About RIPE | Contact  | Search | Sitemap    
Homepage RIPE  
LIR Working Group
search  
     
RIPE Navigation Ends
RIPE Meeting Minutes
RIPE Meeting Presentations
RIPE NCC Navigation Ends
Next Section

RIPE Working Groups

Minutes from RIPE 45


RIPE Meeting: 45
Working Group: LIR
Status: Final
Revision Number: 1.1


RIPE 45
LIR Working Group Session(s)
Chairing: Andrea Borgato
Scribe: Angelo Tramonte

Tuesday 13 May, 16.00 - 17.30
Wednesday 14 May, 09.00-10.30.

mms://webcast.ripe.net/ripe45/lir-1.wmv
mms://webcast.ripe.net/ripe45/lir-2.wmv

/http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-45/presentations/ripe45-lir-agenda/

A. Session start and welcome

Introduction from Andrea Borgato (AB). Apologies and regards from Hans
Petter Holen (HPH), who was unable to attend, this week.

US DoC representative Cathy Handley introduced to the meeting by Rob
Blokzijl (RB).

B. Agenda Bashing

Meeting split in two sections. PKI will be the last item on Tuesday.
All the rest will be held on Wednesday. No changes to the agenda were
suggested or made.

No comment on the RIPE 44 minutes in the meeting or on lir-
wg@ripe.net. The RIPE 44 draft minutes were accepted as final.

C. RIPE 44 minutes + Actions

Some action still open Leo's updates given in his presentation.

The updated Action List is available from the RIPE NCC web site at:

http://www.ripe.net/ripe/wg/lir/lir-actions.html

D. Report from the RIPE NCC Registration Services department
   Leo Vegoda (LV)

http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-45/presentations/ripe45-lir-rs/

E. ICANN ASO Address Council (AC) Report
   Wilfried Woeber (WW)

   Presentation not (yet) available from web site

Questions:

RB: What do as an AC do apart from procedures, documentation and
    meetings, and so on? What do you do?

WW: My personal point of view: I'm not overly happy with the
    achievements because we don't meet enough people face-to-face.

RB: What do you do if you're not working on electronic voting systems
    for your internal decision making processes. But I think your
    answer is clear. I think you might revisit the existence of the AC
    and its mission in life.

WW: Definitely. This is already being discussed internally. My
    personal answer... it would be nice to have a small number of
    people from each RIR service region participating in activities in
    other regions to provide an information transfer bridge in an
    informal technical basis. That's why I went to Santiago and went
    to the Address Policy SIG. That's worth preserving. I don't think
    the AC needs much input to the ICANN budget, though. This is just
    my private view on a couple of points.

F. Working Group name

RB: Change LIR WG into "RIPE Address Policy WG" and "RIPE NCC
    Services WG". The membership survey showed that members and non-
    members did not understand how the policy development process
    works. They thought the LIR WG was only for LIRs. Looking at the
    other RIRs, they have well defined address policy fora. Also, it
    looks like this WG has too much on its plate. This diverts its
    attention from other topics. I think I can summarise the work of
    this WG over the last couple of years as:

    1. Develop IPv4, IPv6, DNS, ASN policy
    2. RIPE NCC services (not only about RS).

    Also, the survey indicated that people did not know where they
    could discuss service related issues: types of services, level of
    service, developing services etc...

    The Activity Plan is the basis for working out the budget and
    fees. It used to be discussed more with the community, but somehow
    the discussion got lost in all the deadlines and timelines. There
    needs to be a permanent action point to work on it. It needs to be
    a living document. It needs a lot more input during the year from
    the operators and community. It's published six weeks before AGM,
    but Only a few people attend.

    Summarising I see that I think we would gain by changed the name
    of this WG and slightly amended the charter and it became the
    this WG into the Policy WG and creating a new RIPE NCC Services
    WG.

    Let's open the discussion! Please give us remarks and comments.

AB: Questions?

Frode Greisen (FG): I've been in these meetings for a long time. It
    took time to understand What this WG is doing. I've been on the
    board for six years, and while I don't speak for the board here, I
    think that a Services WG sounds good! Customer side would be taken
    care of there. We would know when we were doing things wrong - and
    right.

Kurtis Lindqvist (KL): I maybe, perhaps, quite like the idea. We need
    to define what this WG will actually do and how it will relate to
    RIPE NCC. I don't know if "services" is the right name for it.
    Can't tell before the discussion tomorrow. It might be a good
    idea, though.

Gert Doering (GD): We have to discuss more but overall I like the idea.

RB: Don't get hung up on the name. I slightly disagree with FG. It's
    not meant to be the channel between the members and the NCC.
    That's the AGM, as the NCC is a membership organisation. This is a
    mechanism where people (not necessarily members) can discuss with
    the RIPE NCC.

Axel Pawlik (AP): Would the new NCC Services WG take the place of
    other WGs like Database. We shouldn't overlap with other WGs.
    However, the performance of the whole Database service would fall
    under this new WG, but technical developments would fit in the DB
    WG.

