On Wed, Nov 17, 2021 at 07:45:31AM -0800, Ross Vandegrift wrote: > > We like to do a global change to the way the network is setup on the new > > AWS accounts. The goal is to reduce the amount of global IPv4 addresses > > to a minimum, as those are an increasingly rare comodity nowadays. > > Thanks for your work operating these environments. It's much > appreciated! I want to clarify one detail - you've decided to stop > offering globally routable IPv4 addresses in the AWS environments that > you manage. Since you are the one managing these accounts, that is well > within your rights. > > But it isn't a policy the team has adopted. I don't see any problem > with your choice, but please don't position it as the team's official > stance.
Well, it wasn't quite unilateral. I agreed when Bastian proposed the idea on IRC. However, based on the responses, it is evident that this change will cause sufficient problems for enough people that we should reconsider its timing. To be clear, there is absolutely no pressure from AWS or any other entity to reduce our IPv4 footprint. This change is desirable in that it simplifies how our instances connect to the internet, making it easier to reason about their exposure, etc, but if we need to continue to manage direct IPv4 connectivity, we can do that. Rather than postponing this change indefinitely, what about delaying it until June 2022 (chosen arbitrarily). This gives more time for people to come to terms with the changes and make plans to adjust accordingly. noah
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