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RFC1900 - Renumbering Needs Work

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
窄屏简体版  字體: |||超大  

Network Working Group B. Carpenter

Request for Comments: 1900 Y. Rekhter

Category: Informational IAB

February 1996

Renumbering Needs Work

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo

does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of

this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

Renumbering, i.e., changes in the IP addressing information of

various network components, is likely to become more and more

widespread and common. The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) would

like to stress the need to develop and deploy solutions that would

facilitate sUCh changes.

Table of Contents

1. Motivation................................................... 1

2. DNS versus IP Addresses...................................... 2

3. Recommendations.............................................. 3

4. Security Considerations...................................... 4

Acknowledgements................................................ 4

Authors' Addresses.............................................. 4

1. Motivation

Hosts in an IP network are identified by IP addresses, and the IP

address prefixes of subnets are advertised by routing protocols. A

change in such IP addressing information associated with a host or

subnet is known as "renumbering".

Renumbering may occur for a variety of reasons. For example, moving

an IP host from one subnet to another requires changing the host's IP

address. Physically splitting a subnet due to traffic overload may

also require renumbering. A third example where renumbering may

happen is when an organization changes its addressing plan. Such

changes imply changing not only hosts' addresses, but subnet numbers

as well. These are just three examples that illustrate possible

scenarios where renumbering could occur.

Increasingly, renumbering will be needed for organizations that

require Internet-wide IP connectivity, but do not themselves provide

a sufficient degree of address information aggregation. Unless and

until viable alternatives are developed, extended deployment of

Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) is vital to keep the Internet

routing system alive and to maintain continuous uninterrupted growth

of the Internet. With current IP technology, this requires such

organizations to use addresses belonging to a single large block of

address space, allocated to their current service provider which acts

as an aggregator for these addresses. To contain the growth of

routing information, whenever such an organization changes to a new

service provider, the organization's addresses will have to change.

Occasionally, service providers themselves may have to change to a

new and larger block of address space. In either of these cases, to

contain the growth of routing information, the organizations

concerned would need to renumber their subnet(s) and host(s). If the

organization does not renumber, then some of the potential

consequences may include (a) limited (less than Internet-wide) IP

connectivity, or (b) extra cost to offset the overhead associated

with the organization's routing information that Internet Service

Providers have to maintain, or both.

Currently, renumbering is usually a costly, tedious and error-prone

process. It normally requires the services of eXPerts in the area

and considerable advance planning. Tools to facilitate renumbering

are few, not widely available, and not widely deployed. While a

variety of ad hoc approaches to renumbering have been developed and

used, the overall situation is far from satisfactory. There is

little or no documentation that describes renumbering procedures.

While renumbering occurs in various parts of the Internet, there is

little or no documented experience sharing.

2. DNS versus IP Addresses

Within the Internet architecture an individual host can be identified

by the IP address(es) assigned to the network interface(s) on that

host. The Domain Name System (DNS) provides a convenient way to

associate legible names with IP addresses. The DNS name space is

independent of the IP address space. DNS names are usually related

to the ownership and function of the hosts, not to the mechanisms of

addressing and routing. A change in DNS name may be a sign of a real

change in function or ownership, whereas a change in IP address is a

purely technical event.

Expressing information in terms of Domain Names allows one to defer

binding between a particular network entity and its IP address until

run time. Domain Names for enterprises, and Fully Qualified Domain

Names (FQDNs, see RFC1594) for servers and many user systems, are

expected to be fairly long-lived, and more stable than IP addresses.

Deferring the binding avoids the risk of changed mapping between IP

addresses and specific network entities (due to changing addressing

information). Moreover, reliance on FQDNs (rather than IP addresses)

also localizes to the DNS the changes needed to deal with changing

addressing information due to renumbering.

In some cases, both the addresses and FQDNs of desk top or portable

systems are allocated dynamically. It is only a highly responsive

dynamic DNS update mechanism that can cope with this.

3. Recommendations

To make renumbering more feasible, the IAB strongly recommends that

all designs and implementations should minimise the cases in which IP

addresses are stored in non-volatile storage maintained by humans,

such as configuration files. Configuration information used by

TCP/IP protocols should be expressed, whenever possible, in terms of

Fully Qualified Domain Names, rather than IP addresses. Hardcoding IP

addresses into applications should be deprecated. Files containing

lists of name to address mappings, other than that used as part of

DNS configuration, should be deprecated, and avoided wherever

possible.

There are times when legacy applications which require configuration

files with IP addresses rather than Domain Names cannot be upgraded

to meet these recommendations. In those cases, it is recommended that

the configuration files be generated automatically from another file

which uses Domain Names, with the substitution of addresses being

done by lookup in the DNS.

Use of licensing technology that is based upon the IP address of a

host system makes renumbering quite difficult. Therefore, the use of

such technology should be strongly discouraged.

The development and deployment of a toolkit to facilitate and

automate host renumbering is essential. The Dynamic Host

Configuration Protocol (DHCP) is clearly an essential part of such a

toolkit. The IAB strongly encourages implementation and wide-scale

deployment of DHCP. Dynamic router discovery (RFC1256) and service

location (work in progress in the IETF) also belong in this toolkit.

Support for dynamic update capabilities to the Domain Name System

(DNS) that could be done with sufficient authentication would further

facilitate host renumbering. The IAB strongly encourages progression

of work in this area towards standardization within the IETF, with

the goal of integrating DHCP and dynamic update capabilities to

provide truly autoconfigurable TCP/IP hosts.

The IAB strongly encourages sharing of experience with renumbering

and documenting this sharing within the Internet community. The IAB

suggests that the IETF (and specifically its Operational Requirements

Area) may be the most appropriate place to develop such

documentation. The IAB welcomes the creation of the PIER (Procedures

for Internet and Enterprise Renumbering) working group.

4. Security Considerations

Renumbering is believed to be compatible with the Internet security

architecture, as long as addresses do not change during the lifetime

of a security association.

Acknowledgements

This document is a collective product of the Internet Architecture

Board.

Useful comments were received from several people, especially Michael

Patton, Steve Bellovin, Jeff Schiller, and Bill Simpson.

Authors' Addresses

Brian E. Carpenter

Group Leader, Communications Systems

Computing and Networks Division

CERN

European Laboratory for Particle Physics

1211 Geneva 23, Switzerland

Phone: +41 22 767-4967

Fax: +41 22 767-7155

Telex: 419000 cer ch

EMail:

brian@dxcoms.cern.ch

Yakov Rekhter

cisco Systems

170 West Tasman Drive

San Jose, CA 95134

Phone: (914) 528-0090

EMail: yakov@cisco.com

 
 
 
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