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- Network Working Group Y. Rekhter
- Request for Comments: 1887 cisco Systems
- Category: Informational T. Li
- cisco Systems
- Editors
- December 1995
-
-
- An Architecture for IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation
-
-
-
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This document provides information for the Internet community. This
- memo does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution
- of this memo is unlimited.
-
-
- Abstract
-
-
- This document provides an architecture for allocating IPv6 [1]
- unicast addresses in the Internet. The overall IPv6 addressing
- architecture is defined in [2]. This document does not go into the
- details of an addressing plan.
-
-
- 1. Scope
-
-
- The global internet can be modeled as a collection of hosts
- interconnected via transmission and switching facilities. Control
- over the collection of hosts and the transmission and switching
- facilities that compose the networking resources of the global
- internet is not homogeneous, but is distributed among multiple
- administrative authorities. Resources under control of a single
- administration within a contiguous segment of network topology form a
- domain. For the rest of this paper, `domain' and `routing domain'
- will be used interchangeably.
-
- Domains that share their resources with other domains are called
- network service providers (or just providers). Domains that utilize
- other domain's resources are called network service subscribers (or
- just subscribers). A given domain may act as a provider and a
- subscriber simultaneously.
-
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- There are two aspects of interest when discussing IPv6 unicast
- address allocation within the Internet. The first is the set of
- administrative requirements for obtaining and allocating IPv6
- addresses; the second is the technical aspect of such assignments,
- having largely to do with routing, both within a routing domain
- (intra-domain routing) and between routing domains (inter-domain
- routing). This paper focuses on the technical issues.
-
- In the current Internet many routing domains (such as corporate and
- campus networks) attach to transit networks (such as regionals) in
- only one or a small number of carefully controlled access points.
- The former act as subscribers, while the latter act as providers.
-
- Addressing solutions which require substantial changes or constraints
- on the current topology are not considered.
-
- The architecture and recommendations in this paper are oriented
- primarily toward the large-scale division of IPv6 address allocation
- in the Internet. Topics covered include:
-
- - Benefits of encoding some topological information in IPv6
- addresses to significantly reduce routing protocol overhead;
-
- - The anticipated need for additional levels of hierarchy in
- Internet addressing to support network growth;
-
- - The recommended mapping between Internet topological entities
- (i.e., service providers, and service subscribers) and IPv6
- addressing and routing components;
-
- - The recommended division of IPv6 address assignment among
- service providers (e.g., backbones, regionals), and service
- subscribers (e.g., sites);
-
- - Allocation of the IPv6 addresses by the Internet Registry;
-
- - Choice of the high-order portion of the IPv6 addresses in leaf
- routing domains that are connected to more than one service
- provider (e.g., backbone or a regional network).
-
- It is noted that there are other aspects of IPv6 address allocation,
- both technical and administrative, that are not covered in this
- paper. Topics not covered or mentioned only superficially include:
-
- - A specific plan for address assignment;
-
- - Embedding address spaces from other network layer protocols
- (including IPv4) in the IPv6 address space and the addressing
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 2]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- architecture for such embedded addresses;
-
- - Multicast addressing;
-
- - Address allocation for mobile hosts;
-
- - Identification of specific administrative domains in the
- Internet;
-
- - Policy or mechanisms for making registered information known to
- third parties (such as the entity to which a specific IPv6
- address or a potion of the IPv6 address space has been
- allocated);
-
- - How a routing domain (especially a site) should organize its
- internal topology or allocate portions of its IPv6 address
- space; the relationship between topology and addresses is
- discussed, but the method of deciding on a particular topology
- or internal addressing plan is not; and,
-
- - Procedures for assigning host IPv6 addresses.
-
-
- 2. Background
-
-
- Some background information is provided in this section that is
- helpful in understanding the issues involved in IPv6 address
- allocation. A brief discussion of IPv6 routing is provided.
-
- IPv6 partitions the routing problem into three parts:
-
- - Routing exchanges between end systems and routers,
-
- - Routing exchanges between routers in the same routing domain,
- and,
-
- - Routing among routing domains.
-
-
- 3. IPv6 Addresses and Routing
-
-
- For the purposes of this paper, an IPv6 address prefix is defined as
- an IPv6 address and some indication of the leftmost contiguous
- significant bits within this address portion. Throughout this paper
- IPv6 address prefixes will be represented as X/Y, where X is a prefix
- of an IPv6 address in length greater than or equal to that specified
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 3]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- by Y and Y is the (decimal) number of the leftmost contiguous
- significant bits within this address. In the notation, X, the prefix
- of an IPv6 address [2] will have trailing insignificant digits
- removed. Thus, an IPv6 prefix might appear to be 43DC:0A21:76/40.
-
- When determining an administrative policy for IPv6 address
- assignment, it is important to understand the technical consequences.
- The objective behind the use of hierarchical routing is to achieve
- some level of routing data abstraction, or summarization, to reduce
- the cpu, memory, and transmission bandwidth consumed in support of
- routing.
-
- While the notion of routing data abstraction may be applied to
- various types of routing information, this paper focuses on one
- particular type, namely reachability information. Reachability
- information describes the set of reachable destinations. Abstraction
- of reachability information dictates that IPv6 addresses be assigned
- according to topological routing structures. However in practice
- administrative assignment falls along organizational or political
- boundaries. These may not be congruent to topological boundaries and
- therefore the requirements of the two may collide. It is necessary to
- find a balance between these two needs.
-
- Reachability information abstraction occurs at the boundary between
- hierarchically arranged topological routing structures. An element
- lower in the hierarchy reports summary reachability information to
- its parent(s).
-
- At routing domain boundaries, IPv6 address information is exchanged
- (statically or dynamically) with other routing domains. If IPv6
- addresses within a routing domain are all drawn from non-contiguous
- IPv6 address spaces (allowing no abstraction), then the address
- information exchanged at the boundary consists of an enumerated list
- of all the IPv6 addresses.
-
- Alternatively, should the routing domain draw IPv6 addresses for all
- the hosts within the domain from a single IPv6 address prefix,
- boundary routing information can be summarized into the single IPv6
- address prefix. This permits substantial data reduction and allows
- better scaling (as compared to the uncoordinated addressing discussed
- in the previous paragraph).
