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PP - 2011-02 Removal of multihomed requirement for IPv6. Presenter : Erik Bais – ebais @a2b-internet.com. Policy proposal info. Authors – Erik Bais & Jordi Palet Current status : Open for Discussion Phase end : 13 May 2011 Impact on : RIPE - 512. 2011 – 02 Policy proposal .
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PP - 2011-02 Removal of multihomed requirement for IPv6 • Presenter : • Erik Bais – ebais @a2b-internet.com
Policy proposal info • Authors – Erik Bais & Jordi Palet • Current status : Open for Discussion • Phase end : 13 May 2011 • Impact on : RIPE - 512
2011 – 02 Policy proposal • In short : Removal of the multi-home requirement for IPv6 PI in policy RIPE – 512 • Current policy text : • 8. IPv6 Provider Independent (PI) Assignments • To qualify for IPv6 PI address space, an organisation must: • a) demonstrate that it will be multihomed • b) meet the requirements of the policies described in the RIPE NCC document entitled “Contractual Requirements for Provider Independent Resources Holders in the RIPE NCC Service Region”.
Proposed new policy text • Remove point 8: a from the policy. • Let’s keep things simple ..
Why this proposal change ? • Currently there is a discrimination between PA IPv6 and PI IPv6. • As a LIR, you can get a PA IPv6 prefix, without any requirements. • As an end-customer, you can only request a IPv6 PI prefix if you plan for multi-homing.
Current policy is LIR biased • If you pay your way into the community (become a LIR), you are not required to multi-home. • There are plenty of LIR’s that don’t multi-home. • If an end-customer wants an IPv6 PI, they could get a cheap (PI) prefix, but have to start multi-homing.
Where did it come from ? • Limiting IPv6 to PA or PI with multihoming, probably because of fear for v6 DFZ explosion. • However … if you pay to become a LIR, we (the community) don’t care about the DFZ. • So it’s not a technical issue, it is a financial question…
Why not become a LIR? • There are plenty of reasons why a company doesn’t want to sign-up as a LIR. • Strategic reasons • They don’t require to allocate addresses to other entities. • They don’t see themselves as an ISP. • But they still require their own IP space, even if they don’t require / need multihoming.
Why is multi-homing for EC’s not always good? • Multi-homing (BGP) is not for the faint-hearted. • A multi-homing is not cheap. You require : • Expensive equipment • Multiple transits (with a traffic commitment) • Engineers that understand IP/IPv6 & BGP setups. • BGP is setup based on trust and mistakes are quite common …
Why is this not helpful ? • The current PI IPv6 multihoming requirement is not improving the # of IPv6 deployments.
What do you think ? • In order to get your feedback on the topic : • Send your comments to<address-policy-wg@ripe.net> before 13 May 2011. • This could be as simple as : • I support the policy.