分享
 
 
 

RFC1887 - An Architecture for IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation

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

Network Working Group Y. Rekhter

Request for Comments: 1887 cisco Systems

Category: Informational T. Li

cisco Systems

Editors

December 1995

An Architecture for IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation

Status of this Memo

This document provides information for the Internet community. This

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

of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

This document provides an architecture for allocating IPv6 [1]

unicast addresses in the Internet. The overall IPv6 addressing

architecture is defined in [2]. This document does not go into the

details of an addressing plan.

1. Scope

The global internet can be modeled as a collection of hosts

interconnected via transmission and switching facilities. Control

over the collection of hosts and the transmission and switching

facilities that compose the networking resources of the global

internet is not homogeneous, but is distributed among multiple

administrative authorities. Resources under control of a single

administration within a contiguous segment of network topology form a

domain. For the rest of this paper, `domain' and `routing domain'

will be used interchangeably.

Domains that share their resources with other domains are called

network service providers (or just providers). Domains that utilize

other domain's resources are called network service subscribers (or

just subscribers). A given domain may act as a provider and a

subscriber simultaneously.

There are two ASPects of interest when discussing IPv6 unicast

address allocation within the Internet. The first is the set of

administrative requirements for oBTaining and allocating IPv6

addresses; the second is the technical aspect of sUCh assignments,

having largely to do with routing, both within a routing domain

(intra-domain routing) and between routing domains (inter-domain

routing). This paper focuses on the technical issues.

In the current Internet many routing domains (such as corporate and

campus networks) attach to transit networks (such as regionals) in

only one or a small number of carefully controlled Access points.

The former act as subscribers, while the latter act as providers.

Addressing solutions which require substantial changes or constraints

on the current topology are not considered.

The architecture and recommendations in this paper are oriented

primarily toward the large-scale division of IPv6 address allocation

in the Internet. Topics covered include:

- Benefits of encoding some topological information in IPv6

addresses to significantly reduce routing protocol overhead;

- The anticipated need for additional levels of hierarchy in

Internet addressing to support network growth;

- The recommended mapping between Internet topological entities

(i.e., service providers, and service subscribers) and IPv6

addressing and routing components;

- The recommended division of IPv6 address assignment among

service providers (e.g., backbones, regionals), and service

subscribers (e.g., sites);

- Allocation of the IPv6 addresses by the Internet Registry;

- Choice of the high-order portion of the IPv6 addresses in leaf

routing domains that are connected to more than one service

provider (e.g., backbone or a regional network).

It is noted that there are other aspects of IPv6 address allocation,

both technical and administrative, that are not covered in this

paper. Topics not covered or mentioned only superficially include:

- A specific plan for address assignment;

- Embedding address spaces from other network layer protocols

(including IPv4) in the IPv6 address space and the addressing

architecture for such embedded addresses;

- Multicast addressing;

- Address allocation for mobile hosts;

- Identification of specific administrative domains in the

Internet;

- Policy or mechanisms for making registered information known to

third parties (such as the entity to which a specific IPv6

address or a potion of the IPv6 address space has been

allocated);

- How a routing domain (especially a site) should organize its

internal topology or allocate portions of its IPv6 address

space; the relationship between topology and addresses is

discussed, but the method of deciding on a particular topology

or internal addressing plan is not; and,

- Procedures for assigning host IPv6 addresses.

2. Background

Some background information is provided in this section that is

helpful in understanding the issues involved in IPv6 address

allocation. A brief discussion of IPv6 routing is provided.

IPv6 partitions the routing problem into three parts:

- Routing exchanges between end systems and routers,

- Routing exchanges between routers in the same routing domain,

and,

- Routing among routing domains.

3. IPv6 Addresses and Routing

For the purposes of this paper, an IPv6 address prefix is defined as

an IPv6 address and some indication of the leftmost contiguous

significant bits within this address portion. Throughout this paper

IPv6 address prefixes will be represented as X/Y, where X is a prefix

of an IPv6 address in length greater than or equal to that specified

by Y and Y is the (decimal) number of the leftmost contiguous

significant bits within this address. In the notation, X, the prefix

of an IPv6 address [2] will have trailing insignificant digits

removed. Thus, an IPv6 prefix might appear to be 43DC:0A21:76/40.

When determining an administrative policy for IPv6 address

assignment, it is important to understand the technical consequences.

The objective behind the use of hierarchical routing is to achieve

some level of routing data abstraction, or summarization, to reduce

the cpu, memory, and transmission bandwidth consumed in support of

routing.

While the notion of routing data abstraction may be applied to

various types of routing information, this paper focuses on one

particular type, namely reachability information. Reachability

information describes the set of reachable destinations. Abstraction

of reachability information dictates that IPv6 addresses be assigned

according to topological routing structures. However in practice

administrative assignment falls along organizational or political

boundaries. These may not be congruent to topological boundaries and

therefore the requirements of the two may collide. It is necessary to

find a balance between these two needs.

Reachability information abstraction occurs at the boundary between

hierarchically arranged topological routing structures. An element

lower in the hierarchy reports summary reachability information to

its parent(s).

At routing domain boundaries, IPv6 address information is exchanged

(statically or dynamically) with other routing domains. If IPv6

addresses within a routing domain are all drawn from non-contiguous

IPv6 address spaces (allowing no abstraction), then the address

information exchanged at the boundary consists of an enumerated list

of all the IPv6 addresses.

Alternatively, should the routing domain draw IPv6 addresses for all

the hosts within the domain from a single IPv6 address prefix,

boundary routing information can be summarized into the single IPv6

address prefix. This permits substantial data reduction and allows

better scaling (as compared to the uncoordinated addressing discussed

in the previous paragraph).

