to meet.
The goal in shim6 is to find a mechanism which provides all the functional benefits of multi-homing without holding all the state in DFZ routers.
That multihoming was not properly addressed as a core goal to solve in IPv6 is one of the failings in the whole effort. The shim6 approach is, IMO, not going to fly. A multiported NAT box for $179 or less (present product in the marketplace) provides a simple solution without the end stations being involved. Sure, it uses NAT.
There seems to be some ongoing perception that various protocol/ research organisations have no idea about the value of multi-homing for enterprises in the real network, and hence ignore it. While that might have once been the case (I certainly remember thinking so around 1997 whilst shouting on the ipng list), I don't believe it's the case today.
Sadly, because folks wouldn't listen then, IPv6 lacks a useful multihoming solution beyond what we have in IPv4. Gluing on band-aids is not going to solve it. Relying on Moore's Law to continue to make routing equipment keep up is going to be a necessity.
The real problem is that there is no simple answer that doesn't have potentially nasty consequences.
Correct. And so we will see multiport NAT boxes for the forseeable future for smaller sites, and PI space for larger ones.