Hi,

On Aug 30, 2007, at 5:32 AM, Mark J Elkins wrote:
If we go with JPNIC's proposal - and split evenly the last 5 x /8's

JPNIC has revised their proposal.  It is now 1 x /8s.

AfriNIC will (looking at current growth) still have unused IPv4 many
years after the others have run out. This is possibly bad - perhaps we
should have less space? IPv4 address space will be like selling second
hand equipment - thats incompatible with the rest of the world.

Actually, I suspect it more likely it will be seen the Internet's equivalent of oil fields. When IPv4 is no longer available via "traditional" channels, I imagine you will begin to see folks prospecting for 'virgin address pools' that they can exploit (regardless of RIR policies regarding appropriateness of this action -- desperate people will find loopholes).

We really need to ignore the IPv4 problem and go for moving into IPv6.

The challenge is getting the rest of the world to join you. Since the majority of content and users are only available on IPv4, the migration to IPv6 requires a leap of faith. It is possible that the "best" (for some value of that variable) migration strategy will be for ISPs to provide customers with a single IPv4 address as a NAT gateway to the customer network and offer a hosting service for public facing customer applications. Ideally, the ISPs will deploy their entire infrastructure with IPv6, tunneling IPv4 through their infrastructure, thereby not needing any IPv4 addresses for that infrastructure. Unfortunately (as I understand it), network management software, customer provisioning tools, etc. that run over IPv6 aren't quite there yet.

We really have enough IPv4 already to outlast the others..

This largely depends on projected consumption rates...

Regards,
-drc

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