If routing domains are interconnected in a more-or-less random (i.e.,

non-hierarchical) scheme, it is quite likely that no further

abstraction of routing data can occur. Since routing domains would

have no defined hierarchical relationship, administrators would not

be able to assign IPv6 addresses within the domains out of some

common prefix for the purpose of data abstraction. The result would

be flat inter-domain routing; all routing domains would need eXPlicit

knowledge of all other routing domains that they route to. This can

work well in small and medium sized internets. However, this does

not scale to very large internets. For example, we expect IPv6 to

grow to hundreds of thousands of routing domains in North America

alone. This requires a greater degree of the reachability

information abstraction beyond that which can be achieved at the

`routing domain' level.

In the Internet, it should be possible to significantly constrain the

volume and the complexity of routing information by taking advantage

of the existing hierarchical interconnectivity. This is discussed

further in Section 5. Thus, there is the opportunity for a group of

routing domains each to be assigned an address prefix from a shorter

prefix assigned to another routing domain whose function is to

interconnect the group of routing domains. Each member of the group

of routing domains now has its (somewhat longer) prefix, from which

it assigns its addresses.

The most straightforward case of this occurs when there is a set of

routing domains which are all attached to a single service provider

domain (e.g., regional network), and which use that provider for all

external (inter-domain) traffic. A short prefix may be given to the

provider, which then gives slightly longer prefixes (based on the

provider's prefix) to each of the routing domains that it

interconnects. This allows the provider, when informing other routing

domains of the addresses that it can reach, to abstract the

reachability information for a large number of routing domains into a

single prefix. This approach therefore can allow a great deal of

reduction of routing information, and thereby can greatly improve the

scalability of inter-domain routing.

Clearly, this approach is recursive and can be carried through

several iterations. Routing domains at any `level' in the hierarchy

may use their prefix as the basis for subsequent suballocations,

assuming that the IPv6 addresses remain within the overall length and

structure constraints.

At this point, we observe that the number of nodes at each lower

level of a hierarchy tends to grow exponentially. Thus the greatest

gains in the reachability information abstraction (for the benefit of

all higher levels of the hierarchy) occur when the reachability

information aggregation occurs near the leaves of the hierarchy; the

gains drop significantly at each higher level. Therefore, the law of

diminishing returns suggests that at some point data abstraction

ceases to produce significant benefits. Determination of the point

at which data abstraction ceases to be of benefit requires a careful

consideration of the number of routing domains that are expected to

occur at each level of the hierarchy (over a given period of time),

compared to the number of routing domains and address prefixes that

can conveniently and efficiently be handled via dynamic inter-domain

routing protocols.

3.1 Efficiency versus Decentralized Control.

If the Internet plans to support a decentralized address

administration, then there is a balance that must be sought between

the requirements on IPv6 addresses for efficient routing and the need

for decentralized address administration. A coherent addressing plan

at any level within the Internet must take the alternatives into

careful consideration.

As an example of administrative decentralization, suppose the IPv6

address prefix 43/8 identifies part of the IPv6 address space

allocated for North America. All addresses within this prefix may be

allocated along topological boundaries in support of increased data

abstraction. Within this prefix, addresses may be allocated on a

per-provider bases, based on geography or some other topologically

significant criteria. For the purposes of this example, suppose that

this prefix is allocated on a per-provider basis. Subscribers within

North America use parts of the IPv6 address space that is underneath

the IPv6 address space of their service providers. Within a routing

domain addresses for subnetworks and hosts are allocated from the

unique IPv6 prefix assigned to the domain according to the addressing

plan for that domain.

4. IPv6 Address Administration and Routing in the Internet

Internet routing components -- service providers (e.g., backbones,

regional networks), and service subscribers (e.g., sites or campuses)

-- are arranged hierarchically for the most part. A natural mapping

from these components to IPv6 routing components is for providers and

subscribers to act as routing domains.

Alternatively, a subscriber (e.g., a site) may choose to operate as a

part of a domain formed by a service provider. We assume that some,

if not most, sites will prefer to operate as part of their provider's

routing domain, exchanging routing information directly with the

provider. The site is still allocated a prefix from the provider's

address space, and the provider will advertise its own prefix into

inter-domain routing.

Given such a mapping, where should address administration and

allocation be performed to satisfy both administrative

decentralization and data abstraction? The following possibilities

are considered:

1) At some part within a routing domain,

2) At the leaf routing domain,

3) At the transit routing domain (TRD), and

4) At some other, more general boundaries, such as at the

continental boundary.

A part within a routing domain corresponds to any arbitrary connected

set of subnetworks. If a domain is composed of multiple subnetworks,

they are interconnected via routers. Leaf routing domains correspond

to sites, where the primary purpose is to provide intra-domain

routing services. Transit routing domains are deployed to carry

transit (i.e., inter-domain) traffic; backbones and providers are

TRDs. More general boundaries can be seen as topologically

significant collections of TRDs.

The greatest burden in transmitting and operating on reachability

information is at the top of the routing hierarchy, where

reachability information tends to accumulate. In the Internet, for

example, providers must manage reachability information for all

subscribers directly connected to the provider. Traffic destined for

other providers is generally routed to the backbones (which act as

providers as well). The backbones, however, must be cognizant of the

reachability information for all attached providers and their

associated subscribers.

In general, the advantage of abstracting routing information at a

given level of the routing hierarchy is greater at the higher levels

of the hierarchy. There is relatively little direct benefit to the

administration that performs the abstraction, since it must maintain

routing information individually on each attached topological routing

structure.

For example, suppose that a given site is trying to decide whether to

obtain an IPv6 address prefix directly from the IPv6 address space

allocated for North America, or from the IPv6 address space allocated

to its service provider. If considering only their own self-interest,

the site itself and the attached provider have little reason to

choose one approach or the other. The site must use one prefix or

another; the source of the prefix has little effect on routing

efficiency within the site. The provider must maintain information

about each attached site in order to route, regardless of any

commonality in the prefixes of the sites.