-
- If routing domains are interconnected in a more-or-less random (i.e.,
- non-hierarchical) scheme, it is quite likely that no further
- abstraction of routing data can occur. Since routing domains would
- have no defined hierarchical relationship, administrators would not
- be able to assign IPv6 addresses within the domains out of some
- common prefix for the purpose of data abstraction. The result would
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 4]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- be flat inter-domain routing; all routing domains would need explicit
- knowledge of all other routing domains that they route to. This can
- work well in small and medium sized internets. However, this does
- not scale to very large internets. For example, we expect IPv6 to
- grow to hundreds of thousands of routing domains in North America
- alone. This requires a greater degree of the reachability
- information abstraction beyond that which can be achieved at the
- `routing domain' level.
-
- In the Internet, it should be possible to significantly constrain the
- volume and the complexity of routing information by taking advantage
- of the existing hierarchical interconnectivity. This is discussed
- further in Section 5. Thus, there is the opportunity for a group of
- routing domains each to be assigned an address prefix from a shorter
- prefix assigned to another routing domain whose function is to
- interconnect the group of routing domains. Each member of the group
- of routing domains now has its (somewhat longer) prefix, from which
- it assigns its addresses.
-
- The most straightforward case of this occurs when there is a set of
- routing domains which are all attached to a single service provider
- domain (e.g., regional network), and which use that provider for all
- external (inter-domain) traffic. A short prefix may be given to the
- provider, which then gives slightly longer prefixes (based on the
- provider's prefix) to each of the routing domains that it
- interconnects. This allows the provider, when informing other routing
- domains of the addresses that it can reach, to abstract the
- reachability information for a large number of routing domains into a
- single prefix. This approach therefore can allow a great deal of
- reduction of routing information, and thereby can greatly improve the
- scalability of inter-domain routing.
-
- Clearly, this approach is recursive and can be carried through
- several iterations. Routing domains at any `level' in the hierarchy
- may use their prefix as the basis for subsequent suballocations,
- assuming that the IPv6 addresses remain within the overall length and
- structure constraints.
-
- At this point, we observe that the number of nodes at each lower
- level of a hierarchy tends to grow exponentially. Thus the greatest
- gains in the reachability information abstraction (for the benefit of
- all higher levels of the hierarchy) occur when the reachability
- information aggregation occurs near the leaves of the hierarchy; the
- gains drop significantly at each higher level. Therefore, the law of
- diminishing returns suggests that at some point data abstraction
- ceases to produce significant benefits. Determination of the point
- at which data abstraction ceases to be of benefit requires a careful
- consideration of the number of routing domains that are expected to
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 5]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- occur at each level of the hierarchy (over a given period of time),
- compared to the number of routing domains and address prefixes that
- can conveniently and efficiently be handled via dynamic inter-domain
- routing protocols.
-
-
- 3.1 Efficiency versus Decentralized Control.
-
-
- If the Internet plans to support a decentralized address
- administration, then there is a balance that must be sought between
- the requirements on IPv6 addresses for efficient routing and the need
- for decentralized address administration. A coherent addressing plan
- at any level within the Internet must take the alternatives into
- careful consideration.
-
- As an example of administrative decentralization, suppose the IPv6
- address prefix 43/8 identifies part of the IPv6 address space
- allocated for North America. All addresses within this prefix may be
- allocated along topological boundaries in support of increased data
- abstraction. Within this prefix, addresses may be allocated on a
- per-provider bases, based on geography or some other topologically
- significant criteria. For the purposes of this example, suppose that
- this prefix is allocated on a per-provider basis. Subscribers within
- North America use parts of the IPv6 address space that is underneath
- the IPv6 address space of their service providers. Within a routing
- domain addresses for subnetworks and hosts are allocated from the
- unique IPv6 prefix assigned to the domain according to the addressing
- plan for that domain.
-
-
- 4. IPv6 Address Administration and Routing in the Internet
-
-
- Internet routing components -- service providers (e.g., backbones,
- regional networks), and service subscribers (e.g., sites or campuses)
- -- are arranged hierarchically for the most part. A natural mapping
- from these components to IPv6 routing components is for providers and
- subscribers to act as routing domains.
-
- Alternatively, a subscriber (e.g., a site) may choose to operate as a
- part of a domain formed by a service provider. We assume that some,
- if not most, sites will prefer to operate as part of their provider's
- routing domain, exchanging routing information directly with the
- provider. The site is still allocated a prefix from the provider's
- address space, and the provider will advertise its own prefix into
- inter-domain routing.
-
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 6]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- Given such a mapping, where should address administration and
- allocation be performed to satisfy both administrative
- decentralization and data abstraction? The following possibilities
- are considered:
-
- 1) At some part within a routing domain,
-
- 2) At the leaf routing domain,
-
- 3) At the transit routing domain (TRD), and
-
- 4) At some other, more general boundaries, such as at the
- continental boundary.
-
- A part within a routing domain corresponds to any arbitrary connected
- set of subnetworks. If a domain is composed of multiple subnetworks,
- they are interconnected via routers. Leaf routing domains correspond
- to sites, where the primary purpose is to provide intra-domain
- routing services. Transit routing domains are deployed to carry
- transit (i.e., inter-domain) traffic; backbones and providers are
- TRDs. More general boundaries can be seen as topologically
- significant collections of TRDs.
-
- The greatest burden in transmitting and operating on reachability
- information is at the top of the routing hierarchy, where
- reachability information tends to accumulate. In the Internet, for
- example, providers must manage reachability information for all
- subscribers directly connected to the provider. Traffic destined for
- other providers is generally routed to the backbones (which act as
- providers as well). The backbones, however, must be cognizant of the
- reachability information for all attached providers and their
- associated subscribers.
-
- In general, the advantage of abstracting routing information at a
- given level of the routing hierarchy is greater at the higher levels
- of the hierarchy. There is relatively little direct benefit to the
- administration that performs the abstraction, since it must maintain
- routing information individually on each attached topological routing
- structure.
