nanog mailing list archives
Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?]
From: "Stephen Sprunk" <stephen () sprunk org>
Date: Thu, 25 Nov 2004 14:16:29 -0600
Thus spake "Iljitsch van Beijnum" <iljitsch () muada com>
On 21-nov-04, at 20:12, Stephen Sprunk wrote:The point is, that these days applications such as mail and web are sufficiently heavy that you can't even run them cost effectively over dial up (wasting your employee's time costs more than the fatter line) let alone less.That assumes the company wants their employees using web or email, or that there are even humans at a site to begin with.No it doesn't, but if this is not the case, then this clause kicks in:if you don't connect to the internet you don't contribute to the global routing table so there is no issue. :-)
There is an issue of uniqueness. Those hosts that can't reach the Internet typically can talk to other hosts that can, and even multiple private networks often link to each other. At a minimum, statistical uniqueness is necessary to avoid collisions between business partners even on a totally disconnected network. ULAs do not contribute to the global routing table unless ISPs allow them to in violation of the draft's wording and intent. The WG welcomes input on how to prevent this from occurring without invoking restraint of trade concerns.
No, that's not what I'm interested in. What I'd like to know is how many big organizations backhaul their internet traffic to one or a few central sites, and how many connect to one or more ISPs locally at different sites.
I personally know of several dozen, and based on information I can't disclose, I'd say that at least half if not two thirds of the Fortune 1000 backhaul their Internet traffic -- many of them via IPsec VPNs over the Internet. S Stephen Sprunk "Stupid people surround themselves with smart CCIE #3723 people. Smart people surround themselves with K5SSS smart people who disagree with them." --Aaron Sorkin
Current thread:
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?], (continued)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Jeroen Massar (Nov 19)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Kurt Erik Lindqvist (Nov 21)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Stephen Sprunk (Nov 19)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Iljitsch van Beijnum (Nov 20)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] bmanning (Nov 20)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Stephen Sprunk (Nov 20)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Iljitsch van Beijnum (Nov 21)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Stephen Sprunk (Nov 21)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Iljitsch van Beijnum (Nov 22)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Owen DeLong (Nov 22)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Stephen Sprunk (Nov 25)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] bmanning (Nov 26)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Iljitsch van Beijnum (Nov 27)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Owen DeLong (Nov 27)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Nils Ketelsen (Nov 22)
- Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?] Nils Ketelsen (Nov 22)
- Frame-Relay reliability (was Re: who gets a /32) Sean Donelan (Nov 22)
- Re: Frame-Relay reliability (was Re: who gets a /32) Christopher L. Morrow (Nov 22)
- Message not available
- Re: Frame-Relay reliability (was Re: who gets a /32) Christopher L. Morrow (Nov 23)
- large multi-site enterprises and PI prefix [Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?]] Pekka Savola (Nov 21)
- Re: large multi-site enterprises and PI prefix [Re: who gets a /32 [Re: IPV6 renumbering painless?]] bmanning (Nov 21)