However, there is a difference when the provider distributes routing

information to other providers (e.g., backbones or TRDs). In the

first case, the provider cannot aggregate the site's address into its

own prefix; the address must be explicitly listed in routing

exchanges, resulting in an additional burden to other providers which

must exchange and maintain this information.

In the second case, each other provider (e.g., backbone or TRD) sees

a single address prefix for the provider, which encompasses the new

site. This avoids the exchange of additional routing information to

identify the new site's address prefix. Thus, the advantages

primarily accrue to other providers which maintain routing

information about this site and provider.

One might apply a supplier/consumer model to this problem: the higher

level (e.g., a backbone) is a supplier of routing services, while the

lower level (e.g., a TRD) is the consumer of these services. The

price charged for services is based upon the cost of providing them.

The overhead of managing a large table of addresses for routing to an

attached topological entity contributes to this cost.

At present the Internet, however, is not a market economy. Rather,

efficient operation is based on cooperation. The recommendations

discussed below describe simple and tractable ways of managing the

IPv6 address space that benefit the entire community.

4.1 Administration of IPv6 addresses within a domain.

If individual hosts take their IPv6 addresses from a myriad of

unrelated IPv6 address spaces, there will be effectively no data

abstraction beyond what is built into existing intra-domain routing

protocols. For example, assume that within a routing domain uses

three independent prefixes assigned from three different IPv6 address

spaces associated with three different attached providers.

This has a negative effect on inter-domain routing, particularly on

those other domains which need to maintain routes to this domain.

There is no common prefix that can be used to represent these IPv6

addresses and therefore no summarization can take place at the

routing domain boundary. When addresses are advertised by this

routing domain to other routing domains, an enumerated list of the

three individual prefixes must be used.

The number of IPv6 prefixes that leaf routing domains would advertise

is on the order of the number of prefixes assigned to the domain; the

number of prefixes a provider's routing domain would advertise is

approximately the number of prefixes attached to the client leaf

routing domains; and for a backbone this would be summed across all

attached providers. This situation is just barely acceptable in the

current Internet, and is intractable for the IPv6 Internet. A

greater degree of hierarchical information reduction is necessary to

allow continued growth in the Internet.

4.2 Administration at the Leaf Routing Domain

As mentioned previously, the greatest degree of data abstraction

comes at the lowest levels of the hierarchy. Providing each leaf

routing domain (that is, site) with a contiguous block of addresses

from its provider's address block results in the biggest single

increase in abstraction. From outside the leaf routing domain, the

set of all addresses reachable in the domain can then be represented

by a single prefix. Further, all destinations reachable within the

provider's prefix can be represented by a single prefix.

For example, consider a single campus which is a leaf routing domain

which would currently require 4 different IPv6 prefixes. Instead,

they may be given a single prefix which provides the same number of

destination addresses. Further, since the prefix is a subset of the

provider's prefix, they impose no additional burden on the higher

levels of the routing hierarchy.

There is a close relationship between hosts and routing domains. The

routing domain represents the only path between a host and the rest

of the internetwork. It is reasonable that this relationship also

extend to include a common IPv6 addressing space. Thus, the hosts

within the leaf routing domain should take their IPv6 addresses from

the prefix assigned to the leaf routing domain.

4.3 Administration at the Transit Routing Domain

Two kinds of transit routing domains are considered, direct providers

and indirect providers. Most of the subscribers of a direct provider

are domains that act solely as service subscribers (they carry no

transit traffic). Most of the subscribers of an indirect provider are

domains that, themselves, act as service providers. In present

terminology a backbone is an indirect provider, while an NSFnet

regional is an example of a direct provider. Each case is discussed

separately below.

4.3.1 Direct Service Providers

In a provider-based addressing plan, direct service providers should

use their IPv6 address space for assigning IPv6 addresses from a

unique prefix to the leaf routing domains that they serve. The

benefits derived from data abstraction are greater than in the case

of leaf routing domains, and the additional degree of data

abstraction provided by this may be necessary in the short term.

As an illustration consider an example of a direct provider that

serves 100 clients. If each client takes its addresses from 4

independent address spaces then the total number of entries that are

needed to handle routing to these clients is 400 (100 clients times 4

providers). If each client takes its addresses from a single address

space then the total number of entries would be only 100. Finally, if

all the clients take their addresses from the same address space then

the total number of entries would be only 1.

We expect that in the near term the number of routing domains in the

Internet will grow to the point that it will be infeasible to route

on the basis of a flat field of routing domains. It will therefore be

essential to provide a greater degree of information abstraction with

IPv6.

Direct providers may give part of their address space (prefixes) to

leaf domains, based on an address prefix given to the provider. This

results in direct providers advertising to other providers a small

fraction of the number of address prefixes that would be necessary if

they enumerated the individual prefixes of the leaf routing domains.

This represents a significant savings given the expected scale of

global internetworking.

The efficiencies gained in inter-domain routing clearly warrant the

adoption of IPv6 address prefixes derived from the IPv6 address space

of the providers.

The mechanics of this scenario are straightforward. Each direct

provider is given a unique small set of IPv6 address prefixes, from

which its attached leaf routing domains can allocate slightly longer

IPv6 address prefixes. For example assume that NIST is a leaf

routing domain whose inter-domain link is via SURANet. If SURANet is

assigned an unique IPv6 address prefix 43DC:0A21/32, NIST could use a

unique IPv6 prefix of 43DC:0A21:7652:34/56.

If a direct service provider is connected to another provider(s)

(either direct or indirect) via multiple attachment points, then in

certain cases it may be advantageous to the direct provider to exert

a certain degree of control over the coupling between the attachment

points and flow of the traffic destined to a particular subscriber.

Such control can be facilitated by first partitioning all the

subscribers into groups, such that traffic destined to all the

subscribers within a group should flow through a particular

attachment point. Once the partitioning is done, the address space of

the provider is subdivided along the group boundaries. A leaf routing

domain that is willing to accept prefixes derived from its direct

provider gets a prefix from the provider's address space subdivision

associated with the group the domain belongs to.

