Hi, Mark:
1) Re: Ur. Pt. 1) " ISE != IETF. ... ": On a public forum like
NANOG, it is much more expeditious to provide forward guidance than
reciting past failures, especially those of a third party due to
improper system setup.
2) Re: Ur. Pt. 2) " So replace every CPE device, including ... ":
It is evident that you even did not glance at the EzIP Draft
Abstract before commenting, but just relying on your recollection of the
past 240/4 efforts. Please spend a minute or two on reading the EzIP
Abstract. In particular, please look for a keyword "overlay". Hint, this
was not our invention. It was a concise characterization by an
authoritative Internet figure. So, we imported it into our latest IETF
draft update. Hopefully, this keyword will steer your opinion on EzIP.
Regards,
Abe (2022-03-16 10:49)
------------------------------
NANOG Digest, Vol 170, Issue 18
Message: 42 Date: Wed, 16 Mar 2022 13:04:01 +1100 From: Mark Andrews
<ma...@isc.org> To: "Abraham Y. Chen" <ayc...@avinta.com> Cc: Tom
Beecher <beec...@beecher.cc>, "Chen, Abraham Y." <ayc...@alum.mit.edu>,
NANOG <nanog@nanog.org> Subject: Re: Making Use of 240/4 NetBlock Re:
202203151549.AYC Message-ID:
<db491106-7130-41b0-8efa-3c4461e4d...@isc.org> Content-Type: text/plain;
charset=utf-8
On 16 Mar 2022, at 07:27, Abraham Y. Chen<ayc...@avinta.com> wrote:
Hi, Tom:
1) " .... better to have that conversation via the appropriate IETF channels.
": Thanks for the recommendation. I would appreciate very much if you
could guide us to the specific contact. Before we attempt to do so, however, it would be
prudent to report the history of our team's experience:
A. The first IETF Draft on EzIP Project started from 2016-12 as
instructed by the ISE (Independent Submission Editor). Although, at that time
Working Group SunSet4 had been in session for awhile. But, we were not aware
of, nor being informed about such.
ISE != IETF. There is no responsible AD assigned so this is not classed as IETF
work. For ISE work to become IETF work you need to convince a AD to sponsor
the work.
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-chen-ati-adaptive-ipv4-address-space/
B. In Summer of 2018, we discovered that SunSet4 had Concluded. We
contacted the person in charge of keeping an eye on possible future IPv4
activities, but did not receive any instruction to revise our course.
C. Recently, we were made aware of the Int-Area activities. Attempts to
reach the Group Chairs have not received any responses.
D. I just received an Int-Area Digest Vol 199, Issue 14 requesting IETF
to reactivate the IPv4 support.
Firstly nobody uses mailing list digests as references. Secondly anyone can
post to the mailing list, you just need to subscribe. If you read the thread
you can see there is no interest in this.
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/int-area/iZnR1Dkomu4D8AfHTI2xR_npJ8Y/
Hope you can help us to close the loose ends.
2) In the meantime, we realized that the simplest implementation of the EzIP proposal
is to replace the 100.64/10 netblock used by CG-NAT with the 240/4 netblock. Next, taking
advantage of the much larger address pool to begin practicing static address assignment
related disciplines, a "packetized PSTN" is realized. From such a base, the
EzIP powered CG-NAT behaving as an overlay network in parallel to the existing Internet
for providing the same services, many of the drawbacks in the latter are mitigated! So,
we decided to discuss the EzIP proposal directly with the NANOG colleagues, because the
EzIP deployment can actually be rather stealthy.
So replace every CPE device, including the ones you don?t own, to support 240/4
then later replace every CPE device again or replace every CPE device with one
that supports the IPv4aaS you have chosen to use and switch to IPv6-only
between the ISP and the CPE and get IPv6 delivered to your customers. Lots of
ISP?s have already gone to DS-Lite or 464XLAT, to name two IPv4aaS methods, to
provide their clients access to the legacy IPv4 internet over IPv6-only links.
Note nothing prevents there being a mixture of dual stack and IPv6-only clients
on the same access network hardware.
Remember even using these addresses as a replacement for 100.64/10 requires
every device behind the CPE to also support 240/4 or any traffic emitted from
these addresses is subject to be discarded.
I look forward to your thoughts.
Regards,
Abe (2022-03-15 16:26)
On 2022-03-14 14:48, Tom Beecher wrote:
If you want to garner discussion or support for your draft RFC, it's probably
better to have that conversation via the appropriate IETF channels.
On Mon, Mar 14, 2022 at 2:43 PM Abraham Y. Chen<ayc...@avinta.com> wrote:
Hi, Fred:
0) Thank you for a set of references.
1) We cited only one IETF Draft (Wilson, et al.) among them, because it was
the first and only one that clearly stated its limitation (Section 2. Caveats
of Use). More importantly, it was written by three top APNIC officials. Later
efforts on this topic have not introduced (based on my reading) any more
essence to the topic.
2) "... I was there for those discussions, and I'm not sure how to put it more simply....
": With your knowledge of the past, you are uniquely qualified to critique on our work.
However, it would be more expedient for everyone, if you could first read through at least the
Abstract and the Conclusions of the EzIP IETF Draft, before commenting. This is because EzIP
proposal is based on the same general idea as the references you cited, but with a slight extra
step that produced a series of surprising results. In particular, we took the "Caveats"
above to our hearts before proceeding. So, please put such issues behind you while reviewing our
work. Thanks,
Regards,
Abe (2022-03-14 14:39)
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NANOG Digest, Vol 170, Issue 15
Message: 17
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