-
- For example, suppose that a given site is trying to decide whether to
- obtain an IPv6 address prefix directly from the IPv6 address space
- allocated for North America, or from the IPv6 address space allocated
- to its service provider. If considering only their own self-interest,
- the site itself and the attached provider have little reason to
- choose one approach or the other. The site must use one prefix or
- another; the source of the prefix has little effect on routing
- efficiency within the site. The provider must maintain information
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 7]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- about each attached site in order to route, regardless of any
- commonality in the prefixes of the sites.
-
- However, there is a difference when the provider distributes routing
- information to other providers (e.g., backbones or TRDs). In the
- first case, the provider cannot aggregate the site's address into its
- own prefix; the address must be explicitly listed in routing
- exchanges, resulting in an additional burden to other providers which
- must exchange and maintain this information.
-
- In the second case, each other provider (e.g., backbone or TRD) sees
- a single address prefix for the provider, which encompasses the new
- site. This avoids the exchange of additional routing information to
- identify the new site's address prefix. Thus, the advantages
- primarily accrue to other providers which maintain routing
- information about this site and provider.
-
- One might apply a supplier/consumer model to this problem: the higher
- level (e.g., a backbone) is a supplier of routing services, while the
- lower level (e.g., a TRD) is the consumer of these services. The
- price charged for services is based upon the cost of providing them.
- The overhead of managing a large table of addresses for routing to an
- attached topological entity contributes to this cost.
-
- At present the Internet, however, is not a market economy. Rather,
- efficient operation is based on cooperation. The recommendations
- discussed below describe simple and tractable ways of managing the
- IPv6 address space that benefit the entire community.
-
-
- 4.1 Administration of IPv6 addresses within a domain.
-
-
- If individual hosts take their IPv6 addresses from a myriad of
- unrelated IPv6 address spaces, there will be effectively no data
- abstraction beyond what is built into existing intra-domain routing
- protocols. For example, assume that within a routing domain uses
- three independent prefixes assigned from three different IPv6 address
- spaces associated with three different attached providers.
-
- This has a negative effect on inter-domain routing, particularly on
- those other domains which need to maintain routes to this domain.
- There is no common prefix that can be used to represent these IPv6
- addresses and therefore no summarization can take place at the
- routing domain boundary. When addresses are advertised by this
- routing domain to other routing domains, an enumerated list of the
- three individual prefixes must be used.
-
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 8]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- The number of IPv6 prefixes that leaf routing domains would advertise
- is on the order of the number of prefixes assigned to the domain; the
- number of prefixes a provider's routing domain would advertise is
- approximately the number of prefixes attached to the client leaf
- routing domains; and for a backbone this would be summed across all
- attached providers. This situation is just barely acceptable in the
- current Internet, and is intractable for the IPv6 Internet. A
- greater degree of hierarchical information reduction is necessary to
- allow continued growth in the Internet.
-
-
- 4.2 Administration at the Leaf Routing Domain
-
-
- As mentioned previously, the greatest degree of data abstraction
- comes at the lowest levels of the hierarchy. Providing each leaf
- routing domain (that is, site) with a contiguous block of addresses
- from its provider's address block results in the biggest single
- increase in abstraction. From outside the leaf routing domain, the
- set of all addresses reachable in the domain can then be represented
- by a single prefix. Further, all destinations reachable within the
- provider's prefix can be represented by a single prefix.
-
- For example, consider a single campus which is a leaf routing domain
- which would currently require 4 different IPv6 prefixes. Instead,
- they may be given a single prefix which provides the same number of
- destination addresses. Further, since the prefix is a subset of the
- provider's prefix, they impose no additional burden on the higher
- levels of the routing hierarchy.
-
- There is a close relationship between hosts and routing domains. The
- routing domain represents the only path between a host and the rest
- of the internetwork. It is reasonable that this relationship also
- extend to include a common IPv6 addressing space. Thus, the hosts
- within the leaf routing domain should take their IPv6 addresses from
- the prefix assigned to the leaf routing domain.
-
-
- 4.3 Administration at the Transit Routing Domain
-
-
- Two kinds of transit routing domains are considered, direct providers
- and indirect providers. Most of the subscribers of a direct provider
- are domains that act solely as service subscribers (they carry no
- transit traffic). Most of the subscribers of an indirect provider are
- domains that, themselves, act as service providers. In present
- terminology a backbone is an indirect provider, while an NSFnet
- regional is an example of a direct provider. Each case is discussed
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 9]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- separately below.
-
-
- 4.3.1 Direct Service Providers
-
-
- In a provider-based addressing plan, direct service providers should
- use their IPv6 address space for assigning IPv6 addresses from a
- unique prefix to the leaf routing domains that they serve. The
- benefits derived from data abstraction are greater than in the case
- of leaf routing domains, and the additional degree of data
- abstraction provided by this may be necessary in the short term.
-
- As an illustration consider an example of a direct provider that
- serves 100 clients. If each client takes its addresses from 4
- independent address spaces then the total number of entries that are
- needed to handle routing to these clients is 400 (100 clients times 4
- providers). If each client takes its addresses from a single address
- space then the total number of entries would be only 100. Finally, if
- all the clients take their addresses from the same address space then
- the total number of entries would be only 1.
-
- We expect that in the near term the number of routing domains in the
- Internet will grow to the point that it will be infeasible to route
- on the basis of a flat field of routing domains. It will therefore be
- essential to provide a greater degree of information abstraction with
- IPv6.
-
- Direct providers may give part of their address space (prefixes) to
- leaf domains, based on an address prefix given to the provider. This
- results in direct providers advertising to other providers a small
- fraction of the number of address prefixes that would be necessary if
- they enumerated the individual prefixes of the leaf routing domains.
- This represents a significant savings given the expected scale of
- global internetworking.
-
- The efficiencies gained in inter-domain routing clearly warrant the
- adoption of IPv6 address prefixes derived from the IPv6 address space
- of the providers.