At the attachment point (between the direct and indirect providers)

the direct provider advertises both an address prefix that

corresponds to the address space of the provider, and one or more

address prefixes that correspond to the address space associated with

each subdivision. The latter prefixes match the former prefix, but

are longer than the former prefix. Use of the "longest match"

forwarding algorithm by the recipients of these prefixes (e.g., a

router within the indirect provider) results in forcing the flow of

the traffic to destinations depicted by the longer address prefixes

through the attachment point where these prefixes are advertised to

the indirect provider.

For example, assume that SURANet is connected to another regional

provider, NEARNet, at two attachment points, A1 and A2. SURANet is

assigned a unique IPv6 address prefix 43DC:0A21/32. To exert control

over the traffic flow destined to a particular subscriber within

SURANet, SURANet may subdivide the address space assigned to it into

two groups, 43DC:0A21:8/34 and 43DC:0A21:C/34. The former group may

be used for sites attached to SURANet that are closer (as determined

by the topology within SURANet) to A1, while the latter group may be

used for sites that are closer to A2. The SURANet router at A1

advertises both 43DC:0A21/32 and 43DC:0A21:8/34 address prefixes to

the router in NEARNet. Likewise, the SURANet router at A2 advertises

both 43DC:0A21/32 and 43DC:0A21:C/34 address prefixes to the router

in NEARNet. Traffic that flows through NEARNet to destinations that

match 43DC:0A21:8/34 address prefix would enter SURANet at A1, while

traffic to destinations that match 43DC:0A21:C/34 address prefix

would enter SURANet at A2.

Note that the advertisement by the direct provider of the routing

information associated with each subdivision must be done with care

to ensure that such an advertisement would not result in a global

distribution of separate reachability information associated with

each subdivision, unless such distribution is warranted for some

other purposes (e.g., supporting certain aspects of policy-based

routing).

4.3.2 Indirect Providers (Backbones)

There does not at present appear to be a strong case for direct

providers to take their address spaces from the the IPv6 space of an

indirect provider (e.g., backbone). The benefit in routing data

abstraction is relatively small. The number of direct providers today

is in the tens and an order of magnitude increase would not cause an

undue burden on the backbones. Also, it may be expected that as time

goes by there will be increased direct interconnection of the direct

providers, leaf routing domains directly attached to the backbones,

and international links directly attached to the providers. Under

these circumstances, the distinction between direct and indirect

providers may become blurred.

An additional factor that discourages allocation of IPv6 addresses

from a backbone prefix is that the backbones and their attached

providers are perceived as being independent. Providers may take

their long-haul service from one or more backbones, or may switch

backbones should a more cost-effective service be provided elsewhere.

Having IPv6 addresses derived from a backbone is inconsistent with

the nature of the relationship.

4.4 Multi-homed Routing Domains

The discussions in Section 4.3 suggest methods for allocating IPv6

addresses based on direct or indirect provider connectivity. This

allows a great deal of information reduction to be achieved for those

routing domains which are attached to a single TRD. In particular,

such routing domains may select their IPv6 addresses from a space

delegated to them by the direct provider. This allows the provider,

when announcing the addresses that it can reach to other providers,

to use a single address prefix to describe a large number of IPv6

addresses corresponding to multiple routing domains.

However, there are additional considerations for routing domains

which are attached to multiple providers. Such `multi-homed' routing

domains may, for example, consist of single-site campuses and

companies which are attached to multiple backbones, large

organizations which are attached to different providers at different

locations in the same country, or multi-national organizations which

are attached to backbones in a variety of countries worldwide. There

are a number of possible ways to deal with these multi-homed routing

domains.

4.4.1 Solution 1

One possible solution is for each multi-homed organization to obtain

its IPv6 address space independently of the providers to which it is

attached. This allows each multi-homed organization to base its IPv6

assignments on a single prefix, and to thereby summarize the set of

all IPv6 addresses reachable within that organization via a single

prefix. The disadvantage of this approach is that since the IPv6

address for that organization has no relationship to the addresses of

any particular TRD, the TRDs to which this organization is attached

will need to advertise the prefix for this organization to other

providers. Other providers (potentially worldwide) will need to

maintain an explicit entry for that organization in their routing

tables.

For example, suppose that a very large North American company `Mega

Big International Incorporated' (MBII) has a fully interconnected

internal network and is assigned a single prefix as part of the North

American prefix. It is likely that outside of North America, a

single entry may be maintained in routing tables for all North

American Destinations. However, within North America, every provider

will need to maintain a separate address entry for MBII. If MBII is

in fact an international corporation, then it may be necessary for

every provider worldwide to maintain a separate entry for MBII

(including backbones to which MBII is not attached). Clearly this may

be acceptable if there are a small number of such multi-homed routing

domains, but would place an unacceptable load on routers within

backbones if all organizations were to choose such address

assignments. This solution may not scale to internets where there

are many hundreds of thousands of multi-homed organizations.

4.4.2 Solution 2

A second possible approach would be for multi-homed organizations to

be assigned a separate IPv6 address space for each connection to a

TRD, and to assign a single prefix to some subset of its domain(s)

based on the closest interconnection point. For example, if MBII had

connections to two providers in the U.S. (one east coast, and one

west coast), as well as three connections to national backbones in

Europe, and one in the far east, then MBII may make use of six

different address prefixes. Each part of MBII would be assigned a

single address prefix based on the nearest connection.

For purposes of external routing of traffic from outside MBII to a

destination inside of MBII, this approach works similarly to treating

MBII as six separate organizations. For purposes of internal routing,

or for routing traffic from inside of MBII to a destination outside

of MBII, this approach works the same as the first solution.

