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Minutes from RIPE 40


RIPE Meeting: 40
Working Group: LIR
Status: Final
Revision Number: 1

Please mail comments/suggestions on:



 -----------------------------------
 Minutes of the LIR Working Group session of the RIPE 40 Meeting
 1-5 October 2001, at the Prague Congress Centre, Prague, Czech Republic.
 -----------------------------------
 Chair: Hans Petter Holen (HPH)
 Vice-Chair: Denesh Bhabuta
 Scribe: Isabel Pinto Coelho Sena
 -----------------------------------

   Agenda of the LIR Working group:
   1. Admin - scribe, participant list, charter, mailing lists
   2. Agenda
   3. RIPE 39 minutes & actions
   4. Report from the RIPE NCC Hostmasters by Sabrina Waschke
   5. Suggested Policy changes to improve the WG and set the right service
   level
   6. RIPE-185 revision by Nurani Nimpuno
   7. Mir proposal
   8. AW on infrastructure
   9. Change of policy for Portable address space (PI)
   10. Report from The AC
   11. AC Nomination & Election
   12. Global vs Regional Policy -revising RFC 2050
   13.Open Mike

   =======================
   3. RIPE 39 Minutes and Actions
   ========================

   http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/archive/ripe-40/presentations/lir-wg-40
   /sld00 5.html

   1.5.Open Actions:
   35.4 NCC PGP Key exchange procedure Low prio
   35.5 NCC Implement PGP for hm Low prio
   36.5 Chair Assignment window
   applied on infrastructure
   Proposed change
   36.6 AP Collect arbitrators Taken care of
   36.7 NCC Keep LIR-WG updated on pre RIR address space changes DB-WG
   presentation
   37.1 WG Further discuss restoring the transparency Ntr
   (HPH proposes to close this action and move it to the RIPE-185
   discussion)
   38.2 NCC Implement changes to the form while taking into account the
   comments from the WG In
   progress
   38.3 WG Reopen policy discussion - do we need a major revision of
   RIPE-185
   (At RIPE 39 it was decided to revise RIPE-185)
     
   RIPE 40
   38.4 AC Consider how to coordinate Address prediction work Work launched
   38.5 NCC Implement 34.6 LIR-ALLOCATED
   38.6 NCC Propose PI policy to the WG Ongoing
   39.1 NCC Better metrics & more relevant stats
   39.2 NCC Suggest procedure and possible policy changes
   (done, see revised RIPE-185)
   39.3 NCC Call for AC nominations
   (1 nomination)
   39.4 Chairs Define & divide work 
   (needs more work)
   39.5 Chairs Beta test 6 weeks deadline for proposal
   HPH: Did this work? If the LIR-WG wants to change a proposal then the
   LIR-WG chair needs to post a
   proposal 6 weeks before, so that a discussion before the meeting can be
   done, was this good ? Yes.
   LIR-WG likes to have policy proposals sent to the list before the
   meeting.
   
   =======================
   4. Report from the RIPE NCC Hostmasters by Sabrina Waschke
   ========================
   
   Slides can be found at:
   
   http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/archive/ripe-40/presentations/rs-update
   /index.html
   
   No questions on the presented material from the LIR-WG.
   
   =======================
   5. Suggested Policy changes to improve the WG and set the right service  
   level
   ========================
   
   The wait queue is low now. There have been many suggestions during RIPE
   36/37 (creation of the May17th taskforce)/38, 39 wait queue still 
   fluctuates. HPH spent a few days at NCC discussing how to
   improve the RIPE-185 document.
   - Form a new TF to reiterate the work and see if there are other measures
   to be taken.
   - Editorial team will be created, for a new policy document
   
   =======================
   6. RIPE-185 revision by Nurani Nimpuno
   ========================
   
   Slides can be found at:
   
   http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/archive/ripe-40/presentations/ipv4-as-p
   olicy-revision/index.html
   
   HPH: The main purpose of the editorial team is not to review the content
   of RIPE-185. Should the
   discussion be kept on the LIR-WG or shall we create a special mailing
   list? Everyone should join the
   mailing list and it should be an open process. The goal for this
   evening's meeting is to lay down a plan on
   how to proceed.
   