-
- The mechanics of this scenario are straightforward. Each direct
- provider is given a unique small set of IPv6 address prefixes, from
- which its attached leaf routing domains can allocate slightly longer
- IPv6 address prefixes. For example assume that NIST is a leaf
- routing domain whose inter-domain link is via SURANet. If SURANet is
- assigned an unique IPv6 address prefix 43DC:0A21/32, NIST could use a
- unique IPv6 prefix of 43DC:0A21:7652:34/56.
-
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 10]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- If a direct service provider is connected to another provider(s)
- (either direct or indirect) via multiple attachment points, then in
- certain cases it may be advantageous to the direct provider to exert
- a certain degree of control over the coupling between the attachment
- points and flow of the traffic destined to a particular subscriber.
- Such control can be facilitated by first partitioning all the
- subscribers into groups, such that traffic destined to all the
- subscribers within a group should flow through a particular
- attachment point. Once the partitioning is done, the address space of
- the provider is subdivided along the group boundaries. A leaf routing
- domain that is willing to accept prefixes derived from its direct
- provider gets a prefix from the provider's address space subdivision
- associated with the group the domain belongs to.
-
- At the attachment point (between the direct and indirect providers)
- the direct provider advertises both an address prefix that
- corresponds to the address space of the provider, and one or more
- address prefixes that correspond to the address space associated with
- each subdivision. The latter prefixes match the former prefix, but
- are longer than the former prefix. Use of the "longest match"
- forwarding algorithm by the recipients of these prefixes (e.g., a
- router within the indirect provider) results in forcing the flow of
- the traffic to destinations depicted by the longer address prefixes
- through the attachment point where these prefixes are advertised to
- the indirect provider.
-
- For example, assume that SURANet is connected to another regional
- provider, NEARNet, at two attachment points, A1 and A2. SURANet is
- assigned a unique IPv6 address prefix 43DC:0A21/32. To exert control
- over the traffic flow destined to a particular subscriber within
- SURANet, SURANet may subdivide the address space assigned to it into
- two groups, 43DC:0A21:8/34 and 43DC:0A21:C/34. The former group may
- be used for sites attached to SURANet that are closer (as determined
- by the topology within SURANet) to A1, while the latter group may be
- used for sites that are closer to A2. The SURANet router at A1
- advertises both 43DC:0A21/32 and 43DC:0A21:8/34 address prefixes to
- the router in NEARNet. Likewise, the SURANet router at A2 advertises
- both 43DC:0A21/32 and 43DC:0A21:C/34 address prefixes to the router
- in NEARNet. Traffic that flows through NEARNet to destinations that
- match 43DC:0A21:8/34 address prefix would enter SURANet at A1, while
- traffic to destinations that match 43DC:0A21:C/34 address prefix
- would enter SURANet at A2.
-
- Note that the advertisement by the direct provider of the routing
- information associated with each subdivision must be done with care
- to ensure that such an advertisement would not result in a global
- distribution of separate reachability information associated with
- each subdivision, unless such distribution is warranted for some
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 11]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- other purposes (e.g., supporting certain aspects of policy-based
- routing).
-
-
- 4.3.2 Indirect Providers (Backbones)
-
-
- There does not at present appear to be a strong case for direct
- providers to take their address spaces from the the IPv6 space of an
- indirect provider (e.g., backbone). The benefit in routing data
- abstraction is relatively small. The number of direct providers today
- is in the tens and an order of magnitude increase would not cause an
- undue burden on the backbones. Also, it may be expected that as time
- goes by there will be increased direct interconnection of the direct
- providers, leaf routing domains directly attached to the backbones,
- and international links directly attached to the providers. Under
- these circumstances, the distinction between direct and indirect
- providers may become blurred.
-
- An additional factor that discourages allocation of IPv6 addresses
- from a backbone prefix is that the backbones and their attached
- providers are perceived as being independent. Providers may take
- their long-haul service from one or more backbones, or may switch
- backbones should a more cost-effective service be provided elsewhere.
- Having IPv6 addresses derived from a backbone is inconsistent with
- the nature of the relationship.
-
-
- 4.4 Multi-homed Routing Domains
-
-
- The discussions in Section 4.3 suggest methods for allocating IPv6
- addresses based on direct or indirect provider connectivity. This
- allows a great deal of information reduction to be achieved for those
- routing domains which are attached to a single TRD. In particular,
- such routing domains may select their IPv6 addresses from a space
- delegated to them by the direct provider. This allows the provider,
- when announcing the addresses that it can reach to other providers,
- to use a single address prefix to describe a large number of IPv6
- addresses corresponding to multiple routing domains.
-
- However, there are additional considerations for routing domains
- which are attached to multiple providers. Such `multi-homed' routing
- domains may, for example, consist of single-site campuses and
- companies which are attached to multiple backbones, large
- organizations which are attached to different providers at different
- locations in the same country, or multi-national organizations which
- are attached to backbones in a variety of countries worldwide. There
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 12]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- are a number of possible ways to deal with these multi-homed routing
- domains.
-
-
- 4.4.1 Solution 1
-
-
- One possible solution is for each multi-homed organization to obtain
- its IPv6 address space independently of the providers to which it is
- attached. This allows each multi-homed organization to base its IPv6
- assignments on a single prefix, and to thereby summarize the set of
- all IPv6 addresses reachable within that organization via a single
- prefix. The disadvantage of this approach is that since the IPv6
- address for that organization has no relationship to the addresses of
- any particular TRD, the TRDs to which this organization is attached
- will need to advertise the prefix for this organization to other
- providers. Other providers (potentially worldwide) will need to
- maintain an explicit entry for that organization in their routing
- tables.
-
- For example, suppose that a very large North American company `Mega
- Big International Incorporated' (MBII) has a fully interconnected
- internal network and is assigned a single prefix as part of the North
- American prefix. It is likely that outside of North America, a
- single entry may be maintained in routing tables for all North
- American Destinations. However, within North America, every provider
- will need to maintain a separate address entry for MBII. If MBII is
- in fact an international corporation, then it may be necessary for
- every provider worldwide to maintain a separate entry for MBII
- (including backbones to which MBII is not attached). Clearly this may
- be acceptable if there are a small number of such multi-homed routing
- domains, but would place an unacceptable load on routers within
- backbones if all organizations were to choose such address
- assignments. This solution may not scale to internets where there
- are many hundreds of thousands of multi-homed organizations.
