A summary of session highlights and actions from the
RIPE 40 meeting.
Internet Address Policy Discussions
Editorial committee for the re-write of the policy (RIPE-185) document
assembled.
The RIPE NCC published a first draft of the new policy document in August.
Editorial committee will revise the draft in coming months.
Policy change:
Assignment Window for infrastructure
Former AW policy stated that LIRs can make assignments within their AW
per customer within 12 months, without consulting the RIPE NCC. It was
agreed to modify this policy that LIRs can make assignments to their own
infrastructure without being required to consult the RIPE NCC.
There was a short discussion about modifying current address policy
to allow LIRs to make sub-allocations. This will be further discussed
on the LIR-WG mailing lists.
IPv6 Address Allocation Policy:
New policy proposals were presented, similar to proposals made at the
APNIC meeting - The new proposals
will be presented at the ARIN meeting
in Miami, Florida, 28 Oct.
With no final agreement yet, the RIPE NCC, together with a with small
editorial team, will draft an interim policy
A mailing list was created to discuss IPv6 allocation policy on a global
level :
<global-v6@lists.apnic.net>
- It was agreed that allocations made by RIRs to LIRs should be on nibble
boundaries.
IPv6 Assignments for IXPs:
The interim policy agreed on before the RIPE meeting was adopted with
the modification that the default assignment size to IXPs would be a /48
instead of a /64.
ASO Address Council Elections:
Hans Petter Holen Re-elected:
Hans Petter Holen, Technical Manager of Tiscali AS, was elected for
another 3 year term to the ASO Address
Council at the elections held at the RIPE 40 plenary. Hans Petter
is currently the Chair of the RIPE LIR-WG.
Policy Development Process:
Rob Blokzijl, RIPE Chair, described the global policy development
process:
- Proposal in one region (e.g., RIPE WG)
-
Coordination with other regions
-
Possible further refinement and review
-
This process decreases discrepancies between regional policies (more
and more policies globally applicable), but also increases time it takes
to develop policy
-
A document to describe and clarify this process will be forthcoming
RIPE Database, RPSL Update:
The RIPE NCC has taken on RAToolset support and development (Now
known as IRRToolset).
Extensions to RPSL were requested to support IPv6 and Multicast Routing
Registry. This also called for a broader review of the specification.
Almost 3 million
unreferenced person objects were removed from the RIPE Database.
Discussions are ongoing on how to keep data in the RIPE Database
focused on Internet operations.
After the completion of the migration to RPSL
and the recent RIPE Database releases, the RIPE NCC is now ready to
actively progress with adding new functionality. The DB-WG was quite active
this time, resuming its traditional role of a forum for discussion of
new features to add value to RIPE Database users (e.g. Incident Response
Team (IRT) object, time stamping, etc.)
New objects and attributes were discussed. The (IRT) object was given
the "go ahead"; other proposals are under consideration.
Collaboration with APNIC is increasing and it was great to be
able to have George Michaelson, APNIC Technical Services Manager, participating
actively in all Database related discussions.
The Tools-WG was quite well attended
and the RIPE NCC received good feedback for further tool development.
DNSSEC:
DNSSEC Workshop:
The RIPE NCC developed a hands-on workshop/tutorial,
showing system administrators how to secure a zone using DNSSEC.This course
was offered to the community for the first time immediately after RIPE
40. We plan to offer this course at regular intervals in 2002.
Test-Traffic:
Bandwidth Analysis:
A first prototype of a bandwidth measurement setup was presented at
RIPE 40; it will be turned into production in the next month.
Tutorials & Presentations:
IP Request Tutorial:
The IP Request
tutorial, a refined version of the LIR
training course, was also presented
IPv6 Tutorial by Florent Parent:
Once again, the popular IPv6 tutorial at the RIPE meeting was well attended.
The tutorial material can be found at:
http://www.viagenie.qc.ca/en/ipv6/presentations/ripe40-ipv6tutorial-praha-oct2001.pdf
BGP Tutorial by Philip Smith:
Part of the EOF session, this tutorial focused BGP techniques and setting
up multihoming. The tutorial material can be found at:
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-40/tutorials/bgp-tutorial/index.html
Proper Filtering Presentation by Randy Bush:
Focusing on the benefits of proper filtering to prolong the lifetime
of routing table space (a short term solution) also buying enough time
to develop a new routing protocol.
*****
Please note that all presentations can be located on line at:
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-40/presentations/
Minutes of the meeting will be made available on
our website as they become available.
Please join us at the next RIPE meetings:
RIPE 41
January 14 18, 2001 in Amsterdam
RIPE 42 April 29 May 3, 2001 in Amsterdam
If you have any questions about RIPE Meetings please send an email to
<meetings@ripe.net>.
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