> On Jul 10, 2015, at 00:59 , Joe Maimon <jmai...@ttec.com> wrote:
> 
> There has been tomes on this topic. There will continue to be many more.
> 
> That is because many of you continue in trying to defend the following 
> concept.
> 
> customer subnet bits  ==  isp customers bits
> 
> So now, the ISP is supposed to put some effort and gain more bits. Why not 
> the customer?
> 
> Its inherently suspicious. Because its inherently wrong - for the ISP, and 
> possibly for the address space as well.
> 
> Indulge me as I wax poetic.
> 
> I venture to say that proponents want to see everyone else have the service 
> of their own dreams. When broadband rolled to the masses with a single ipv4 
> address per subscriber, forget about routing, their hearts broke. The new 
> common denominator was a far cry from what their experience was. The division 
> of internet into different classes of netizens a bitter pill to swallow. You 
> are only one budget cut away from joining the ho-poloi. Its quite scary.
> 
> Hence the determination that no user should ever have to go without enough 
> addresses ever again. A new common denominator, now is the time to get it 
> accepted!
> 
> It will be like the old days, a class C with every leased line! Forever!

I will concur with most of this.

> 
> And the ISPs?
> 
> They have enough to get started and they can get more if they put the effort 
> in.

Actually, as has been pointed out earlier by me and Valdis at least, they can 
get enough to last a good long time up front if they just do a little bit of 
napkin math before submitting their request.

Here’s how it works:

JimBob’s ISP and Bait shop serves their customers from 25 distinct wiring 
centers. They expect to deploy another 50 wiring centers over the next 5 years.

Their largest wiring center supports 5,000,000 customers.

Representing 5,000,000 requires 23 bits. Rounded up to a multiple of 4 becomes 
24 bits. At 24 bits, 5,000,000 is < 75% of the available /48s. So 24 bits is a 
good number.

Representing 75 wiring centers requires another 6 bits. Rounded up to a 
multiple of 4 becomes 8 bits. At 8 bits, 75 is < 75% of the 256 available 
numbers, so 8 is a good number.

24 + 8 is 32.

48 - 32 is 16.

JimBob’s ISP can apply to ARIN for a /16.

Other RIRs are a little different, but still usually not terribly hard to get a 
large allocation if it can be even remotely justified.


> So all the rational and logical debate is pointless. Gut feelings, philosophy 
> and emotions are what is at stake and those tend not to respond well to 
> things like logic and reason.

Perhaps. Unfortunately, I think it is more the long-prefix crowd that is going 
on gut feelings. Unless you can show me how there’s harm to the ISPs from /48s 
per end site, or any other logic to support the need to retain the concept of 
second-class netizens, then I think logic is on the side of a more egalitarian 
internet.

Owen

Reply via email to