If we assume that incoming traffic (coming from outside of MBII, with

a destination within MBII) is always to enter via the nearest point

to the destination, then each TRD which has a connection to MBII

needs to announce to other TRDs the ability to reach only those parts

of MBII whose address is taken from its own address space. This

implies that no additional routing information needs to be exchanged

between TRDs, resulting in a smaller load on the inter-domain routing

tables maintained by TRDs when compared to the first solution. This

solution therefore scales better to extremely large internets

containing very large numbers of multi-homed organizations.

One problem with the second solution is that backup routes to multi-

homed organizations are not automatically maintained. With the first

solution, each TRD, in announcing the ability to reach MBII,

specifies that it is able to reach all of the hosts within MBII. With

the second solution, each TRD announces that it can reach all of the

hosts based on its own address prefix, which only includes some of

the hosts within MBII. If the connection between MBII and one

particular TRD were severed, then the hosts within MBII with

addresses based on that TRD would become unreachable via inter-domain

routing. The impact of this problem can be reduced somewhat by

maintenance of additional information within routing tables, but this

reduces the scaling advantage of the second approach.

The second solution also requires that when external connectivity

changes, internal addresses also change.

Also note that this and the previous approach will tend to cause

packets to take different routes. With the first approach, packets

from outside of MBII destined for within MBII will tend to enter via

the point which is closest to the source (which will therefore tend

to maximize the load on the networks internal to MBII). With the

second solution, packets from outside destined for within MBII will

tend to enter via the point which is closest to the destination

(which will tend to minimize the load on the networks within MBII,

and maximize the load on the TRDs).

These solutions also have different effects on policies. For example,

suppose that country `X' has a law that traffic from a source within

country X to a destination within country X must at all times stay

entirely within the country. With the first solution, it is not

possible to determine from the destination address whether or not the

destination is within the country. With the second solution, a

separate address may be assigned to those hosts which are within

country X, thereby allowing routing policies to be followed.

Similarly, suppose that `Little Small Company' (LSC) has a policy

that its packets may never be sent to a destination that is within

MBII. With either solution, the routers within LSC may be configured

to discard any traffic that has a destination within MBII's address

space. However, with the first solution this requires one entry; with

the second it requires many entries and may be impossible as a

practical matter.

4.4.3 Solution 3

There are other possible solutions as well. A third approach is to

assign each multi-homed organization a single address prefix, based

on one of its connections to a TRD. Other TRDs to which the multi-

homed organization are attached maintain a routing table entry for

the organization, but are extremely selective in terms of which other

TRDs are told of this route. This approach will produce a single

`default' routing entry which all TRDs will know how to reach (since

presumably all TRDs will maintain routes to each other), while

providing more direct routing in some cases.

There is at least one situation in which this third approach is

particularly appropriate. Suppose that a special interest group of

organizations have deployed their own provider. For example, lets

suppose that the U.S. National Widget Manufacturers and Researchers

have set up a U.S.-wide provider, which is used by corporations who

manufacture widgets, and certain universities which are known for

their widget research efforts. We can expect that the various

organizations which are in the widget group will run their internal

networks as separate routing domains, and most of them will also be

attached to other TRDs (since most of the organizations involved in

widget manufacture and research will also be involved in other

activities). We can therefore expect that many or most of the

organizations in the widget group are dual-homed, with one attachment

for widget-associated communications and the other attachment for

other types of communications. Let's also assume that the total

number of organizations involved in the widget group is small enough

that it is reasonable to maintain a routing table containing one

entry per organization, but that they are distributed throughout a

larger internet with many millions of (mostly not widget-associated)

routing domains.

With the third approach, each multi-homed organization in the widget

group would make use of an address assignment based on its other

attachment(s) to TRDs (the attachments not associated with the widget

group). The widget provider would need to maintain routes to the

routing domains associated with the various member organizations.

Similarly, all members of the widget group would need to maintain a

table of routes to the other members via the widget provider.

However, since the widget provider does not inform other general

worldwide TRDs of what addresses it can reach (since the provider is

not intended for use by other outside organizations), the relatively

large set of routing prefixes needs to be maintained only in a

limited number of places. The addresses assigned to the various

organizations which are members of the widget group would provide a

`default route' via each members other attachments to TRDs, while

allowing communications within the widget group to use the preferred

path.

4.4.4 Solution 4

A fourth solution involves assignment of a particular address prefix

for routing domains which are attached to precisely two (or more)

specific routing domains. For example, suppose that there are two

providers `SouthNorthNet' and `NorthSouthNet' which have a very large

number of customers in common (i.e., there are a large number of

routing domains which are attached to both). Rather than getting two

address prefixes these organizations could obtain three prefixes.

Those routing domains which are attached to NorthSouthNet but not

attached to SouthNorthNet obtain an address assignment based on one

of the prefixes. Those routing domains which are attached to

SouthNorthNet but not to NorthSouthNet would obtain an address based

on the second prefix. Finally, those routing domains which are

multi-homed to both of these networks would obtain an address based

on the third prefix. Each of these two TRDs would then advertise two

prefixes to other TRDs, one prefix for leaf routing domains attached

to it only, and one prefix for leaf routing domains attached to both.

This fourth solution is likely to be important when use of public

data networks becomes more common. In particular, it is likely that

at some point in the future a substantial percentage of all routing

domains will be attached to public data networks. In this case,

nearly all government-sponsored networks (such as some current

regionals) may have a set of customers which overlaps substantially

with the public networks.

4.4.5 Summary

There are therefore a number of possible solutions to the problem of

assigning IPv6 addresses to multi-homed routing domains. Each of

these solutions has very different advantages and disadvantages.

Each solution places a different real (i.e., financial) cost on the

multi-homed organizations, and on the TRDs (including those to which

the multi-homed organizations are not attached).

