Am 03.06.2014 09:40, schrieb Ray Hunter:
Steven Barth <mailto:[email protected]>
3 June 2014 09:15

Well maybe it was worded a bit ambiguously. The main idea behind this was that an HNCP router should provide "basic connectivity" in the form of DHCPv4 and DHCPv6-PD to non-HNCP-routers. 7084 routers should not do anything fancy and just work as legacy devices believing the homenet is their ISP.

This should not mean you should be able to "tunnel" through 7084 routers or so.

Does that sound sane? And maybe what would be a better wording for this idea?

It is a sane idea, and I applaud any manufacturer that can prevent that a lot of 7084 routers are destined for the landfill sooner than they should be.
I guess this would not only apply to 7084 routers but "current IPv6-capable homerouters" in general in the end.


But it's still a can of worms and you should think very carefully whether you want this as a SHOULD in HNCP. I humbly suggest MAY at most.
I guess I'm fine with that.


e.g. What about the topology:

Homenet router ----- Homenet Router
    |                    |
    |                    |
L2 switch e.g. Powerline Ethernet
          |
          |
     7084 router

Which Homenet router acts as the Service Provider Router of 7084?
The behavior is essentially the same as with clients right now. One homenet router per link is elected as DHCP / DHCPv6-server. The only addition here is that this elected router now acts as PD-server as well.


That's even before considering the question, what do you do when the 7084 router is inserted between two Homenet routers?
This should be same as the current situation: If you are lucky that 7084 router gives you PD then you have essentially two separate homenets, if not that homenet router behind the legacy one gets no (IPv6)-connectivity and probably nasty IPv4 double-NATs. There is not much you can do though except teach that router to speak homenet.



In fairness I should declare that I was extremely skeptical about publishing 7084, and whether it would be harmful for Homenet.

Well I guess it doesn't really do much in favor of homenet by proclaiming: there is only the ISP on one side and clients on the other side you need to care about. Well at least it defines some sane requirements (and some less sane ones) regarding these 2 issues.

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