-
-
- 4.4.2 Solution 2
-
-
- A second possible approach would be for multi-homed organizations to
- be assigned a separate IPv6 address space for each connection to a
- TRD, and to assign a single prefix to some subset of its domain(s)
- based on the closest interconnection point. For example, if MBII had
- connections to two providers in the U.S. (one east coast, and one
- west coast), as well as three connections to national backbones in
- Europe, and one in the far east, then MBII may make use of six
- different address prefixes. Each part of MBII would be assigned a
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- single address prefix based on the nearest connection.
-
- For purposes of external routing of traffic from outside MBII to a
- destination inside of MBII, this approach works similarly to treating
- MBII as six separate organizations. For purposes of internal routing,
- or for routing traffic from inside of MBII to a destination outside
- of MBII, this approach works the same as the first solution.
-
- If we assume that incoming traffic (coming from outside of MBII, with
- a destination within MBII) is always to enter via the nearest point
- to the destination, then each TRD which has a connection to MBII
- needs to announce to other TRDs the ability to reach only those parts
- of MBII whose address is taken from its own address space. This
- implies that no additional routing information needs to be exchanged
- between TRDs, resulting in a smaller load on the inter-domain routing
- tables maintained by TRDs when compared to the first solution. This
- solution therefore scales better to extremely large internets
- containing very large numbers of multi-homed organizations.
-
- One problem with the second solution is that backup routes to multi-
- homed organizations are not automatically maintained. With the first
- solution, each TRD, in announcing the ability to reach MBII,
- specifies that it is able to reach all of the hosts within MBII. With
- the second solution, each TRD announces that it can reach all of the
- hosts based on its own address prefix, which only includes some of
- the hosts within MBII. If the connection between MBII and one
- particular TRD were severed, then the hosts within MBII with
- addresses based on that TRD would become unreachable via inter-domain
- routing. The impact of this problem can be reduced somewhat by
- maintenance of additional information within routing tables, but this
- reduces the scaling advantage of the second approach.
-
- The second solution also requires that when external connectivity
- changes, internal addresses also change.
-
- Also note that this and the previous approach will tend to cause
- packets to take different routes. With the first approach, packets
- from outside of MBII destined for within MBII will tend to enter via
- the point which is closest to the source (which will therefore tend
- to maximize the load on the networks internal to MBII). With the
- second solution, packets from outside destined for within MBII will
- tend to enter via the point which is closest to the destination
- (which will tend to minimize the load on the networks within MBII,
- and maximize the load on the TRDs).
-
- These solutions also have different effects on policies. For example,
- suppose that country `X' has a law that traffic from a source within
- country X to a destination within country X must at all times stay
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- entirely within the country. With the first solution, it is not
- possible to determine from the destination address whether or not the
- destination is within the country. With the second solution, a
- separate address may be assigned to those hosts which are within
- country X, thereby allowing routing policies to be followed.
- Similarly, suppose that `Little Small Company' (LSC) has a policy
- that its packets may never be sent to a destination that is within
- MBII. With either solution, the routers within LSC may be configured
- to discard any traffic that has a destination within MBII's address
- space. However, with the first solution this requires one entry; with
- the second it requires many entries and may be impossible as a
- practical matter.
-
-
- 4.4.3 Solution 3
-
-
- There are other possible solutions as well. A third approach is to
- assign each multi-homed organization a single address prefix, based
- on one of its connections to a TRD. Other TRDs to which the multi-
- homed organization are attached maintain a routing table entry for
- the organization, but are extremely selective in terms of which other
- TRDs are told of this route. This approach will produce a single
- `default' routing entry which all TRDs will know how to reach (since
- presumably all TRDs will maintain routes to each other), while
- providing more direct routing in some cases.
-
- There is at least one situation in which this third approach is
- particularly appropriate. Suppose that a special interest group of
- organizations have deployed their own provider. For example, lets
- suppose that the U.S. National Widget Manufacturers and Researchers
- have set up a U.S.-wide provider, which is used by corporations who
- manufacture widgets, and certain universities which are known for
- their widget research efforts. We can expect that the various
- organizations which are in the widget group will run their internal
- networks as separate routing domains, and most of them will also be
- attached to other TRDs (since most of the organizations involved in
- widget manufacture and research will also be involved in other
- activities). We can therefore expect that many or most of the
- organizations in the widget group are dual-homed, with one attachment
- for widget-associated communications and the other attachment for
- other types of communications. Let's also assume that the total
- number of organizations involved in the widget group is small enough
- that it is reasonable to maintain a routing table containing one
- entry per organization, but that they are distributed throughout a
- larger internet with many millions of (mostly not widget-associated)
- routing domains.
-
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- With the third approach, each multi-homed organization in the widget
- group would make use of an address assignment based on its other
- attachment(s) to TRDs (the attachments not associated with the widget
- group). The widget provider would need to maintain routes to the
- routing domains associated with the various member organizations.
- Similarly, all members of the widget group would need to maintain a
- table of routes to the other members via the widget provider.
- However, since the widget provider does not inform other general
- worldwide TRDs of what addresses it can reach (since the provider is
- not intended for use by other outside organizations), the relatively
- large set of routing prefixes needs to be maintained only in a
- limited number of places. The addresses assigned to the various
- organizations which are members of the widget group would provide a
- `default route' via each members other attachments to TRDs, while
- allowing communications within the widget group to use the preferred
- path.
-
-
- 4.4.4 Solution 4
-
-
- A fourth solution involves assignment of a particular address prefix
- for routing domains which are attached to precisely two (or more)
- specific routing domains. For example, suppose that there are two
- providers `SouthNorthNet' and `NorthSouthNet' which have a very large
- number of customers in common (i.e., there are a large number of
- routing domains which are attached to both). Rather than getting two
- address prefixes these organizations could obtain three prefixes.