In addition, most of the solutions described also highlight the need

for each TRD to develop a policy on whether and under what conditions

to accept addresses that are not based on its own address prefix, and

how such non-local addresses will be treated. For example, a somewhat

conservative policy might be that non-local IPv6 address prefixes

will be accepted from any attached leaf routing domain, but not

advertised to other TRDs. In a less conservative policy, a TRD might

accept such non-local prefixes and agree to exchange them with a

defined set of other TRDs (this set could be an a priori group of

TRDs that have something in common such as geographical location, or

the result of an agreement specific to the requesting leaf routing

domain). Various policies involve real costs to TRDs, which may be

reflected in those policies.

4.5 Private Links

The discussion up to this point concentrates on the relationship

between IPv6 addresses and routing between various routing domains

over transit routing domains, where each transit routing domain

interconnects a large number of routing domains and offers a more-

or-less public service.

However, there may also exist a number of links which interconnect

two routing domains in such a way, that usage of these links may be

limited to carrying traffic only between the two routing domains.

We'll refer to such links as "private".

For example, let's suppose that the XYZ corporation does a lot of

business with MBII. In this case, XYZ and MBII may contract with a

carrier to provide a private link between the two corporations, where

this link may only be used for packets whose source is within one of

the two corporations, and whose destination is within the other of

the two corporations. Finally, suppose that the point-to-point link

is connected between a single router (router X) within XYZ

corporation and a single router (router M) within MBII. It is

therefore necessary to configure router X to know which addresses can

be reached over this link (specifically, all addresses reachable in

MBII). Similarly, it is necessary to configure router M to know which

addresses can be reached over this link (specifically, all addresses

reachable in XYZ Corporation).

The important observation to be made here is that the additional

connectivity due to such private links may be ignored for the purpose

of IPv6 address allocation, and do not pose a problem for routing on

a larger scale. This is because the routing information associated

with such connectivity is not propagated throughout the internet, and

therefore does not need to be collapsed into a TRD's prefix.

In our example, let's suppose that the XYZ corporation has a single

connection to a regional, and has therefore uses the IPv6 address

space from the space given to that regional. Similarly, let's

suppose that MBII, as an international corporation with connections

to six different providers, has chosen the second solution from

Section 4.4, and therefore has obtained six different address

allocations. In this case, all addresses reachable in the XYZ

Corporation can be described by a single address prefix (implying

that router M only needs to be configured with a single address

prefix to represent the addresses reachable over this link). All

addresses reachable in MBII can be described by six address prefixes

(implying that router X needs to be configured with six address

prefixes to represent the addresses reachable over the link).

In some cases, such private links may be permitted to forward traffic

for a small number of other routing domains, such as closely

affiliated organizations. This will increase the configuration

requirements slightly. However, provided that the number of

organizations using the link is relatively small, then this still

does not represent a significant problem.

Note that the relationship between routing and IPv6 addressing

described in other sections of this paper is concerned with problems

in scaling caused by large, essentially public transit routing

domains which interconnect a large number of routing domains.

However, for the purpose of IPv6 address allocation, private links

which interconnect only a small number of private routing domains do

not pose a problem, and may be ignored. For example, this implies

that a single leaf routing domain which has a single connection to a

`public' provider (e.g., the Alternet), plus a number of private

links to other leaf routing domains, can be treated as if it were

single-homed to the provider for the purpose of IPv6 address

allocation. We expect that this is also another way of dealing with

multi-homed domains.

4.6 Zero-Homed Routing Domains

Currently, a very large number of organizations have internal

communications networks which are not connected to any service

providers. Such organizations may, however, have a number of private

links that they use for communications with other organizations. Such

organizations do not participate in global routing, but are satisfied

with reachability to those organizations with which they have

established private links. These are referred to as zero-homed

routing domains.

Zero-homed routing domains can be considered as the degenerate case

of routing domains with private links, as discussed in the previous

section, and do not pose a problem for inter-domain routing. As

above, the routing information exchanged across the private links

sees very limited distribution, usually only to the routing domain at

the other end of the link. Thus, there are no address abstraction

requirements beyond those inherent in the address prefixes exchanged

across the private link.

However, it is important that zero-homed routing domains use valid

globally unique IPv6 addresses. Suppose that the zero-homed routing

domain is connected through a private link to a routing domain.

Further, this routing domain participates in an internet that

subscribes to the global IPv6 addressing plan. This domain must be

able to distinguish between the zero-homed routing domain's IPv6

addresses and any other IPv6 addresses that it may need to route to.

The only way this can be guaranteed is if the zero-homed routing

domain uses globally unique IPv6 addresses.

Whereas globally unique addresses are necessary to differentiate

between destinations in the Internet, globally unique addresses may

not be sufficient to guarantee global connectivity. If a zero-homed

routing domain gets connected to the Internet, the block of addresses

used within the domain may not be related to the block of addresses

allocated to the domain's direct provider. In order to maintain the

gains given by hierarchical routing and address assignment the zero-

homed domain should under such circumstances change addresses

assigned to the systems within the domain.

4.7 Continental aggregation

Another level of hierarchy may also be used in this addressing scheme

to further reduce the amount of routing information necessary for

global routing. Continental aggregation is useful because

continental boundaries provide natural barriers to topological

connection and administrative boundaries. Thus, it presents a

natural boundary for another level of aggregation of inter-domain

routing information. To make use of this, it is necessary that each

continent be assigned an appropriate contiguous block of addresses.

Providers (both direct and indirect) within that continent would

allocate their addresses from this space. Note that there are

numerous exceptions to this, in which a service provider (either

direct or indirect) spans a continental division. These exceptions

can be handled similarly to multi-homed routing domains, as discussed

above.

The benefit of continental aggregation is that it helps to absorb the

entropy introduced within continental routing caused by the cases

where an organization must use an address prefix which must be

advertised beyond its direct provider. In such cases, if the address

is taken from the continental prefix, the additional cost of the

route is not propagated past the point where continental aggregation

takes place.

