> On 18 Dec 2018, at 22:30, Joel Halpern <j...@joelhalpern.com> wrote:
> 
> History of non-contiguous network masks, as I observed it. [snip]
> 
> When we were done, other folks looked at the work (I don't know if the 
> Internet Drafts are still in repositories, but they shoudl be.)  And 
> concluded that while this would work, no network operations staff would ever 
> be able to do it correctly.  So as a community we decided not to go down that 
> path.

In the late 1990s I was doing web server things at Demon Internet. Our 
“Homepages” service provided an IP-based virtual host for each customer (it 
predated widespread support for HTTP Host: headers), and by the time I joined 
the service had two /18s and a /16 of web sites (if my memory is correct). We 
were allocating addresses to customers sequentially, so the /18s were full and 
the /16 was in progress.

We had a small number of front-end Squid reverse proxy caches which owned all 
the IP addresses, using a BSD kernel hack (which I worked on to get published 
but it never got committed upstream 
https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=12071)

The problem was that the entirely static load spreading relied on the routing 
config upstream from the reverse proxies, and IIRC it just divided the space 
into /18s and allocated them to proxies. So the load allocation was very uneven.

I thought up a cunning hack, to divide the /16 by using a non-contiguous 
netmask of 0xffff0003 instead of 0xffffc000, so that successive customers would 
be allocated to front ends 0,1,2,3 cyclically. Fun :-)

But I observed that one of my colleagues had a CIDR chart stuck on the side of 
his monitor, and that all the documentation in this area warned of dragons and 
bugs, and I realised that it would be unwise to do more than try it out 
experimentally :-)

Tony.
-- 
f.anthony.n.finch  <d...@dotat.at>  http://dotat.at

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