   Wilfred Woeber (WW): In favour of doing on a dedicated mailing list,
   people seem to un-subscribe from
   lir-wg@ripe.net because of too much traffic.
   
   Mike Norris: Do we still want to talk about address allocation? How about
   de-allocation, rental of
   addresses? The document should be more readable. A new LIR gets a /20
   whether they want it or not,
   should this not be covered in the document? Add more motivation to the
   actual policies, make underlying
   policies and principles more explicit.
   
   HPH: Good point. A lot of policies are not in the document, so please
   step forward and point them out.
   Goal now is to have a document that represents the policies as they are
   today, focus is to get it out as fast
   as possible, then get comments on it and finally change it.
   The underlying principles and policies need to be clarified in the
   document.
   
   Nurani Nimpuno (NN): We had that in mind when drafting this document. We
   want to explain the reasons
   behind the policies. That makes updating policy easier when the reasons  
   are not valid any longer.
   
   HPH: More candidates for the editorial team?
   
   WW: I would like some feedback from the community at large. Wouldn't it
   be better to describe policies
   for ASN in a separate doc? Have a parallel doc on IPv6 and IPv4.
   
   NN: There are separate v4 and v6 documents now because the IPv6 policy is
   under strong development.
   
   WW: What we have now is a good thing. But there are other issues. My
   contribution would be to identify
   which parts of documents the LIR needs to read and when? Who needs to
   read what, when and how 
   often. We probably don't want to have those reviewed each time a request
   is needed.
   
   David Huberman (DH): AS policy should be out as the policy is unrelated  
   to IPv4 policy.
   
   General agreement not to include ASN in the RIPE-185 document.
   
   HPH: When RIPE-185 was created, we ended up with all that an LIR needs to
   know.
   
   NN: I appreciate David's comments as I was worried that I had stripped
   too much.
   As long as it covers all the policies it needs to be as short as
   possible.
   
   Pascal Julienne (PJ): I also agree to split ASN & IP address.
   
   HPH: An mail was sent out with all the policies that have changed since  
   the last version of the RIPE-185
   document, these need to be added. We have two options: We keep the   
   document and keep updating it
   within, or policy change could be done in amendments.
   
   ??: Perhaps have a policy doc and an amendment doc and merge it all
   together once a year.
   
   HPH: The idea is to republish documents with a new number.
   
   DH: The document is only as useful as the number of people that read it,
   NCC Registration Services
   WebPages should have a link to a policy page with the current document
   and any amendments that have
   been made in the meantime. This then makes it independent of the document
   publication process.
   
   NN: Yes, we need such a guide. The Communications department have
   improved the numbering of
   documents issue.
   
   HPH: I propose a break, does anyone want to discuss the contents of the
   draft?
   No reaction...
   
   HPH: coffee break
   
   =======================
   7. MIR proposal
   =======================
   
   WW: Stephen Burley sends his apologies, he was not able to make it to
   this meeting but he will send a
   revised MIR proposal to the mailing list.
   
   HPH: OK, drop it from the agenda and discuss on the list.
   
   HPH:
   (a drawing is made)
   The way things work today is that an LIR gets an allocation and makes
   assignments to it's customers. The
   MIR proposal is to put something in between the NCC and the LIR. We also
   have another issue namely
   an LIR may have several individual ISPs or resellers so they would have
   the right to take a trunk of their
   address space and sub-allocate to these ISPs. This is not possible. Under
   the current policies, either the
   LIR would have to handle all those addresses or the resellers would have
   to set-up a separate LIR. And
   in the past we also had issues of making reservations within the
   allocation which is not allowed if we think
   about the fact that this address space is reserved for that company. It
   has been allowed to plan the usage
   of the allocation so that I set aside this space for what I think the
   customer will want. Then I get to the
   point of getting new address space, getting past the 80% part is
   difficult. That is the situation for applying
   to these sub-allocations. So is the relation RIRāLIR sufficient or do we
   need another level? A sub-LIR.
   That is the problem that we have, anyone wants to speak on behalf of some
   of the problems here.
   
