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[ipv6-wg] Re: Re: [address-policy-wg] Re: Andre's guide to fix IPv6
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Per Heldal
heldal at eml.cc
Thu Dec 1 11:37:20 CET 2005
On Thu, 1 Dec 2005 09:11:48 +0100, "Kurt Erik Lindqvist" <kurtis at kurtis.pp.se> said: > > On 30 nov 2005, at 17.16, Daniel Roesen wrote: > > > ISPs do exist for customers, not customers do exist to feed ISPs > > in the > > most convenient way for the ISPs. Some folks seem to forget that, > > looking at all the discussion trying to ignore the demand for real > > multihoming (and that includes TE and network-wide routing policy > > implementation, neither being delivered by things like shim6). > > I think you are contradicting yourself here. Shim6 does give the end- s/does/may ? ;) > user TE capability. It does not give the ISP the possibility to > ignore it, as they could today. Shim6 is work in progress and may be used as an argument to adjust adress-assignment policies sometime in the future. If we want ipv6 deployed today we have to provide a mechanism to support requirements about redundancy and independence from individual providers. > I am not sure what you mean with > "network-wide routing policy implementation".... I guess this relates to supporting infrastructure necessary for shim6 to support or replace current ipv4 technology like load-balancing, filtering etc. If standards are defined today and everyone agree to implement them asap it will still take years before such products are available and a commercially viable alternative. Shim6 has a potential to provide improved "granularity" in traffic management (individual path-selection for each source-destination HBA-pair) but that is irrelevant until the technology is actually there. Bottom line: it's fine to develop technology for the future, but operational procedures and policies must be supported by current technology. //per -- Per Heldal heldal at eml.cc
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