I'd suggest adding the condition at the start of the second sentence to
be sure it is read correctly:

   "If r is non-zero but only a part ..."

The other thing bothering me about that sentence is that it is talking about provisioning of the Rule IPv4 index in isolation, when it is actually part of the BMR. Why not simply say, for the complete sentence:

"If r is non-zero but only a part of the IPv4 address/prefix is encoded in the EA bits, the missing initial portion is provided by the Rule IPv4 prefix from the BMR."

On 09/04/2013 6:52 AM, Ole Troan wrote:
Tom,

In the previous note, I meant the BMR used as FMR, to be technical.
But here's another point from the same section:

The length of r MAY be zero, in which case the complete IPv4
address or prefix is encoded in the EA bits.  If only a part of the
IPv4 address/prefix is encoded in the EA bits, the Rule IPv4 prefix
is provisioned to the CE by other means (e.g.  a DHCPv6 option).

Question: does that second sentence also assume r = 0? If so, I
think you've moved beyond what makes sense to document as part of
MAP-E. Given that you have the MAP-E BMR mechanism, why wouldn't
you use it?

no, the second sentence assumes r > 0. "If only a part of the IPv4
address is encoded...", implies that the other part comes via the
BMR.

cheers, Ole

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