   GD: Stephen's MIR proposal is supposed to solve Uunet's problem. Not sure
   if many others have the
   same problem. I have a slightly different proposal, called sub-LIR
   proposal. It is not really a proposal but
   legalising and documenting of something that is already happening. What
   our problem is that we, as an
   LIR, have resellers that sometimes have their own resellers. They might
   apply for a /29 but I am not going
   to route these /29's through the hierarchy, so I kind of allocate a /25
   or a /24 to my reseller and say to
   them that they can give some addresses to their customers and they should
   send me all the network
   information, RIPE-219's and I would do what RIPE NCC does right now. This
   is not legal right now
   according to the policies, but it is the only way to scale IP addresses.
   I would like to see some policies
   and procedures for this. How does the 80% rule apply? Under which
   conditions can a reseller get a
   bigger block? For instance I give them a /25 to start with, when they
   have used it to 80% they can get a
   /24 or a /23 and when I go to NCC to ask for addresses, will they then
   check my allocation for 80%
   taking up all the assignments but also sub-allocations into account? I
   want the 80% rule to apply to
   sub-allocations, not only assignments. Because, say I only have resellers
   and I have a /16 that I split into
   /20's to all my resellers, not everything is assigned yet, I might never
   reach 80% of assignments but might
   reach 100% of sub-allocation. So this should be documented and permitted.
   I think this is similar to the
   way IANA, NCC and LIRs relate. If my resellers do bad things, I am
   responsible for it otherwise I get
   into problems with NCC. This is similar to the relation between RIR and
   LIR. Each level has to trust level
   directly below. I think it is manageable.
   
   WW: There are many good reasons why you want to do internal aggregation.
   Start-ups have the tendency
   to grow. Address space then would ideally be aggregatable. This also
   makes reverse delegation easier. At
   the moment I do this with the unassigned addresses within my allocation.
   LIRs don't have to tell their
   customers how they manage their address space. This is possible until I
   hit the 80%. Becomes interesting
   when you have a redistribution address system (resellers) structure or if
   ISP grows fast. Problem is if one
   part of the network (PoP or reseller) grows faster than the others, then
   one has to destroy internal
   aggregation again. Would like to have these issues addressed rather than
   install yet another exception like
   the MIR proposal. This could either result in revisiting the 80% usage
   rule or other policies.
   
   Larisa Yurkina: I support the idea of sub-LIR. We were able to reach a
   compromise with the NCC to
   keep several blocks open for our sub-regions.
   
   HPH: OK, there is a need that is not being taken care of, but the current
   proposal of sub-allocation are
   fine until you need another 80%, because you will hit the sub-allocated
   80% much quicker but not the
   80% really in use. Good for aggregation, but bad for conservation. We
   need a new policy that balances
   the need for aggregation and conservation by introducing a new hierarchy,
   this is just like CIDR a couple
   of years ago. None of the proposals solve all the issues.
   
   DH: I am confused. There are now 3 different issues: MIR, sub-LIRs or
   NIR, reservations for purpose of
   aggregation, this are all very different things. This is the reality of
   CIDR. Support Gert's original proposal.
   Gert's model is an hierarchical. Reality is that CIDR and Ipv6 support
   hierarchical model. However, RIPE
   NCC does not allow this. LIRs should be able to allocate to people
   downstream and the allow people to
   assign. There should be a mechanism in the RIPE database that allows
   this.
   
   Mirjam Kuehne: Let's go back in history, RIPE-185 says that this
   hierarchical system is recognised with
   LIRs and resellers and ISPs, however since the NCC only has a
   professional relationship with an LIR and
   not their customers, that the responsibility remains with the LIR. But I
   agree that we should find a way to
   document this in the database.
   