- Those routing domains which are attached to NorthSouthNet but not
- attached to SouthNorthNet obtain an address assignment based on one
- of the prefixes. Those routing domains which are attached to
- SouthNorthNet but not to NorthSouthNet would obtain an address based
- on the second prefix. Finally, those routing domains which are
- multi-homed to both of these networks would obtain an address based
- on the third prefix. Each of these two TRDs would then advertise two
- prefixes to other TRDs, one prefix for leaf routing domains attached
- to it only, and one prefix for leaf routing domains attached to both.
-
- This fourth solution is likely to be important when use of public
- data networks becomes more common. In particular, it is likely that
- at some point in the future a substantial percentage of all routing
- domains will be attached to public data networks. In this case,
- nearly all government-sponsored networks (such as some current
- regionals) may have a set of customers which overlaps substantially
- with the public networks.
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- 4.4.5 Summary
-
-
- There are therefore a number of possible solutions to the problem of
- assigning IPv6 addresses to multi-homed routing domains. Each of
- these solutions has very different advantages and disadvantages.
- Each solution places a different real (i.e., financial) cost on the
- multi-homed organizations, and on the TRDs (including those to which
- the multi-homed organizations are not attached).
-
- In addition, most of the solutions described also highlight the need
- for each TRD to develop a policy on whether and under what conditions
- to accept addresses that are not based on its own address prefix, and
- how such non-local addresses will be treated. For example, a somewhat
- conservative policy might be that non-local IPv6 address prefixes
- will be accepted from any attached leaf routing domain, but not
- advertised to other TRDs. In a less conservative policy, a TRD might
- accept such non-local prefixes and agree to exchange them with a
- defined set of other TRDs (this set could be an a priori group of
- TRDs that have something in common such as geographical location, or
- the result of an agreement specific to the requesting leaf routing
- domain). Various policies involve real costs to TRDs, which may be
- reflected in those policies.
-
-
- 4.5 Private Links
-
-
- The discussion up to this point concentrates on the relationship
- between IPv6 addresses and routing between various routing domains
- over transit routing domains, where each transit routing domain
- interconnects a large number of routing domains and offers a more-
- or-less public service.
-
- However, there may also exist a number of links which interconnect
- two routing domains in such a way, that usage of these links may be
- limited to carrying traffic only between the two routing domains.
- We'll refer to such links as "private".
-
- For example, let's suppose that the XYZ corporation does a lot of
- business with MBII. In this case, XYZ and MBII may contract with a
- carrier to provide a private link between the two corporations, where
- this link may only be used for packets whose source is within one of
- the two corporations, and whose destination is within the other of
- the two corporations. Finally, suppose that the point-to-point link
- is connected between a single router (router X) within XYZ
- corporation and a single router (router M) within MBII. It is
- therefore necessary to configure router X to know which addresses can
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- be reached over this link (specifically, all addresses reachable in
- MBII). Similarly, it is necessary to configure router M to know which
- addresses can be reached over this link (specifically, all addresses
- reachable in XYZ Corporation).
-
- The important observation to be made here is that the additional
- connectivity due to such private links may be ignored for the purpose
- of IPv6 address allocation, and do not pose a problem for routing on
- a larger scale. This is because the routing information associated
- with such connectivity is not propagated throughout the internet, and
- therefore does not need to be collapsed into a TRD's prefix.
-
- In our example, let's suppose that the XYZ corporation has a single
- connection to a regional, and has therefore uses the IPv6 address
- space from the space given to that regional. Similarly, let's
- suppose that MBII, as an international corporation with connections
- to six different providers, has chosen the second solution from
- Section 4.4, and therefore has obtained six different address
- allocations. In this case, all addresses reachable in the XYZ
- Corporation can be described by a single address prefix (implying
- that router M only needs to be configured with a single address
- prefix to represent the addresses reachable over this link). All
- addresses reachable in MBII can be described by six address prefixes
- (implying that router X needs to be configured with six address
- prefixes to represent the addresses reachable over the link).
-
- In some cases, such private links may be permitted to forward traffic
- for a small number of other routing domains, such as closely
- affiliated organizations. This will increase the configuration
- requirements slightly. However, provided that the number of
- organizations using the link is relatively small, then this still
- does not represent a significant problem.
-
- Note that the relationship between routing and IPv6 addressing
- described in other sections of this paper is concerned with problems
- in scaling caused by large, essentially public transit routing
- domains which interconnect a large number of routing domains.
- However, for the purpose of IPv6 address allocation, private links
- which interconnect only a small number of private routing domains do
- not pose a problem, and may be ignored. For example, this implies
- that a single leaf routing domain which has a single connection to a
- `public' provider (e.g., the Alternet), plus a number of private
- links to other leaf routing domains, can be treated as if it were
- single-homed to the provider for the purpose of IPv6 address
- allocation. We expect that this is also another way of dealing with
- multi-homed domains.
-
-
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 18]
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- 4.6 Zero-Homed Routing Domains
-
-
- Currently, a very large number of organizations have internal
- communications networks which are not connected to any service
- providers. Such organizations may, however, have a number of private
- links that they use for communications with other organizations. Such
- organizations do not participate in global routing, but are satisfied
- with reachability to those organizations with which they have
- established private links. These are referred to as zero-homed
- routing domains.
-
- Zero-homed routing domains can be considered as the degenerate case
- of routing domains with private links, as discussed in the previous
- section, and do not pose a problem for inter-domain routing. As
- above, the routing information exchanged across the private links
- sees very limited distribution, usually only to the routing domain at
- the other end of the link. Thus, there are no address abstraction
- requirements beyond those inherent in the address prefixes exchanged
- across the private link.
-
- However, it is important that zero-homed routing domains use valid
- globally unique IPv6 addresses. Suppose that the zero-homed routing
- domain is connected through a private link to a routing domain.
- Further, this routing domain participates in an internet that
- subscribes to the global IPv6 addressing plan. This domain must be
- able to distinguish between the zero-homed routing domain's IPv6
- addresses and any other IPv6 addresses that it may need to route to.
- The only way this can be guaranteed is if the zero-homed routing
- domain uses globally unique IPv6 addresses.