RB: It's not easy to define where to discuss what. We want results
    more than discussion. We want to discuss where it's most
    productive.

WW: The name is not a real issue. The RIPE NCC offers services: so
    this WG should discuss about all the issues and where everybody is
    welcome not only the members.

RB: The proposed WG isn't for discussing the budget, the Activity Plan
    and fees and things like that. There are well defined mechanisms
    for that.

KL: Today we are discussing what to take out of the LIR WG. Can we
have
    examples? What are the views of the chairs?

RB: Already discussed in the past, the WG should find its own
    chair. HPH agrees with me on that. A development is needed.

KL: Can we have examples of what they will do? (the 2 WGs)

AP: The statistics presented in Leo's presentation should be in the
    services WG, policy related issues should be in the other.
    Services WG will discuss about Activity Plan and what to do or not
    to do: anyway all this needs to be clarified.

There were no more questions of comments. There was insufficient time
for the presentation on PKI, so that was moved to the next slot. The
session was closed.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Welcome from Andrea Borgato to the 2nd part of the LIR WG


G.  Secure Communication with the RIPE NCC
    Tiago Antao (TA)

http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-45/presentations/ripe45-lir-pki/

    (Questions raised during the presentation)

WW: Why can't LIRs use this certificate to communicate with each
    other?

TA: It's only a certificate policy issue not a technical one. We don't
    foresee an immediate technical need for it.

Patrick Faltstrom (PAF): Only two application support this system you
    need to implement this better. Only few e-mail clients (the two we
    mentioned), need to think carefully about it.

TA: We studied the MUAs used in the mails we received. Only 10% of the
    mails we received were sent by MUAs that do not support X.509.

Shane Kerr (SK): We considered PGP as an option. We preferred an
    integrated service (that does web support, too). X.509 can do that
    but we will keep on using PGP. PGP won't be deprecated, we will
    continue to support it as long as it is useful to people.

WW: The web system (X.509) is good but am afraid the X.509 is not
    the best system of authentication for e-mail. Not everyone is
    integrated with X.509. Future development is needed.

TA: We are not deprecating existing systems. Nothing is being taken
    away. You can continue to use old mechanisms if you want to do so.
    We want you to send us your feedback on the draft document.

Questions? No questions

H. Policy Issues

   The Policy Development Process

AB: On the web site there is a process explaining how to develop
    policy. Proposals should be submitted six weeks before the meeting
    and sent out 30 days before the meeting. There should be
    discussion on the mailing list. Draft documents will be published,
    comments will be taken into consideration before being published
    as RIPE documents.

http://www.ripe.net/ripe/wg/lir/howto_develop.html

   PI Address Policy - report from PI Policy Task Force
   Gert Doering

   Presentation not (yet) available from web site

GD: At the last RIPE meeting there were some comments that the current
    PI policy is broken. Hence the PI-TF was formed at RIPE 44. There
    was some discussion on the mailing list that small ranges that are
    assigned but not globally routable. Also: we discussed about
    assigning a minimum size (say a /24) the routability is improved
    but people might use this policy to get a /24 when they did not
    qualify for it as PA. Or maybe we should stop PI completely? Or
    maybe only have PI available for very special cases, IXPs etc.
    There was no consensus to do away with PI. We don't have proposal
    but only thoughts and I wonder how to go ahead?

KL: We currently give out unroutable address space. It's not useful.
    We need some mechanisms to verify what people do otherwise people
    are pushed to lie. At the moment the policy is meaningless. The
    worst thing we can do is hand out address space that is not
    useful.

WW: There is not just one routing cloud in the world. Some prefixes
    don't need global accessibility. It is not a mistake to issue
    unique addresses that are not globally routable. Also, the big
    problem is address conservation -vs- routing table growth. This is
    the same discussion as in the IPv6 framework, the golden network
    discussion. Who are the small but important networks. Should we
    agree on a minimum block size that would be globally routable or
    useful. Should it be the same for PI as PA. This would increase
    the burn rate of addresses. There is lots of unused address space
    and I think we may be overly concentrating on conservation.

GD: OK to be routable is not a condition sine qua non. So maybe we
    need PI and even /29s of PI. OK, maybe we should be much less
    strict with address usage? There was a chap a couple of meetings
    ago that suggested we burn up IPv4 and go on to IPv6 quite
    quickly. I'm not sure if we're ready for that, yet. Handing out PI
    blocks with no obstacles leads to massive growth in the routing
    tables. As an ISP that has to purchase router memory I am quite
    scared of this.

Paul Wilson (PW) (APNIC): There is lots of confusion between PI and
    PA. We don't use this wording. We now talk about PORTABLR and NON-
    PORTABLE. That helped in our region. Result? End User or ISP has
    the same impact on the routing table. However there are a lot of
    ranges that are not used for allocations so we did few assignments
    for multihoming organisations. Less than 100 per year. We do have
    a small multi-homing policy. There is no minimum size for those
    assignments but I'm almost 100% sure we've not assigned anything
    smaller than a /24.

GD: The policy about size related to routability... push the use of
    PI space. Let's continue use PI space but warn users about the
    problem with routability.

