V6 still not supported Re: 202203231017.AYC

Abraham Y. Chen aychen at avinta.com
Sat Mar 26 01:51:52 UTC 2022


*********** Resend to go through NANOG ************


On 2022-03-23 11:59, Abraham Y. Chen wrote:
> Dear Pascal:
>
> 0)    So glad to see your recount of the history and the analysis!
>
> 1)    We have recently formulated a proposal called EzIP (Phonetic for 
> Easy IPv4) that is very much along the line of what you just described 
> below, but with a few twists. I browsed through US patent 7,356,031, 
> but failed to spot the key word "240. It appears to me that it was 
> more a general concept than practice. Did you submit a draft on your 
> work to IETF? Perhaps due to these, our (including patent examiner's) 
> prior art search never came across your work. Although, your patent 
> was granted in the same year as the Normative Reference [2] of our 
> IETF draft. Please have a quick read of the below whitepaper. It 
> provides you an overview of EzIP as well as references to US Pat. 
> No.11,159,425, the current IETF draft and a feasibility demonstration 
> setup.
>
> https://www.avinta.com/phoenix-1/home/RevampTheInternet.pdf
>
> 2)    Here is a few quick comparisons between our two teams' work and 
> the outline of EzIP benefits:
>
>     A.    Your "Realm" is very much equivalent to our RAN (Regional 
> Area Network). However, instead of utilizing 240.0.0/8, we propose to 
> use the full 240/4 each to maximize its effectiveness. Each RAN can 
> serve up to 39M population as large as Tokyo Metro, even before 
> utilizing the three private netblocks.
>
>     B.    Your "Elevator Shaft" making use of part of the 240/4 pool 
> is equivalent to our single IPv4 public address to tether a RAN from 
> the Internet core. Ours is a "micro" building block approach that 
> provides more flexibility. For example, up to 75% of the smaller 
> countries around the world need only one IPv4 each to achieve the 
> "Elevator Shaft" configuration.
>     C.    Your "Inter-Realm Router" is simply the current Internet 
> core routers in the EzIP scheme.
>
>     D.   Instead of proposing any modification to the IP packet 
> header, EzIP can deploy within the capability of the RFC791. That is, 
> when inter-RAN traffic is needed, the Option Word mechanism is 
> activated to carry the 240/4 addresses within the RAN, leaving the 
> basic source and destination address fields to carry the public IPv4 
> addresses of the RANs at either end.
>
>     E.    EzIP implementation is very straightforward. We have 
> identified at least one case that only requires "*/disabling/* the 
> program code that has been */disabling/* the use of the 240/4 
> netblock". With your software expertise, you likely know other 
> configurations.
>
>     F.    EzIP essentially proposes to expand the address pool 
> currently used by CG-NAT without any hardware change. In addition, the 
> simplification in administrating the 240/4 addresses deterministically 
> can mitigate the root cause to the cyber insecurity, thus reducing the 
> OpEx.
>
>     G.    Treating 240/4 as the fourth netblock in RFC1918 allows the 
> RAN to operate pretty much independent of the Internet core. On the 
> other hand, being rejected by current routers enables RANs to be 
> deployed worldwide by themselves without interference in either 
> direction. This forms an */overlay /*network providing Internet-like 
> services while having individualized flexibility per RAN.
>
>     H.    As more and more RANs are deployed, there will be increasing 
> number of IPv4 public addresses becoming "spares". Each can support 
> one RAN to serve other purposes, such as true test beds for 
> experimenting new protocols.
>
>     I.    There probably are a few more parallelisms that we can 
> identify, as we discuss more.
>
> I look forward to your thoughts and critiques.
>
> Regards,
>
>
> Abe (2022-03-23 11:59 EDT)
>
>
>
> On 2022-03-23 05:01, Pascal Thubert (pthubert) via NANOG wrote:
>> I see the same thing from the other side, being a S/W developer for switching and routing boxes since the early 90's. The PM barrier is a high wall indeed. And yet some techs succeed to pass it. What I'm arguing is that we can pass that wall if we work together with the same objective.
>>
>> I've been monitoring this list for a while, very insightful, very happy with what I learn in the process. But here I feel compelled to react. I read that IPv6 did not succeed in 25 years. But unless I miss something, complaining did not succeed either, did it?
>>
