draft-rja-ilnp-intro-03, Section 1, Page 4, says in part:
% The high-order 64-bits of the IPv6 address become the Locator.
% The Locator indicates the subnetwork point of attachment for
% a node.  In essence, the Locator names a subnetwork.  Locators
% are also known as Routing Prefixes.

Yes, this was all that I had found before asking my question. Now Tony tells 
me, it is simply the IPv6 address space.


What is here any better/different from LISP-2 ?


I am confused. This sounds like Karl Valentin. Though the left spotlight (IPv4) 
on a stage was down, he tried to repair the right one (IPv6).


Heiner





-----Ursprüngliche Mitteilung----- 
Von: RJ Atkinson <[email protected]>
An: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]
Verschickt: Di., 15. Jun. 2010, 23:28
Thema: Re: [rrg] ILNP Identfiers



On 15  Jun 2010, at 16:57 , [email protected] wrote:
> can you tell me where you describe the value space of your locators?
> I have no idea at all what routable and allegeably also hierarchically 
structured value space ILNP is using.

I don't understand what you mean by a "value space".


So I'm not sure exactly what is being asked.
Since I don't understand the question, I am not sure 
whether I am pointing at the right place, but here is 
an attempt:


draft-rja-ilnp-intro-03, Section 1, Page 4, says in part:
% The high-order 64-bits of the IPv6 address become the Locator.
% The Locator indicates the subnetwork point of attachment for
% a node.  In essence, the Locator names a subnetwork.  Locators
% are also known as Routing Prefixes.

Yours,

Ran


 
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