Geoff Houston (GH): Don't understand protection of routing table.
    Routers can now handle millions of routing table entries, not the
    100,000 we have today. PA is easy because ISPs can do what they
    want. This is not good for small entities. There should be a
    system (PI) for these small entities to have small blocks of
    routable address space. They should be advised to take at least a
    /24.

KL: We (as an LIR) didn't were qualify for our 1st alloc. So we
    applied for PI. Over two years, less than 50 assignments longer
    than /24 have been made. It's a very small problem. It's more a
    problem that people become an LIR and do not meet the minimum
    alloocation criteria. That's a broken policy. If we add 50 routes
    in two years as compared to 130,000, well, who cares?

GD: there are 2 ways to solve the problem:

    a) sub-allocation
    b) re-look the PA policy for new LIR's

    Maybe we should come with some more ideas on the PI taskforce
    mailing list. No one is happy but no one is so un-happy to change
    things.

LV: Contact me if you want to be added in the mailing list. My e-mail
    address is .


  Discussion of RIPE-261 "IPv6 Address Space Management"
  Paul Wilson.

   Presentation not (yet) available from web site

GD: As a user of IPv6 I agree the current way of IANA to allocate
    space is not efficient. Don't like proposal very much because I
    want to identify prefixes by region. It would be useful if each
    RIR got a /8 from the IANA.

DK: You lose the ability to filter based on when a block is allocated
    under this proposal. I don't dislike sparse allocation. The RIRs
    should get larger blocks from IANA. This is two proposals and they
    should be treated separately.

GD: What do you think bout my idea of IANA allocating RIRs /12.

DK: Could be a /12, a little smaller or larger. If the block overfill
    and ten ISPs in the world have to announce a couple of extra
    prefixes it's not so terrible.

David Wilson (DW): I think spare allocation and a large address pool
    is a good idea. I note one extra constraint the Common Address
    Pool takes on it. At the moment it makes no difference at the
    moment as we have a Common Allocation Policy for all the regions.
    I think it would put a lot of pressure on the regions to keep the
    common policy, even if it did not turn out to be practical in the
    future. Very few LIRs should ever be coming back for extra address
    space so the pool is actually larger than it otherwise would be.

WW: I agree with David that it might be useful to review the history
    of the way of allocate IPv6 space. Would be better to track the
    history of IP space by looking into the registries than by looking
    at the individual address figures?

GD: Is this something that needs to be discussed between IANA and
    RIR's. Leo do you confirm?

LV: It's better to have a consensus before asking for a change.

GD: Let's do that on the mailing list.

WW: Has this been discussed in the other RIRs? Discussion of changes
    to the common IPv6 policy

PW: Yes but without consensus.

*  Presentation from David Kessens IPv6 Feedback Policy.

   Presentation not (yet) available from web site

Questions?

Mohsan (AfNIC): We are running a ccTLD server and we peer with several
    ISP's and we want to do the same in IPv6. The day after the
    peering was done it was rejected because we announced a /48. There
    is a lack of information because ISP ask only /32 or /35. There is
    a lack of a BCP document for this. Maybe ccTLD servers should get
    a /32 or have a special set of /48s?

DK: As an operational issue this can be discussed in the IPv6 WG? The
    policy is for this WG. Do you want to volunteer to write a draft
    about it?

Monshan: I'd like an opinion of the room, does make sense to separate
    /32 for ccTLD servers?

GD: This issue should be discussed also within Routing WG and IPv6
    WG. My opinion is do not makle special cases. TLD server are not
    special. Root servers are but not TLDs as they can be looked up in
    the root.

KL: What is this IPv6 taskforce planning to do?

DK: We need to discuss this more. The feedback from the AP region is
    not to move too fast on this.

PW: It always surprises me that the bar of 200 customers is considerd
    too high to receive a block of address space about the same size
    as today's IPv4 Internet. However, it's worth noting section 4.4
    of the policy. We should clarify the meaning of these words. The
    intent was that you could show justification for a block larger
    than a /32. At APNIC we try to clarify the meaning. Also, at the
    last APNIC meeting we approved a critical infrastructure policy to
    give a /32 to critical infrastructure included root NS, gTLDs and
    ccTLDs.

GD: A lot of LIRs don't think they will reach 200 IPv6 customers in
    two years so they don't apply in the first place. I ask them if
    they have 200 IPv4 customers. If they say yes then I tell them
    that they qualify as these might convert to IPv6. Then we have
    some providers that are pretty high up in the routing hierarchy
    and don't have customers that they give address space to.
    Conservation is not the problem, the problem is the number of
    prefixes in the routing table.

I. Status attribute values

   A draft document will be posted for discussion, shortly.

X. AOB

   Nothing raised.

Y. Summary of actions arising from this meeting

   TBD

Z. Open Microphone
 

Next Section
     About RIPE | Site Map | LIR Portal | About the RIPE NCC | Contact | © RIPE Community. All rights reserved.
RIPE.NET Homepage LIR Portal RIPE Community