[LAC-TF] Fwd: RFC 7421 on Analysis of the 64-bit Boundary in IPv6 Addressing

Fernando Gont fgont at si6networks.com
Wed Jan 14 20:50:15 BRST 2015


Estimados,

FYI, hemos publicado un nuevo IETF RFC, titulado "Analysis of the 64-bit
Boundary in IPv6 Addressing".

El mismo se encuentra disponible en:
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7421>.

No habiendo dormido por las ultimas 36 horas (!), time to go to bed.

Saludos cordiales,
Fernando




-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: RFC 7421 on Analysis of the 64-bit Boundary in IPv6 Addressing
Date: Wed, 14 Jan 2015 14:43:01 -0800 (PST)
From: rfc-editor at rfc-editor.org
To: ietf-announce at ietf.org, rfc-dist at rfc-editor.org
CC: ipv6 at ietf.org, rfc-editor at rfc-editor.org

A new Request for Comments is now available in online RFC libraries.


        RFC 7421

        Title:      Analysis of the 64-bit Boundary
                    in IPv6 Addressing
        Author:     B. Carpenter, Ed.,
                    T. Chown, F. Gont,
                    S. Jiang, A. Petrescu,
                    A. Yourtchenko
        Status:     Informational
        Stream:     IETF
        Date:       January 2015
        Mailbox:    brian.e.carpenter at gmail.com,
                    tjc at ecs.soton.ac.uk,
                    fgont at si6networks.com,
                    jiangsheng at huawei.com,
                    alexandru.petrescu at cea.fr,
                    ayourtch at cisco.com
        Pages:      24
        Characters: 60469
        Updates/Obsoletes/SeeAlso:   None

        I-D Tag:    draft-ietf-6man-why64-08.txt

        URL:        https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7421

The IPv6 unicast addressing format includes a separation between the
prefix used to route packets to a subnet and the interface identifier
used to specify a given interface connected to that subnet.
Currently, the interface identifier is defined as 64 bits long for
almost every case, leaving 64 bits for the subnet prefix.  This
document describes the advantages of this fixed boundary and analyzes
the issues that would be involved in treating it as a variable
boundary.

This document is a product of the IPv6 Maintenance Working Group of the
IETF.


INFORMATIONAL: This memo provides information for the Internet community.
It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
this memo is unlimited.

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