   HPH: Current LIR-PARTITIONED only affects documentation and not policy.
   
   Sabrina: Please take this issues account. First of all it was mentioned 
   several levels from resellers to their
   resellers down to their customers. How far does this go? Do we have one
   reseller, who is then assigning
   to other resellers, who then assigns to its customers...How many levels 
   of sub-allocation? Then also what
   is the knowledge of these resellers or downstreams? Is it your
   responsibility as their LIR to make sure that
   they know and follow all the policies & procedures? What usage do we want
   in these sub-allocations
   before an LIR can come back for a new allocation? Should we review the  
   80% usage? Should we maybe 
   reduce allocation usage requirement instead of requiring a new status?  
   
   GD: To come back to Mirjam's comments, I want it to be documented in the
   database and change the
   policy. That's why I don't like the LIR-partitioned because those
   partitions are really allocations. To
   Sabrina, I would consider sub-allocations as assignments. Same way IANA
   allocates a /8 to RIPE and
   this /8 might be 80% allocated, which is not really 80% in use. This is
   the way these sub-allocations should
   be looked at. With some kind of reasonable sub-allocations size.
   Regarding the level of hierarchy: for us it
   is mainly 1 level, LIRs - resellers - customers. We only have one case
   with 2 levels, we have one reseller
   and he has one additional reseller, but I think we could consider them as
   one level. About the contractual
   issue: NCC has a contract with us and we would be responsible downstream.
   They sign to follow policies
   and then we make sure they do. Can we talk about a contract with
   resellers here, to make sure that the
   policies are still applied? Maybe we can take the normal LIR contract and
   make adjustments.
   
   DH: I support everything Gert just said. For the purposes of the database
   and the purposes of the
   relationship between the RIPE NCC and LIR, I do not think it matters how
   many levels of sub-allocations
   actually exist. For the purposes of the database there should only be one
   level. 80% is fine, other reasons
   to move the 80% would be aggregation but that is a different topic. For
   the purpose of sub-lir and
   sub-allocations I feel that 80% is unreasonable. Exactly what Gert said,
   the relationship between IANA
   and RIRs is not dependant on how much address space the RIRs allocate to
   their constituencies, therefore
   the same principles should be applied to the LIR and its constituencies.
   And finally, I can't say it any better
   than Bill Woodcock actually said it in Bologna at RIPE 39, but one of the
   things that bothers me as an
   LIR operator, is that there is still absolutely no level of trust between
   the NCC and the LIRs. We have to
   be trusted at some point in my opinion to assign address space and
   allocate address space to our
   customers, to our constituency. We are not going to break the contract we
   have with the NCC stating that
   we will follow the rules and regulations for address policy assigning and
   application and therefore so will
   our customers, it is our responsibility that does not need to be either
   audited or even overseen by the
   NCC to ensure compliance.
   
   NN: I want to comment on the understanding of an allocation. What I am
   hearing is that people are saying
   that LIRs do sub-allocate and this is not reflected in the current
   policy. The question is: what do we mean
   with sub-allocated? Does that mean that once an LIR has sub-allocated
   part of its allocation, that it is
   counted as in use? I think that is also what Sabrina was referring to. We
   need to recognise that this is
   happening and should be able to be reflected in the database. But also
   what I am hearing is that the LIRs
   should be able to sub-allocate, meaning that part will be allocated to
   one-level below, is this seen as in
   use? Would an 80% sub-allocation be seen as a full allocation?
   
   HPH: This is exactly what we propose. We need criteria to decide on the
   size of sub-allocations. We
   need guidelines. How big can it be, how long can it be free, at what
   point would it have to be taken back
   etc. We can create a system that it is possible to have that. This
   shouldn't be a problematic thing to do.
   
