At 09:10 19-08-2011, The IESG wrote:
The IESG has received a request from an individual submitter to consider
the following document:
- 'IANA Reserved IPv4 Prefix for Shared Transition Space'
  <draft-weil-shared-transition-space-request-03.txt> as an Informational
RFC

The IESG plans to make a decision in the next few weeks, and solicits
final comments on this action. Please send substantive comments to the
ietf@ietf.org mailing lists by 2011-09-16. Exceptionally, comments may be

Making such an allocation through a document which is not intended for the Standards Track is highly unusual. Last year I raised a concern in a non-IETF mailing list about making IPv4 allocations using "RFC required" as there will be more economic pressure for process end-run as the world gets to the odds and ends of IPv4 addresses. I don't see any text that fits under protocol assignment (see RFC 2860) in draft-weil-shared-transition-space-request-03. In fact, the Security Considerations section mentions that the "memo does not define any protocol".

The draft only mentions an applicability and justification for Shared Transition Space and references draft-bdgks-arin-shared-transition-space-00. While the policy fits under RIR community processes, it does not fit under allocations made for technical specifications. Publishing this document on the grounds that the ARIN wants it is not a good enough reason. Will ARIN be "donating" the /10 IPv4 address space to IANA for it to make this allocation?

The draft mentions that:

  "Network equipment manufacturers MUST NOT use the
   assigned block in default or example device configurations."

As the IPv4 address block is not specified in the document, the above requirement cannot be followed. The expectation that the IPv4 address block will only be used by Infrastructure Providers is optimistic. RFC 5735 covers Special Use IPv4 Addresses. This document should update the BCP.

A proposal similar to this one was discussed in a V6OPS meeting in Asia. If my reading is correct, it did not gain consensus. The proposal gets discussed in North America in OPSAWG and it gains consensus. BTW, this draft contains only 220 lines, including boilerplate and it has five authors.

Regards,
-sm
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