>> My frustration is that indeed (as a dev guy) we have been trying hard to serve users our best. We proposed a number of things in the IPv4 evolution direction that I see being asked on this list. For larger IPv4 space and smooth migration, I'm personally fond of the IP-in-IP variation that filed in 20+ years ago as US patent 7,356,031. Basically we reserve a /8, say, since it is so popular at this time, 240.0.0./8, and make it the "elevator shaft" between IPv4 realms. Say the current IPv4 Internet is realm 1, that Internet would have IP address 240.0.0.1/8 in the shaft, and would continue operating as is, without a change in hosts and routers for traffic staying inside the current Internet. Now say China builds realm 2; that Internet would have IP address 240.0.0.2/8 in the shaft. A host in the Internet that wants to talk to a host in China would require an update to parse new DNS double-A (realm, address) records to encapsulate the packet IP-in-IP, outer src= 240.0.0.1 outer dest=240.0.0.2. The router that serves the shaft at level 1 attracts 240.0.0.0/8 within realm 1 and routes up the elevator for more specific (host) routes within that prefix. The router that serves the shaft at level 2 attracts 240.0.0.2/32 inside the shaft; upon the said packet it would swap the inner and outer destination and the packet would reach the Chinese address with classical routing within realm 2. Routers serving the shaft need an update, but then, only those do. Obviously the host in China can only reply if its stack is updated to understand the format. But all the other hosts and routers in China can be classical IPv4 as we know them long as their traffic stays in China. To migrate to IPv6 what you can do is map the elevator shaft prefix in, say, 400::/3 (sadly cannot use F00/3 that would map 240 neatly but is already assigned). The current internet would own 400:1::/32, China would own 400:2::/32, etc... You encode the double-A of the host in the prefix, reserve a well known suffix for IPv4 mapped double-A, and you have an IPv6 address that can be mapped both ways statelessly. When migrating to v6, each IPv4 node that owns a public IPv4 address in one realm gets a full IPv6 /64 for free.
>>
>> This kind of ideas have existed for long but apparently did not meet their public.
>>
>> So we tried evolving IPv6 instead. And we did. I've witnessed deep evolution in networking technology with, e.g., IoT and SRv6. I've seen both being despised on this list and I'm not asking for more fuel on that fire. I just want to use these techs as a proof that evolution is indeed possible, that it happens in the context of IPv6, and that done in your direction it could make some folks happier than the current state of affairs. On the side, since I see the name, please consider that Cisco ships both techs above, so it is indeed capable of risk taking, the PM wall can indeed be passed, as long as there's enough pressure from both side.
>>
>> For those interested, I'd be happy to chat on how IPv6 ND has evolved (on paper) but is stuck behind the PM wall as well.
>>
>> Keep safe;
>>
>> Pascal
>>
>> Message-----
>>> From: NANOG<nanog-bounces+pthubert=cisco.com at nanog.org>  On Behalf Of
>>> Michael Thomas
>>> Sent: mardi 22 mars 2022 22:37
>>> To:nanog at nanog.org
>>> Subject: Re: V6 still not supported
>>>
>>>
>>> On 3/22/22 5:45 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
>>>> john,
>>>>
>>>> fwiw your story matches what is left of my memory.  one nuance
>>>>
>>>>> That’s not to say that there wasn’t "IETF politics” involved, but
>>>>> rather that such politics were expressed as enormous pressure to
>>>>> “make a decision”
>>>> my take was that cidr had done a lot to relieve the immediate
>>>> technical pressure for the short term; but there was a deep fear that
>>>> the industry press was stirring a major poolpah about the end of the
>>>> internet due to
>>>> ipv4 exhaustion.  i.e. a seriously flawed technical compromise was
>>>> pushed on us in reaction to a perception of bad press.
>>>>
>>>> i have learned that, when i am under great pressure to DO SOMETHING,
>>>> it's time to step back, go make a cup of tea, and think.  the ietf did
>>>> not.  and here we are, a quarter of a century later, still trying to
>>>> clean up the mess.
>>>>
>>> So are you saying that an ipng that came out in, say, 2000 which was
>>> according to you was vastly superior having taken the time to get it
>>> right would have had any better chance of being adopted? My experience
>>> with Cisco product managers at the time is that they couldn't give a
>>> shit about the technical aspects of an ipng. If their silicon forwarding
>>> couldn't handle it, they weren't interested unless customers were
>>> clamoring for it. I can't see how that negative feedback loop could have
>>> ever been prevented other than other ipng being done in, oh say, 1993
>>> when it was all still software forwarding.
>>>
>>> Mike
>
>



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