>Subject: Re: Dual stack IPv6 for IPv4 depletion
>
>Because vendor pressure depends on a userbase that knows enough to demand 
>fixes.

No vendor pressure is dependent on people buying their stuff.  Don't send that 
CPE to your user if it does not meet your standards.  If their stuff breaks 
because of shortsighted coding to bad for them.  I am not going to be the guy 
to build in stupid limitations today to save a few minutes of coding for some 
lazy hardware vendor.

>
>Simple fact is that if most ISPs deploy degraded services, vendors will code 
>to the lowest common denominator of that degraded service and we’ll all be 
>forced to live within those limitations in the products we receive.
>

Why would you think so?  Did your IPv4 router not accept a /8 netmask even 
though there was very little chance you would get one?  I know most of my 
programmers are trained to anticipate all of the possible options for an input. 
 Sometimes this is hard to define but with IPv6 it is clearly in the 
specification.

Would you consider an ISP that hands out /56s to be "degraded"?  Most users 
wouldn't know the difference and if you offered the /48 on request (or even 
better automatically on depletion of the /56) what would be degraded?

>This is already evident in the IPv4 world. Even though my TiVO is 100% 
>reachable from the internet, I can’t use any of TiVO’s applications to access 
>it directly, I have to work through their proxy servers that depend on 
>periodic >polling from my devices to work because they assume everyone is 
>stuck behind NAT.
>

That would be Tivo's fault wouldn't it.  It would be trivially simple for them 
to know if they were behind a NAT so I am guessing they force you through their 
proxy for other purposes.  Should we re-engineer the way IP works so that Tivo 
can write crap code?  Should we limit all future v6 users today so that crap 
CPE works now?

>Can you offer one valid reason not to give residential users /48s? Any benefit 
>whatsoever?
>

I never said that there was a valid reason not to use /48s or /56s or whatever 
prefix you like.  What I am saying is don't force that decision on anyone 
today.  IPv6 does not force the use of any particular prefix length for an end 
user, why should you?  Why do we all have to use the same length anyways?

>Owen


Steven Naslund
Chicago IL

Reply via email to