On Apr 2, 2010, at 6:38 26PM, Andrew Gray wrote: > Jeroen van Aart writes: >> Cutler James R wrote: >>> I also just got a fresh box of popcorn. I will sit by and wait >> I honestly am not trying to be a troll. It's just everytime I glance over >> the IANA IPv4 Address Space Registry I feel rather annoyed about all those >> /8s that were assigned back in the day without apparently realising we might >> run out. It was explained to me that many companies with /8s use it for >> their internal network and migrating to 10/8 instead is a major pain. > > You know, I've felt the same irritation before, but one thing I am wondering > and perhaps some folks around here have been around long enough to know - > what was the original thinking behind doing those /8s? > I understand that they were A classes and assigned to large companies, etc. > but was it just not believed there would be more than 126(-ish) of these > entities at the time? Or was it thought we would move on to larger address > space before we did? Or was it that things were just more free-flowing back > in the day? Why were A classes even created? RFC 791 at least doesn't seem > to provide much insight as to the 'whys'.
Many large companies found that class A nets weren't very useful. Multiple levels of subnetting didn't exist, which meant that you couldn't assign a /16 to a location and a /24 to each piece of thick yellow cable within the location, for example. AT&T got 12/8 moderately early. We realized we couldn't easily use it, and offered it back in exchange for the equivalent in class B space. Postel gave us the latter (135/8), but told us to keep 12/8 -- other people were discovering the same problem, so there was little demand for class A networks. (This was circa 1987, if memory serves, and possibly a year or two earlier.) --Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb