[sig-policy] report on prop-057: Proposal to change IPv6 initial allocat
Below is a summary of discussion on the proposal to date. We
encourage you to continue discussion on the mailing list before
APNIC 25.
Discussion statistics
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Posted to Policy SIG mailing list: 25 January 2008
Number of posts: 40
Number of people participating in discussions: 13
Economy of origin of participants: 4 from Australia
1 from Hong Kong
3 from Japan
1 from Nepal
2 from New Zealand
2 from outside AP
Summary of discussion to date
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- A plan is different to a commitment.
- Many LIRs in Japan have not applied for an IPv6 initial
allocation because they feel that a plan is a commitment
that must be met.
- The plan for 200 assignments has not been raised as a problem
in APNIC surveys. No LIR has been denied an initial IPv6
allocation purely because they did not have a plan for 200
assignments.
- Given the linguistic diversity in the region, it would be good
to clarify the words used to describe the initial allocation
criteria.
- A problem with the current IPv6 multihoming policy is that many
networks filter out prefixes smaller than a /35. This proposal
could fix that.
- Perhaps suggest a change to the multihoming assignment
policy rather than using this allocation policy process.
- The obstacles to IPv6 deployment are the difficulty of actually
deploying it and the lack of user demand.
- Is it possible that organisations that are not established
LIRs with RIR/NIR allocations will say this proposal
discriminates against them?
- IPv6 allocations within the APNIC region continue to grow,
which could suggest that the barrier to allocation is
negligible.
- Actual BGP announcement of IPv6 allocations has not grown,
which suggests that LIRs are not using the space after
receiving it. IPv6 needs to be made usable for the LIR's
customers.
- Perhaps remove the proposal's requirement to be an existing
LIR with RIR/NIR allocations and allow any LIR with a
plan for IPv6 assignments or sub-allocations to receive an
initial IPv6 allocation.
- It is possible that if the proposal was implemented, any
organisation that asks for an initial IPv6 allocation will
qualify?
- Maybe IPv6 initial allocation criteria should mirror the IPv4
initial allocation criteria .
- Maybe a criteria based on a scale, such as the HD-ratio,
could be used by LIRs to justify an initial IPv6
allocation.
- Proposal authors suggest amended alternative criteria:
- Be an existing LIR with IPv4 allocations from an RIR/NIR
AND have a plan for making assignments and/or sub-
allocations to other organizations within two years.
The LIR should also plan to announce the allocation as a
single aggregated block in the inter-domain routing
system within two years.
Full details of the proposal can be found at:
http://www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-057-v001.html