Leif
While not a committee member, this is tolerable and workable.
We can assign a /48 to every tower (POP) and that will geo locate
good enough for the rural area. Geo location by address doesn't
work that well in our rural area anyhow. Can be miles off. But
using tower location will get it into less than 10 mile geo location.
One comment is that most providers that I have dealt with are very
reluctant to swip anything less than an IPv4 /24. This no longer affects
me because these providers are in the process of reclaiming their IP
space when we shifted to fiber. One was nice and one wasn't, but we
basically had to shift all customers to NAT since we didn't make it in time
to get our own IPv4 allocation. Getting an IPv6 allocation is waiting on
our fiber
provider providing dual stack and the issues you are some what addressing
in this current policy making.
Thanks
Paul McNary
pmcn...@cameron.net
On 7/21/2017 11:44 AM, Leif Sawyer wrote:
Happy Friday, everybody.
As promised, here is the latest rewrite of the draft policy below,
and it will soon be updated at:
https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2017_5.html
There are two changes noted in the policy statement: the first of
which reflects what seems to be the current
consensus of the PPML regarding netblock sizing; the second is to
strike language that may be read as either restrictive
or non-operational.
----
Problem Statement:
Current ARIN policy has different WHOIS directory registration
requirements for IPv4 vs IPv6 address assignments.
IPv4 registration is triggered for an assignment of any address
block equal to or greater than a /29 (i.e., eight IPv4 addresses).
In the case of IPv6, registration occurs for an assignment of any
block equal to or greater than a /64, which constitutes one entire
IPv6 subnet and is the minimum block size for an allocation.
Accordingly, there is a significant disparity between IPv4 and IPv6
WHOIS registration thresholds in the case of assignments, resulting in
more work in the case of IPv6 than is the case for IPv4.
There is no technical or policy rationale for the disparity, which
could serve as a deterrent to more rapid IPv6 adoption.
The purpose of this proposal is to eliminate the disparity and
corresponding adverse consequences.
Policy statement:
1) Alter section 6.5.5.1 "Reassignment information" of the NRPM to
strike "/64 or more addresses" and change to "/47 or more addresses,
or sub-delegation of any size that will be individually announced,"
and
2) Alter section 6.5.5.3.1. "Residential Customer Privacy" of
the NRPM by deleting the phrase "holding /64 and larger blocks"
Comments:
a. Timetable for implementation:
Policy should be adopted as soon as possible.
b. Anything else:
Author Comments:
IPv6 should not be more burdensome than the equivalent IPv4 network size.
Currently, assignments of /29 or more of IPv4 space (8 addresses)
require registration
The greatest majority of ISP customers who have assignments of IPv4
space are of a single IPv4 address which do not trigger any ARIN
registration requirement when using IPv4.
This is NOT true when these same exact customers use IPv6, as
assignments of /64 or more of IPv6 space require registration.
Beginning with RFC 3177, it has been standard practice to
assign a minimum assignment of /64 to every customer end user site,
and less is never used.
This means that ALL IPv6 assignments, including those
customers that only use a single IPv4 address must be registered with
ARIN if they are given the minimum assignment of /64 of IPv6 space.
This additional effort may prevent ISP's from giving IPv6
addresses because of the additional expense of registering those
addresses with ARIN, which is not required for IPv4.
The administrative burden of 100% customer registration of IPv6
customers is unreasonable, when such is not required for those
customers receiving only IPv4 connections.
---
Leif Sawyer
Advisory Council
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