Hi, > A possible course of action for the LISP Working Group and the IESG to > consider would be for the existing /32 address be documented as an IANA > Special Purpose Address allocation for use in supporting the current > LISP experiment, and for the LISP advocates to make their case for > particular requirements in the handling of global unicast address > allocations in IPv6 to the regional addressing communities. This would > allow the existing address policy development process to generate > outcomes that appropriately address the desires and concerns of the > broader community of stakeholders in supporting the potential > requirements of a broad base of deployment of LISP in the Internet's > routing environment. So, if I understand you correctly you say that this should be a (global?) policy proposal in the different RIR regions. Is that correct? If yes, then that could mean that every region allocates/assigns LISP prefixes from a separate block. Together with the current experimental /32 that would mean 6 prefixes for LISP in total. That's not as ideal as a single prefix, but still very acceptable for the BGP table. If this wg agrees that this is the way forward then there are a few things that should be done as far as I can see: - Define when the current experiment with the /32 is successful - Document a vision of how LISP should be deployed using a few prefixes that cover all the LISP space - Advise on how LISP prefixes could/should be assigned - Probably also looking at different phases, for example: - Early adopters: separate PITRs+BGP routes for each /48? - Middle: central PITRs covering the whole LISP space (public? in tier-1 nets?) - Long term: LISP PITRs in all major networks - Describe a strategy to go from each phase to the next - How to deal with the prefixes if LISP isn't as widely accepted as we hope - Writing a (global?) policy proposal for assignment of LISP prefixes - Submitting that proposal to all RIR regions and try to get consensus there I think that if we do the above we can show the operators a possible future where the BGP table isn't cluttered with PI prefixes. Worst case we end up with a prefix in BGP for every LISP end-site, but that's no worst than with current PI assignments. Best case we end up with a much smaller routing table (compared to normal PI) where all those end-sites are covered by a few prefixes. IMHO the most important thing is to plan on how to get there :-) And yes: of course I volunteer to help writing this stuff :-) Sander