Dear Owen:

1) "... Africa ... They don’t really have a lot of alternatives. ...": Actually, there is, simple and in plain sight. Please have a look at the below IETF Draft:

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-chen-ati-adaptive-ipv4-address-space

2)  If this looks a bit too technical due to the nature of such a document, there is a distilled version that provides a bird-eye's view of the solution:

https://www.avinta.com/phoenix-1/home/RevampTheInternet.pdf

3)  All of the above can start from making use of the 240/4 netblock as a reusable (by region / country) unicast IP address resources that could be accomplished by as simple as commenting out one line of the existing network router program code. I will be glad to go into the specifics if you can bring their attention to this almost mystic topic.

Regards,


Abe (2022-11-19 22:50 EST)


On 2022-11-18 18:20, Owen DeLong via NANOG wrote:

On Nov 18, 2022, at 03:44, Joe Maimon <jmai...@jmaimon.com> wrote:



Mark Tinka wrote:

On 11/17/22 19:55, Joe Maimon wrote:

You could instead use a /31.
We could, but many of our DIA customers have all manner of CPE's that may or 
may not support this. Having unique designs per customer does not scale well.
its almost 2023. /31 support is easily mandatory. You should make it mandatory.
Much of Africa in 2023 runs on what the US put into the resale market in the 
late 1990s, tragically.

Its 2023, your folk should be able to handle addressing more advanced than from 
the 90s. And your betting the future on IPv6?
They don’t really have a lot of alternatives.

To be honest, we'll keep using IPv4 for as long as we have it, and for as long 
as we can get it from AFRINIC. But it's not where we are betting the farm - 
that is for IPv6.
And yet you wonder why I consider AFRINIC’s artificial extension of the free 
pool through draconian austerity measures to be a global problem?

Its on Afrinic to try and preserve their pool if they wish to by doing things 
such as getting it across that progress in addressing efficiency is an 
important consideration in fulfilling requests for additional resources.
Instead of this, they’re mostly ignoring policy, implementing draconian 
restrictions on people getting space from the free pool, and buying into 
various forms of reality avoidance.

But see the crux above. If your RiR isnt frowning on such behavior then its 
poor strategy to implement it.
So far, AFRINIC has given a complete pass to Tinka’s organization and their 
documented excessive unused address space despite policy that prohibits them 
from doing so. However, AFRINIC management and board seem to have extreme 
difficulty with reading their governing documents in anything resembling a 
logical interpretation.

Owen



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