Note that, in contrast to the case of providers, the aggregation of

continental routing information may not be done on the continent to

which the prefix is allocated. The cost of inter-continental links

(and especially trans-oceanic links) is very high. If aggregation is

performed on the `near' side of the link, then routing information

about unreachable destinations within that continent can only reside

on that continent. Alternatively, if continental aggregation is done

on the `far' side of an inter-continental link, the `far' end can

perform the aggregation and inject it into continental routing. This

means that destinations which are part of the continental

aggregation, but for which there is not a corresponding more specific

prefix can be rejected before leaving the continent on which they

originated.

For example, suppose that Europe is assigned a prefix of 46/8, such

that European routing also contains the longer prefixes 46DC:0A01/32

and 46DC:0A02/32 . All of the longer European prefixes may be

advertised across a trans-Atlantic link to North America. The router

in North America would then aggregate these routes, and only

advertise the prefix 46/8 into North American routing. Packets which

are destined for 46DC:0A01:1234:5678:ABCD:8765:4321:AABB would

traverse North American routing, but would encounter the North

American router which performed the European aggregation. If the

prefix 46DC:0A01/32 is unreachable, the router would drop the packet

and send an unreachable message without using the trans-Atlantic

link.

4.8 Private (Local Use) Addresses

Many domains will have hosts which, for one reason or another, will

not require globally unique IPv6 addresses. A domain which decides

to use IPv6 addresses out of the private address space is able to do

so without address allocation from any authority. Conversely, the

private address prefix need not be advertised throughout the public

portion of the Internet.

In order to use private address space, a domain needs to determine

which hosts do not need to have network layer connectivity outside

the domain in the foreseeable future. Such hosts will be called

private hosts, and may use the private addresses described above if

it is topologically convenient. Private hosts can communicate with

all other hosts inside the domain, both public and private. However,

they cannot have IPv6 connectivity to any external host. While not

having external network layer connectivity, a private host can still

have access to external services via application layer relays.

Public hosts do not have connectivity to private hosts outside of

their own domain.

Because private addresses have no global meaning, reachability

information associated with the private address space shall not be

propagated on inter-domain links, and packets with private source or

destination addresses should not be forwarded across such links.

Routers in domains not using private address space, especially those

of Internet service providers, are expected to be configured to

reject (filter out) routing information that carries reachability

information associated with private addresses. If such a router

receives such information the rejection shall not be treated as a

routing protocol error.

In addition, indirect references to private addresses should be

contained within the enterprise that uses these addresses. Prominent

example of such references are DNS Resource Records. A possible

approach to avoid leaking of DNS RRs is to run two nameservers, one

external server authoritative for all globally unique IP addresses of

the enterprise and one internal nameserver authoritative for all IP

addresses of the enterprise, both public and private. In order to

ensure consistency both these servers should be configured from the

same data of which the external nameserver only receives a filtered

version. The resolvers on all internal hosts, both public and

private, query only the internal nameserver. The external server

resolves queries from resolvers outside the enterprise and is linked

into the global DNS. The internal server forwards all queries for

information outside the enterprise to the external nameserver, so all

internal hosts can access the global DNS. This ensures that

information about private hosts does not reach resolvers and

nameservers outside the enterprise.

4.9 Interaction with Policy Routing

We assume that any inter-domain routing protocol will have difficulty

trying to aggregate multiple destinations with dissimilar policies.

At the same time, the ability to aggregate routing information while

not violating routing policies is essential. Therefore, we suggest

that address allocation authorities attempt to allocate addresses so

that aggregates of destinations with similar policies can be easily

formed.

5. Recommendations

We anticipate that the current exponential growth of the Internet

will continue or accelerate for the foreseeable future. In addition,

we anticipate a rapid internationalization of the Internet. The

ability of routing to scale is dependent upon the use of data

abstraction based on hierarchical IPv6 addresses. It is therefore

essential to choose a hierarchical structure for IPv6 addresses with

great care.

Great attention must be paid to the definition of addressing

structures to balance the conflicting goals of:

- Route optimality

- Routing algorithm efficiency

- Ease and administrative efficiency of address registration

- Considerations for what addresses are assigned by what addressing

authority

It is in the best interests of the internetworking community that the

cost of operations be kept to a minimum where possible. In the case

of IPv6 address allocation, this again means that routing data

abstraction must be encouraged.

In order for data abstraction to be possible, the assignment of IPv6

addresses must be accomplished in a manner which is consistent with

the actual physical topology of the Internet. For example, in those

cases where organizational and administrative boundaries are not

related to actual network topology, address assignment based on such

organization boundaries is not recommended.

The intra-domain routing protocols allow for information abstraction

to be maintained within a domain. For zero-homed and single-homed

routing domains (which are expected to remain zero-homed or single-

homed), we recommend that the IPv6 addresses assigned within a single

routing domain use a single address prefix assigned to that domain.

Specifically, this allows the set of all IPv6 addresses reachable

within a single domain to be fully described via a single prefix.

We anticipate that the total number of routing domains existing on a

worldwide Internet to be great enough that additional levels of

hierarchical data abstraction beyond the routing domain level will be

necessary.

In most cases, network topology will have a close relationship with

national boundaries. For example, the degree of network connectivity

will often be greater within a single country than between countries.

It is therefore appropriate to make specific recommendations based on

national boundaries, with the understanding that there may be

specific situations where these general recommendations need to be

modified.

Further, from experience with IPv4, we feel that continental

aggregation is beneficial and should be supported where possible as a

means of limiting the unwarranted spread of routing exceptions.

5.1 Recommendations for an address allocation plan

We anticipate that public interconnectivity between private routing

domains will be provided by a diverse set of TRDs, including (but not

necessarily limited to):

- Backbone networks;

- A number of regional or national networks; and,

- A number of commercial Public Data Networks.

