Below, in-line.

Saludos,
Jordi

-----Mensaje original-----
De: address-policy-wg <[email protected]> en nombre de Sander 
Steffann <[email protected]>
Fecha: lunes, 15 de enero de 2018, 17:37
Para: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <[email protected]>
CC: <[email protected]>
Asunto: Re: [address-policy-wg] 2016-04 To Last Call (IPv6 Sub-assignment 
Clarification)

    Hi,
    
    > My reading of PDP 2.4 is [..]
    
    Please stop being a lawyer. I have told you how we do things in this 
working group. Please listen to what the chairs are telling you.
    
    > My reason to re-raise those now, is because they become evident when you 
compare the proposed 2.6 change with the policy proposal arguments AND 
specially the impact analysis, contradictions which for some reason, I didn’t 
discover before (so disagree with you, those points aren’t the same I raised 
before, may be similar, but the reason now is the contradictory text), and this 
seems to be in the scope of PDP 2.4.
    
    I think you are mis-interpreting the policy proposal. I see no such 
contradiction.
    
    > The author of the proposal and the NCC could confirm their intent:
    > 1) Is the proposal looking for disallowing a /64 ? If so, then the impact 
analysis is broken and NCC is looking to implement something different than 
what the proposal is asking for.
    
    The policy is explicitly not mentioning prefix lengths but clarifying 
intentions. Delegating a prefix is still not allowed. The NCC explains in the 
impact analysis that having only a single device/user/etc on a subnet (i.e. 
RFC8273) is treated the same as having multiple users on a subnet: both are not 
considered assignments and are therefore permitted.

[Jordi] I think we are in-sync, but your response clearly demonstrates that 
there is a need for clarifying the text.
-> Policy proposal “Providing another entity with separate addresses (not 
prefixes)”
-> a /64 is a prefix

    
    > 2) The proposal clearly is NOT intended for “permanent” broadband 
services, but his is NOT stated in the proposed text change. I doubt that the 
NCC can enforce a policy that don’t have that stated in the policy text. Can 
the NCC confirm that?
    
    The proposal adds a one-paragraph extension to the existing policy to allow 
connecting devices to a network: "Providing another entity with separate 
addresses (not prefixes) from a subnet used on a link operated by the 
assignment holder is not considered a sub-assignment. [...and some 
examples...]". There are more use-cases than you and I can think of, and trying 
to enumerate which ones are allowed and which ones aren't is bad 
overengineering. This has been discussed before. And these days it's not viable 
to provision broadband customers without delegating (DHCPv6-PD) address space 
to them anyway.

[Jordi] Again, we are in-sync, but I don’t agree that DHCPv6-PD is the only 
way, and the actual proposal text doesn’t state it, even if the argument of the 
proposal explain it. Can the NCC confirm if they apply the policy text or the 
“arguments” of the policy proposal? I think it is the policy text, so we are 
missing something.
    
    > 3) I also believe that the policy isn’t pretending to be used in data 
centers. Can this be clarified?
    
    Where did you get that idea? "connecting a server or appliance to an 
assignment holder's network" is one of the explicit examples of what is allowed.

[Jordi] I fully understand that text, but still think that is not the same if I 
run a host/server in a hotspot, with many VMs, using RFC8273 or DHCPv6-PD or a 
manual or proprietary mechanisms, which I fully understand within the intent of 
the policy (and I agree), vs running a complete data center (which typically is 
using non-temporary addresses/prefixes). Again, I think it may be clear in the 
argument of the proposal, but not in the policy text. Which one is used by NCC 
to evaluate a request?
    
    > Regarding a possible appeal. The procedure talks about “unless there are 
exceptional extenuating circumstances”.
    > 
    > I think it is the case for an impact analysis contradicting the proposal.
    
    I think you are reading more into this proposal that what is actually 
there, and based on that have misinterpreted it.
    
    > Is up the chairs to decide that, of course and I understand that you may 
need to wait until the end of the last call to decide on that (this is the 
reason why I understand that the appeal doesn’t make sense now, unless you have 
already taken a decision).
    
    You're misunderstanding what we are suggesting you appeal to. We're 
suggesting you appeal the decision that there was consensus at the end of the 
review phase and that the proposal was ready to go to last-call. If you don't 
agree with that decision then you can appeal it.
    
    At the end of last-call there will be another decision about whether we 
have consensus or not, based on the feedback received during last-call. That 
decision has (of course) not been made yet, but as I said in my previous email 
I so far haven't seen any reasons that block that consensus *yet*. We'll have 
to wait for the end of last-call to make a final judgement :)

[Jordi] Believe me, I’m not interested in appealing, I’m interested in reaching 
consensus on a text that is coherent. My reading of the actual situation is 
that even if it may look that we have consensus, when you re-read everything 
and put it together towards implementing the policy, it doesn’t work. The text 
is not concrete enough so to be enforced in the evaluation (again, unless the 
NCC read the arguments and not the policy text).
    
    > If you believe is not the case, then, please let me know how to send the 
appeal to the “Working Group Chairs Collective (WGCC)”, I guess there is a 
mailing list for that?
    
    Sure: RIPE WG Chairs <[email protected]>
    
    Cheers,
    Sander
    
    
    



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