   DH: If NCC entrust the contract between it and the LIR, trusts that the  
   LIR makes assignments
   downstream according to the policies, the AW, why can not the LIR
   operator be entrusted to properly
   manage a sub-allocation. If Nurani's ISP comes to my - David's -LIR and
   needs a /23 for Nurani's ISPs
   to assign further downstream, why can't David's LIR be entrusted to
   oversee Nurani's ISPs- allocation
   from Davids LIR and ensure that it is being properly utilised, assigned,
   allocated, reclaimed in necessary
   cases, in the exact same way that the RIR looks at the LIR? Why does
   there necessarily have to be an
   explicit contract? Why does there necessarily have to be a mechanism for
   oversight by the NCC for the
   relationship between an LIR and its customers?
   
   HPH: History has proven that LIRs were given too much trust in the
   beginning and they abused it. That's
   why we have the AW. That's why we have Audits. 4 years ago these were
   introduced because we could
   not trust the capabilities of the LIRs.
   
   Mike Norris: I wonder if it is the trust between the NCC and the LIRs
   that is really the issue? We are in a
   very competitive market. Maybe it's that we don't trust each other. We
   make the policies, RIPE NCC
   only implements them. It's more a matter of trusting each other. We are
   all watching each other. Not
   fair to say that the RIPE NCC should trust the LIRs more. I support
   Gert's proposal as such that there
   may be contractual implications.
   
   Dave Pratt (DP): What are the criteria that a sub-allocations can be
   made, there are none at the moment.
   
   HPH: This system would lock customers into an upstream ISP because of
   issues with renumbering
   customers. In Europe the small ISPs have the freedom to have their own   
   allocations. This system could
   mitigate against the small ISPs. Do we as a community want to do this?
   
   Mirjam: Policies influence the market, but if you would restrict the  
   market, some regulators might step in,
   that's why we have an open membership. Keep this in the back of the mind.
   
   Paul Mylotte: layers after layers with 80% 80%...another level is not  
   acceptable because 3 80% is 50%.
   This is not acceptable.
   HPH: close this discussion, move it to the mailing list.
   
   =======================
   8. AW on infrastructure
   =======================
   
   HPH: explanation of issue:
   http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/archive/ripe-40/presentations/lir-wg-40
   /sld009.html
   
   David Pratt: I am worried that this will be abused and will impose a lot
   of work on the RIPE NCC to
   track this. I propose to allow the AW for infrastructure to be used more
   often than just once a year. One
   could approach the RIPE NCC once it's AW has been used and ask NCC to
   refresh the AW allowing it
   to be used again. The NCC can than decide to increase the AW or just
   refresh. This installs an ongoing
   trust system.
   
   HPH: I do not understand how this solves my problem. If I need to assign
   5 times a /24 for my
   infrastructure, I still can not apply for an AW as it is all for one
   organisation, namely for myself.
   
   DP: That's when one would ask for a refresh of the AW, explain that your
   AW is too small and ask for a
   bigger one if needed so as not to have to ask for a refresh that often.
   
   HPH: Maybe I do not understand what you mean by refresh of the AW.
   
   DP: Basically when I go to NCC and ask for more addresses for
   infrastructure they would review my
   AW and increase it.
   
   HPH: What you are saying is to introduce a new system? Right now it is
   not possible to get an AW if I am  
   only assigning to myself. We need to change the policy so that I can get
   an AW and then review how to
   increase it.
   
   NN: A few points. One of the problems now is the way an AW is defined, it
   does not help you for
   assignments to yourself since you can only use it once a year per
   organisation. So to change this we must
   think of how we tag this AW for own infrastructure. What we do like about
   the AW is that it describes
   some level of clue, so to speak. The more experienced, the more aware of
   all the policies, the more
   responsibility LIRs get to make assignments without having to come to the
   RIPE NCC for approval. But only for customers and not for themselves. 
   The thought we had on it is to actually tie the AW with the
   percentage of the allocation that is in use for own infrastructure.
   