These networks will not be interconnected in a strictly hierarchical

manner (for example, there is expected to be direct connectivity

between regionals, and all of these types of networks may have direct

international connections). These TRDs will be used to interconnect

a wide variety of routing domains, each of which may comprise a

single corporation, part of a corporation, a university campus, a

government agency, or other organizational unit.

In addition, some private corporations may be expected to make use of

dedicated private TRDs for communication within their own

corporation.

We anticipate that the great majority of routing domains will be

attached to only one of the TRDs. This will permit hierarchical

address aggregation based on TRD. We therefore strongly recommend

that addresses be assigned hierarchically, based on address prefixes

assigned to individual TRDs.

To support continental aggregation of routes, we recommend that all

addresses for TRDs which are wholly within a continent be taken from

the continental prefix.

For the proposed address allocation scheme, this implies that

portions of IPv6 address space should be assigned to each TRD

(explicitly including the backbones and regionals). For those leaf

routing domains which are connected to a single TRD, they should be

assigned a prefix value from the address space assigned to that TRD.

For routing domains which are not attached to any publically

available TRD, there is not the same urgent need for hierarchical

address aggregation. We do not, therefore, make any additional

recommendations for such `isolated' routing domains. Where such

domains are connected to other domains by private point-to-point

links, and where such links are used solely for routing between the

two domains that they interconnect, again no additional technical

problems relating to address abbreviation is caused by such a link,

and no specific additional recommendations are necessary. We do

recommend that since such domains may wish to use a private address

space, that the addressing plan specify a specific prefix for private

addressing.

Further, in order to allow aggregation of IPv6 addresses at national

and continental boundaries into as few prefixes as possible, we

further recommend that IPv6 addresses allocated to routing domains

should be assigned based on each routing domain's connectivity to

national and continental Internet backbones.

5.2 Recommendations for Multi-Homed Routing Domains

Some routing domains will be attached to multiple TRDs within the

same country, or to TRDs within multiple different countries. We

refer to these as `multi-homed' routing domains. Clearly the strict

hierarchical model discussed above does not neatly handle such

routing domains.

There are several possible ways that these multi-homed routing

domains may be handled, as described in Section 4.4. Each of these

methods vary with respect to the amount of information that must be

maintained for inter-domain routing and also with respect to the

inter-domain routes. In addition, the organization that will bear the

brunt of this cost varies with the possible solutions. For example,

the solutions vary with respect to:

- Resources used within routers within the TRDs;

- Administrative cost on TRD personnel; and,

- Difficulty of configuration of policy-based inter-domain routing

information within leaf routing domains.

Also, the solution used may affect the actual routes which packets

follow, and may effect the availability of backup routes when the

primary route fails.

For these reasons it is not possible to mandate a single solution for

all situations. Rather, economic considerations will require a

variety of solutions for different routing domains, service

providers, and backbones.

6. Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this document.

7. Acknowledgments

This document is largely based on RFC1518. The section on Private

Addresses borrowed heavily from RFC1597.

We'd like to thank Havard Eidnes, Bill Manning, Roger Fajman for

their review and constructive comments.

REFERENCES

[1] Deering, S., and R. Hinden, Editors, "Internet Protocol, Version

6 (IPv6) Specification", RFC1883, Xerox PARC, Ipsilon Networks,

December 1995.

[2] Hinden, R., and S. Deering, Editors, "IP Version 6 Addressing

Architecture", RFC1884, Ipsilon Networks, Xerox PARC, December

1995.

AUTHORS' ADDRESSES

Yakov Rekhter

cisco Systems, Inc.

470 Tasman Dr.

San Jose, CA 95134

Phone: (914) 528-0090

EMail: yakov@cisco.com

Tony Li

cisco Systems, Inc.

470 Tasman Dr.

San Jose, CA 95134

Phone: (408) 526-8186

 
 
 
免责声明:本文为网络用户发布,其观点仅代表作者个人观点,与本站无关,本站仅提供信息存储服务。文中陈述内容未经本站证实,其真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
2023年上半年GDP全球前十五强
 百态   2023-10-24
美众议院议长启动对拜登的弹劾调查
 百态   2023-09-13
上海、济南、武汉等多地出现不明坠落物
 探索   2023-09-06
印度或要将国名改为“巴拉特”
 百态   2023-09-06
男子为女友送行,买票不登机被捕
 百态   2023-08-20
手机地震预警功能怎么开?
 干货   2023-08-06
女子4年卖2套房花700多万做美容:不但没变美脸,面部还出现变形
 百态   2023-08-04
住户一楼被水淹 还冲来8头猪
 百态   2023-07-31
女子体内爬出大量瓜子状活虫
 百态   2023-07-25
地球连续35年收到神秘规律性信号,网友:不要回答!
 探索   2023-07-21
全球镓价格本周大涨27%
 探索   2023-07-09
钱都流向了那些不缺钱的人,苦都留给了能吃苦的人
 探索   2023-07-02
倩女手游刀客魅者强控制(强混乱强眩晕强睡眠)和对应控制抗性的关系
 百态   2020-08-20
美国5月9日最新疫情:美国确诊人数突破131万
 百态   2020-05-09
荷兰政府宣布将集体辞职
 干货   2020-04-30
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案逍遥观:鹏程万里
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案神机营:射石饮羽
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案昆仑山:拔刀相助
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案天工阁:鬼斧神工
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案丝路古道:单枪匹马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:与虎谋皮
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:李代桃僵
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案镇郊荒野:指鹿为马
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:小鸟依人
 干货   2019-11-12
倩女幽魂手游师徒任务情义春秋猜成语答案金陵:千金买邻
 干货   2019-11-12
 
推荐阅读
 
 
 
>>返回首頁<<
 
靜靜地坐在廢墟上,四周的荒凉一望無際,忽然覺得,淒涼也很美
© 2005- 王朝網路 版權所有