> From: ietf-boun...@ietf.org [mailto:ietf-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of
> Noel Chiappa
> Sent: Wednesday, November 21, 2012 8:49 AM
> To: ietf@ietf.org; l...@ietf.org
> Cc: j...@mercury.lcs.mit.edu; jcur...@arin.net; pwil...@apnic.net;
> i...@ietf.org
> Subject: Re: [lisp] Last Call: <draft-ietf-lisp-eid-block-03.txt> (LISP
> EID Block) to Informational RFC
>
> The concept, as I understand it, is that there will be no migration "out
> of [that] allocation", for the simple reason that the entire rationale
> of this range of namespace is that it will be processed differently,
> i.e. require special casing in the code in various places; something
> like:
>
>       if ((dest & EIDSPACEMASK) == EIDSPACEALLOCATION)
>               process_one_way();
>         else
>               process_another_way();
>
> That being the case, the last thing one would want is either i) changing
> the block that is handled specially, or ii) having a number of smaller
> blocks, allocated over time, as either one would require much more
> complex code to
> handle: you'd have to have some sort of config file, which could hold
> multiple blocks, code to read it, the code to process packets (above)
> would have to be able to handle multiple blocks, yadda-yadda.
>
> (Changing the block is the same as having multiple blocks, because past
> a certain point you're too big for a flag day, which would be the only
> way to avoid having multiple blocks in use at the same time.)
>
[WEG] Then the draft needs to say some variant of the above - why it can't 
migrate, why a flag day won't work, and why it needs that size block right now 
for an experimental technology, including some justification about the size of 
the block. If the allocation justification is not going to be done within the 
RIR community, then it needs to be done here. Noel, you specifically complained 
about IETF not allowing experiments to proceed while some details are still a 
little hand-wavey [1], but you seem to want it both ways. If this is to be 
permanent space, then permanent justification and level of detail is required. 
If it's to be an experiment, then it should expect that there will be at least 
one renumber as it transitions from experiment to production. I don't think 
that expecting code to handle two blocks (the experimental one and the 
permanent one) is asking too much, nor is it expecting too much to require a 
line in the sand to ensure that the transition between experiment and 
production happens before "you're too big for a flag day".
If a single permanent allocation that never changes is truly necessary, putting 
a sunset date on the allocation from IANA seems a reasonable solution to me, 
but no one really responded to that in my last mail [2]. If the experiment is 
wildly successful and leads to a permanent deployment, then the currently 
experimental RFCs get updates written to elevate them to proposed standard, and 
while we're at it, we remove the sunset date from the IANA allocation. If the 
experiment ends up being a science project and doesn't gain wide deployment, 
this reclaims the space to prevent it from being another "Class E" space that 
is essentially stranded by an allocation that is no longer used.
>
> I suspect (I haven't communicated with them directly) that the people
> who are involved with this scheme don't really care _who_ allocates the
> space, and how
> - all they care about is that it's all in one chunk - for the reason
> laid out above.
>
[WEG] and the people who are involved in number allocation have clearly told 
"the people involved in this scheme" that they do care who allocates the space 
and how, especially if the experiment has no bounded end. I think a compromise 
is doable, but saying "it's not important right now" probably isn't going to 
make the problem go away.


Thanks,
Wes George

[1] http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ietf/current/msg75920.html
[2] http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ietf/current/msg75919.html


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