Cameron,

On Dec 8, 2010, at 12:01 PM, Cameron Byrne wrote:
> I believe a lot of folks think the routing paths should be tightly
> coupled with the physical topology.

The downside, of course, being that if you change your location within the 
physical topology, you have to renumber.  Enterprises have already voted with 
their feet that this isn't acceptable with IPv4 and they'll no doubt do the 
same with IPv6.

> In a mature IPv6 world, that is sane, i am not sure what the
> real value of LISP is.

Sanity is in the eye of the beholder.  The advantage a LISP(-like) scheme 
provides is a way of separating location from identity, allowing for arbitrary 
topology change (and complexity in the form of multi-homing) without affecting 
the identities of the systems on the network. Changing providers or 
multi-homing would thus not result in a renumbering event or pushing yet 
another prefix into the DFZ.

> Then there is the question of who benefits from LISP
> and who pays.  The edge pays and the DFZ guys benefit (they deffer
> router upgrades).... i already pay the DFZ guys enough today.

Increased size/flux in the DFZ as a result of PI allocations, more specifics 
announced for traffic engineering, and multi-homing _will_ increase the cost to 
the "DFZ guys" as they have to upgrade their routers to deal with growth. It is 
unlikely they'll not pass that cost on to their customers.

Regards,
-drc


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