-
- Whereas globally unique addresses are necessary to differentiate
- between destinations in the Internet, globally unique addresses may
- not be sufficient to guarantee global connectivity. If a zero-homed
- routing domain gets connected to the Internet, the block of addresses
- used within the domain may not be related to the block of addresses
- allocated to the domain's direct provider. In order to maintain the
- gains given by hierarchical routing and address assignment the zero-
- homed domain should under such circumstances change addresses
- assigned to the systems within the domain.
-
-
-
- 4.7 Continental aggregation
-
-
- Another level of hierarchy may also be used in this addressing scheme
- to further reduce the amount of routing information necessary for
-
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- global routing. Continental aggregation is useful because
- continental boundaries provide natural barriers to topological
- connection and administrative boundaries. Thus, it presents a
- natural boundary for another level of aggregation of inter-domain
- routing information. To make use of this, it is necessary that each
- continent be assigned an appropriate contiguous block of addresses.
- Providers (both direct and indirect) within that continent would
- allocate their addresses from this space. Note that there are
- numerous exceptions to this, in which a service provider (either
- direct or indirect) spans a continental division. These exceptions
- can be handled similarly to multi-homed routing domains, as discussed
- above.
-
- The benefit of continental aggregation is that it helps to absorb the
- entropy introduced within continental routing caused by the cases
- where an organization must use an address prefix which must be
- advertised beyond its direct provider. In such cases, if the address
- is taken from the continental prefix, the additional cost of the
- route is not propagated past the point where continental aggregation
- takes place.
-
- Note that, in contrast to the case of providers, the aggregation of
- continental routing information may not be done on the continent to
- which the prefix is allocated. The cost of inter-continental links
- (and especially trans-oceanic links) is very high. If aggregation is
- performed on the `near' side of the link, then routing information
- about unreachable destinations within that continent can only reside
- on that continent. Alternatively, if continental aggregation is done
- on the `far' side of an inter-continental link, the `far' end can
- perform the aggregation and inject it into continental routing. This
- means that destinations which are part of the continental
- aggregation, but for which there is not a corresponding more specific
- prefix can be rejected before leaving the continent on which they
- originated.
-
- For example, suppose that Europe is assigned a prefix of 46/8, such
- that European routing also contains the longer prefixes 46DC:0A01/32
- and 46DC:0A02/32 . All of the longer European prefixes may be
- advertised across a trans-Atlantic link to North America. The router
- in North America would then aggregate these routes, and only
- advertise the prefix 46/8 into North American routing. Packets which
- are destined for 46DC:0A01:1234:5678:ABCD:8765:4321:AABB would
- traverse North American routing, but would encounter the North
- American router which performed the European aggregation. If the
- prefix 46DC:0A01/32 is unreachable, the router would drop the packet
- and send an unreachable message without using the trans-Atlantic
- link.
-
-
-
-
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-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- 4.8 Private (Local Use) Addresses
-
-
- Many domains will have hosts which, for one reason or another, will
- not require globally unique IPv6 addresses. A domain which decides
- to use IPv6 addresses out of the private address space is able to do
- so without address allocation from any authority. Conversely, the
- private address prefix need not be advertised throughout the public
- portion of the Internet.
-
- In order to use private address space, a domain needs to determine
- which hosts do not need to have network layer connectivity outside
- the domain in the foreseeable future. Such hosts will be called
- private hosts, and may use the private addresses described above if
- it is topologically convenient. Private hosts can communicate with
- all other hosts inside the domain, both public and private. However,
- they cannot have IPv6 connectivity to any external host. While not
- having external network layer connectivity, a private host can still
- have access to external services via application layer relays.
- Public hosts do not have connectivity to private hosts outside of
- their own domain.
-
- Because private addresses have no global meaning, reachability
- information associated with the private address space shall not be
- propagated on inter-domain links, and packets with private source or
- destination addresses should not be forwarded across such links.
- Routers in domains not using private address space, especially those
- of Internet service providers, are expected to be configured to
- reject (filter out) routing information that carries reachability
- information associated with private addresses. If such a router
- receives such information the rejection shall not be treated as a
- routing protocol error.
-
- In addition, indirect references to private addresses should be
- contained within the enterprise that uses these addresses. Prominent
- example of such references are DNS Resource Records. A possible
- approach to avoid leaking of DNS RRs is to run two nameservers, one
- external server authoritative for all globally unique IP addresses of
- the enterprise and one internal nameserver authoritative for all IP
- addresses of the enterprise, both public and private. In order to
- ensure consistency both these servers should be configured from the
- same data of which the external nameserver only receives a filtered
- version. The resolvers on all internal hosts, both public and
- private, query only the internal nameserver. The external server
- resolves queries from resolvers outside the enterprise and is linked
- into the global DNS. The internal server forwards all queries for
- information outside the enterprise to the external nameserver, so all
- internal hosts can access the global DNS. This ensures that
-
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- information about private hosts does not reach resolvers and
- nameservers outside the enterprise.
-
-
- 4.9 Interaction with Policy Routing
-
-
- We assume that any inter-domain routing protocol will have difficulty
- trying to aggregate multiple destinations with dissimilar policies.
- At the same time, the ability to aggregate routing information while
- not violating routing policies is essential. Therefore, we suggest
- that address allocation authorities attempt to allocate addresses so
- that aggregates of destinations with similar policies can be easily
- formed.
-
-
- 5. Recommendations
-
-
- We anticipate that the current exponential growth of the Internet
- will continue or accelerate for the foreseeable future. In addition,
- we anticipate a rapid internationalization of the Internet. The
- ability of routing to scale is dependent upon the use of data
- abstraction based on hierarchical IPv6 addresses. It is therefore
- essential to choose a hierarchical structure for IPv6 addresses with
- great care.
-
- Great attention must be paid to the definition of addressing
- structures to balance the conflicting goals of:
-
- - Route optimality
-
- - Routing algorithm efficiency
-
- - Ease and administrative efficiency of address registration
-
- - Considerations for what addresses are assigned by what addressing
- authority
-
- It is in the best interests of the internetworking community that the
- cost of operations be kept to a minimum where possible. In the case
- of IPv6 address allocation, this again means that routing data
- abstraction must be encouraged.
-
- In order for data abstraction to be possible, the assignment of IPv6
- addresses must be accomplished in a manner which is consistent with
- the actual physical topology of the Internet. For example, in those
- cases where organizational and administrative boundaries are not
-
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- related to actual network topology, address assignment based on such
- organization boundaries is not recommended.
-
- The intra-domain routing protocols allow for information abstraction
- to be maintained within a domain. For zero-homed and single-homed
- routing domains (which are expected to remain zero-homed or single-
- homed), we recommend that the IPv6 addresses assigned within a single
- routing domain use a single address prefix assigned to that domain.
- Specifically, this allows the set of all IPv6 addresses reachable
- within a single domain to be fully described via a single prefix.
-
- We anticipate that the total number of routing domains existing on a
- worldwide Internet to be great enough that additional levels of
- hierarchical data abstraction beyond the routing domain level will be
- necessary.
-
- In most cases, network topology will have a close relationship with
- national boundaries. For example, the degree of network connectivity
- will often be greater within a single country than between countries.
- It is therefore appropriate to make specific recommendations based on
- national boundaries, with the understanding that there may be
- specific situations where these general recommendations need to be
- modified.
-
- Further, from experience with IPv4, we feel that continental
- aggregation is beneficial and should be supported where possible as a
- means of limiting the unwarranted spread of routing exceptions.
-
-
- 5.1 Recommendations for an address allocation plan
-
-
- We anticipate that public interconnectivity between private routing
- domains will be provided by a diverse set of TRDs, including (but not
- necessarily limited to):
-
- - Backbone networks;
-
- - A number of regional or national networks; and,
-
- - A number of commercial Public Data Networks.
-
- These networks will not be interconnected in a strictly hierarchical
- manner (for example, there is expected to be direct connectivity
- between regionals, and all of these types of networks may have direct
- international connections). These TRDs will be used to interconnect
- a wide variety of routing domains, each of which may comprise a
- single corporation, part of a corporation, a university campus, a
-
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
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-
- government agency, or other organizational unit.
-
- In addition, some private corporations may be expected to make use of
- dedicated private TRDs for communication within their own
- corporation.
-
- We anticipate that the great majority of routing domains will be
- attached to only one of the TRDs. This will permit hierarchical
- address aggregation based on TRD. We therefore strongly recommend
- that addresses be assigned hierarchically, based on address prefixes
- assigned to individual TRDs.
-
- To support continental aggregation of routes, we recommend that all
- addresses for TRDs which are wholly within a continent be taken from
- the continental prefix.
-
- For the proposed address allocation scheme, this implies that
- portions of IPv6 address space should be assigned to each TRD
- (explicitly including the backbones and regionals). For those leaf
- routing domains which are connected to a single TRD, they should be
- assigned a prefix value from the address space assigned to that TRD.
-
- For routing domains which are not attached to any publically
- available TRD, there is not the same urgent need for hierarchical
- address aggregation. We do not, therefore, make any additional
- recommendations for such `isolated' routing domains. Where such
- domains are connected to other domains by private point-to-point
- links, and where such links are used solely for routing between the
- two domains that they interconnect, again no additional technical
- problems relating to address abbreviation is caused by such a link,
- and no specific additional recommendations are necessary. We do
- recommend that since such domains may wish to use a private address
- space, that the addressing plan specify a specific prefix for private
- addressing.
-
- Further, in order to allow aggregation of IPv6 addresses at national
- and continental boundaries into as few prefixes as possible, we
- further recommend that IPv6 addresses allocated to routing domains
- should be assigned based on each routing domain's connectivity to
- national and continental Internet backbones.
-
-
- 5.2 Recommendations for Multi-Homed Routing Domains
-
-
- Some routing domains will be attached to multiple TRDs within the
- same country, or to TRDs within multiple different countries. We
- refer to these as `multi-homed' routing domains. Clearly the strict
-
-
-
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- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- hierarchical model discussed above does not neatly handle such
- routing domains.
-
- There are several possible ways that these multi-homed routing
- domains may be handled, as described in Section 4.4. Each of these
- methods vary with respect to the amount of information that must be
- maintained for inter-domain routing and also with respect to the
- inter-domain routes. In addition, the organization that will bear the
- brunt of this cost varies with the possible solutions. For example,
- the solutions vary with respect to:
-
- - Resources used within routers within the TRDs;
-
- - Administrative cost on TRD personnel; and,
-
- - Difficulty of configuration of policy-based inter-domain routing
- information within leaf routing domains.
-
- Also, the solution used may affect the actual routes which packets
- follow, and may effect the availability of backup routes when the
- primary route fails.
-
- For these reasons it is not possible to mandate a single solution for
- all situations. Rather, economic considerations will require a
- variety of solutions for different routing domains, service
- providers, and backbones.
-
-
- 6. Security Considerations
-
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this document.
-
-
- 7. Acknowledgments
-
-
- This document is largely based on RFC 1518. The section on Private
- Addresses borrowed heavily from RFC 1597.
-
- We'd like to thank Havard Eidnes, Bill Manning, Roger Fajman for
- their review and constructive comments.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Rekhter & Li Informational [Page 25]
-
- RFC 1887 IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation Architecture December 1995
-
-
- REFERENCES
-
-
-
- [1] Deering, S., and R. Hinden, Editors, "Internet Protocol, Version
- 6 (IPv6) Specification", RFC 1883, Xerox PARC, Ipsilon Networks,
- December 1995.
-
-
- [2] Hinden, R., and S. Deering, Editors, "IP Version 6 Addressing
- Architecture", RFC 1884, Ipsilon Networks, Xerox PARC, December
- 1995.
-
-
- AUTHORS' ADDRESSES
-
-
- Yakov Rekhter
- cisco Systems, Inc.
- 470 Tasman Dr.
- San Jose, CA 95134
-
- Phone: (914) 528-0090
- EMail: yakov@cisco.com
-
-
- Tony Li
- cisco Systems, Inc.
- 470 Tasman Dr.
- San Jose, CA 95134
-
- Phone: (408) 526-8186
- EMail: tli@cisco.com
-
-
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