Owen DeLong wrote: >> It is the first step to have the RSIP style transparent Internet. >> >> The second step is to use port numbers for routing within ISPs. >> But, it is not necessary today. >> > Still doesn't scale. 40 bits isn't enough to uniquely identify a > conversation end-point.
It's 48 bit. > If you use port numbers for routing, > you don't have enough port numbers for conversation IDs. That you use IPv4 addresses for routing does not make it unusable for identifications. Moreover, it is easy to have a transport protocol with 32bit or 48bit port numbers with the end to end fashion only by modifying end part of the Internet. >> Unlike IPv4 with natural boundary of /24, routing table >> explosion of IPv6 is a serious scalability problem. > Solvable. It was solvable. > IPv6 has enough bits that we can use map/encap or > other various forms of herarchical overlay ASN-based routing > to resolve those issues over time. The reality is that situation has been worsening over time. As RFC2374 was obsoleted long ago, it is now impossible to restore it. Masataka Ohta