Hi Peter,

/48 is already in a nibble boundary, so no chance :-)

Despite that, initially I'm considering only the policy for IPv6 PA (LIRs/ISPs).

If the inputs provide a view that this should be the same for IPv6 PI, I've no 
issue in do that one as well, so in that case if you have previously justified, 
for example, a /47, you should automatically be able to get the /44.

However, if we believe that both should be proposed (nibble boundary for IPv6 
PA and nibble boundary for IPv6 PI) I think it will be better decoupled in 
separate policy proposals, to facilitate the discussion and possible consensus, 
and again no problem from my side to work on both.

Regards,
Jordi
 
 

-----Mensaje original-----
De: address-policy-wg <[email protected]> en nombre de Peter 
Hessler <[email protected]>
Fecha: miércoles, 2 de mayo de 2018, 7:45
Para: <[email protected]>
Asunto: Re: [address-policy-wg] inputs on possible policy proposal for IPv6

    On 2018 May 02 (Wed) at 07:25:12 -0500 (-0500), JORDI PALET MARTINEZ via 
address-policy-wg wrote:
    :Hi all,
    :
    :As you probably know, ARIN amended some time ago their IPv6 policy 
proposal in order to make sure that the allocations to LIRs are aligned to the 
nibble boundary.
    :
    :In the context of another discussion in AfriNIC, Owen DeLong, suggested 
that we could do something similar.
    :
    :I'm considering submitting a policy proposal in each RIR (RIPE, AfriNIC, 
LACNIC, APNIC), for that, but I will like to get some inputs before, and 
"sense" the feeling about that of the participants.
    :
    :Note that in the case of RIPE, we have a big difference with the other 
RIRs, because all them start with /32, while we updated our policy several 
years ago (because 6rd deployment), to allocated /29. This means that if we go 
for this policy, it will be justified to "upgrade" all the /29 allocations to a 
/28.
    :
    
    Using this justification, would that also grow all IPv6 PI /48s to a /44,
    or only those that are not already at a nibble boundary?
    
    
    :This is the example that Owen sent to the AfriNIC list:
    :
    :1. Figure out the number of end sites you expect to serve in your largest 
aggregation point
    :   in 3-5 years.
    :2. Round that to a nibble boundary (with a 25% minimum free space) (1-12 
end sites = 4 bits,
    :   13-192 end sites = 8 bits. 193-3,072 end sites = 12 bits, 3,073-49,152 
end sites = 16 bits,
    :   49,153-786,432 = 20 bits, etc.)… Call this E.
    :3. Figure out the number of aggregation points you expect to have in 3-5 
years. Round that up
    :   to a nibble boundary with a 25% minimum free space (same as in step 2). 
Call this A.
    :4. 48-(A+E) = prefix size.
    :
    :   Example: An ISP has 42,000 customers in it’s largest end site. It has 
128 end sites.
    :           E = 16, A = 8, 48-(16+8) = 48-(24) = 24, this ISP should get a 
/24.
    :
    :So, would you agree in doing something on this line?
    :
    :Thanks in advance for any inputs!
    :
    :Regards,
    :Jordi
    : 
    : 
    :
    :
    :
    :**********************************************
    :IPv4 is over
    :Are you ready for the new Internet ?
    :http://www.consulintel.es
    :The IPv6 Company
    
    
    -- 
    Broad-mindedness, n.:
        The result of flattening high-mindedness out.
    
    



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