On Mar 2, 2006, at 7:49 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Clearly, it would be extremely unwise for an ISP or
an enterprise to rely on shim6 for multihoming. Fortunately
they won't have to do this because the BGP multihoming
option will be available.
Are you *sure* BGP multihoming will be available? This is my
interpretation of the IPv6 /32 allocation policy:
To receive an allocation of a /32, you must:
"A) Be an LIR". I think you can consider a hosting company an LIR.
"B) Not be an end site". A little less cut and dry, but I'll accept
that a hosting company doesn't fit the definition of an end site.
"C) plan to provide IPv6 connectivity to organizations to which it
will assign /48s, by advertising that connectivity through its single
aggregated address allocation". This is the one where I don't think a
hosting company fits.
If all of your hosting is "shared", the servers are your
responsibility, and you're not providing connectivity to anyone but
yourself. I don't think you qualify at all at this point.
If you're selling dedicated servers or colo space, it's a little
better, but I still don't think you fit. The average dedicated
hosting/colo company now runs many customers servers sharing one
subnet. Each customer gets /32's assigned per server, unless you're a
huge colo customer, you're not getting space SWIPed to you.
When deciding who gets space out of your /32:
Assignments are to be made in accordance with the existing
guidelines (RFC3177,RIRs-on-48), which are summarized here as:
- /48 in the general case, except for very large subscribers
- /64 when it is known that one and only one subnet is needed by
design
- /128 when it is absolutely known that one and only one device is
connecting.
One customer on one dedicated server gets a /128. Even if you stretch
plausibility, they only get a /64. I don't see any way you can
justify giving colo customers /48s, unless they're deploying huge
networks in your datacenter.
The final rule for getting a /32 is:
"D) be an existing, known ISP in the ARIN region or have a plan for
making at least 200 /48 assignments to other organizations within
five years."
Unless you're providing transit/connectivity to 200 companies/
networks, I can't see how you justify assigning even ONE /48, let
alone 200.
The other PI assignment policies that have been proposed either
require that you have a /19 already in IPv4 (lots of hosting
companies don't have anything this size), or have tens/hundreds of
thousands of devices.
Even if a hosting company does get a /32 or a /44 or whatever, the
"you can't deaggregate your assignment at all" policy rules out
having multiple independent POPs unless you somehow arrange to get
multiple allocations(which isn't possible now).