RFC 2008:Implications of Various Address Allocatio...
RFC-Ref

public Internet


Click on the red underlined text to get to the source

... address allocation and management are essential operational functions for the Public Internet. The exact policies for IP unicast address ...
... unicast address allocation and management policies for the Public Internet, and to provide recommendations with respect to these policies. ...
... address ownership" and "address lending," and the technical implications of these policies for the Public Internet. For the organizations that could provide reachability to a sufficiently large ...
... lending" policy should be formally added to the set of address allocation policies in the Public Internet. The document also recommends that organizations that do not provide a sufficient degree of routing information ...


... IP unicast address is its ability to interact with the Public Internet routing service and thereby ...
... exchange data with the remainder of the Internet. In other words, for the Public Internet, it is the reachability of an IP address that ...
... gives it an intrinsic value. Observe, however, that IP addresses are used outside of the Public Internet. This document does not cover the value of addresses in other than the Public Internet ...
... Public Internet. This document does not cover the value of addresses in other than the Public Internet context. ...
... The above implies that in the Public Internet it is the service environment (the Internet ...
... routing system, which gives an IP address its intrinsic value, rather than the inverse. Consequently, if the Public Internet routing system ceases to be operational, the service ...
... cease to have any functional value in the Internet. At this point, for the Public Internet, all address allocation and management ...


... The enormous growth of the Public Internet places a heavy load on the Internet routing system ...
... is going to exceed the limit of the routers. Therefore, to preserve uninterrupted continuous growth of the Public Internet, deploying mechanisms that contain the growth rate of the routing information is ...
... RFC1518, RFC1519] has been deployed since late 1992 in the Public Internet as the primary mechanism to contain the growth rate of the routing information - ...
... CIDR is an example of the application of hierarchical routing in the Public Internet, where subnets, subscribers, and finally providers ...


... The "address ownership" allocation policy and its implications on the Public Internet ...
... The "address lending" allocation policy and its implications for the Public Internet ...


... recommends using the "address lending" policy. Consequently, when such an organization first connects to the Public Internet or changes its topological attachment to the Public Internet, the organization ...
... such an organization first connects to the Public Internet or changes its topological attachment to the Public Internet, the organization eventually needs to renumber. Renumbering allows the organization to withdraw any exceptional prefixes ...


... Internet connectivity must take into account its impact on the scalability of the Public Internet routing system. Among all of the possible address ...
... routing system, and therefore to the fragmentation (partitioning) of the Public Internet. ...
... Within the context of the current Public Internet, address allocation and management ...
... address lending" policy should be formally added to the set of address allocation policies in the Public Internet. Second, organizations that do not provide a sufficient degree of routing information aggregation ...



Google
Web
RFC-Ref