   8
   AW for Infrastructure
   - all assignments need to be registered in the DB
   - assignments for Infrastructure need to be tagged (RIPE NCC internal or
   in DB)
   - xx% of your allocation? Or AWII? Table (see below)
   § How do we see the difference between these assignment types?
   - addresses exceeding the AW need to be requested
   
   AW addr
   0 0 0%
   /30 4 xx
   /29 8
   /28 16
   /27 32
   /26 64
   /25 128
   /24 256
   /23 512
   /22 1024
   /21 2048
   /20 4096
   /19 8192
   
   For example an AW of a /26 still would allow you to assign 64 addresses
   per customer per year and a
   certain percentage of your allocation to your entire infrastructure per
   year. If we would do that we would 
   still keep the AW idea and it would mean that the more experienced would
   get a higher AW to assign to
   their customers. If you only assign to customers than that would mean 
   that you do not care about the     
   assignments to your own infrastructure. So LIRs would have a certain
   percentage of their allocation that
   they can use for their own infrastructure without coming to the RIPE NCC
   for approval.
   
   Paul Mylotte: I agree with this proposal
   
   Pascal Julienne: AW for customers and infrastructure should not
   necessarily be the same. If the AW for
   infrastructure is dependent on the AW for customers, a cable company
   would never have an AW for
   infrastructure, because it does not assign addresses to customers.
   
   HPH: This is exactly why we introduced a new proposal
   DH: This discussion has started with cable companies. Rate by which
   addresses are assigned to
   customers may be completely different than what is assigned to the ISP's
   infrastructure. Yes, it introduces
   another mechanism, but this is required.
   
   HPH: This proposal allows the AW to grow if you assign just to yourself.
   
   Sabrina: People may have misunderstood: proposal was not to have AW
   depending on customer
   assignments, can also depend on assignments to infrastructure.
   
   WW: I think there are easier ways: doubling the AW or issuing an AW that
   grows in an exponantial way.
   Wait-Queue might grow with this new policy. I am afraid to introduce a
   new rule that is open to
   interpretation, particulary from Hostmasters. And I would like to state
   that the size of one's AW does not
   reflect the clue level of an organisation.
   
   GD: Doesn't undercurrent AW procedure is workable for him.
   
   HPH: We propose to apply the AW to the increment and not to the total of
   the assignment.
   
   HPH: is this proposal to have for customers and infrastructure
   
   WW: yes 
   
   GD: this is already happening with the current policy.
   
   DH: This is the fifth meeting in which we discuss this issue. Where do we
   go from here to get an interim
   policy as quickly as possible?
   
   HPH: I have made a proposal, the NCC has a different proposal, any other
   ideas?
   
   GD: without having this problem myself, the increment proposal seems to
   address to the problem better.
   Auditing needs to be done on this, checking whether a /24 are not used
   when /25 was enough.
   
   Pascal Julienne: I also like the incremental proposal better.
   
   HPH: Should we have an increment model with a limit of growth rate? Or is
   my proposal good enough?
   The increment model can be mis-used, as Nurani said.
   
   Dave H: I like the original proposal, no additions needed.
   NN: The concern is that it would mean that you could split a big
   assignment above the AW into several
   small within AW.
   
   GD: This can already be done. But you can check that when the LIR comes
   back for the new
   allocation. If you have a suspicion of abuse, you can audit them.
   
   Sabrina: do you want to delay getting the new allocation until with an
   audit?
   
   HPH: It would be acceptable to provide some more additional information
   with the allocation request.
   Only full audit when there is suspicion of abuse.
   
   SW: And how about new LIRs that have no experience yet?
   
   GD: those have no AW yet. They will eventually get an AW even if they  
   only assign to own infrastructure.
   As it is now, they would never get an AW.
   
   Janos Zsako: I wonder if this is an incentive for LIRs to register
   assignments to customers as assignments
   for infrastructure. That would also mean that the database would not be 
   accurate anymore.
   
   HPH: we come back to the trust issue. I would like to call for consensus.
   Those in favour? Not in favour?
   No-one. We have a new policy in place.
 

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