Arturo Servin wrote: >> Even at that time and even on small end user LANs, it is >> better to let the gateway manage the address configuration >> state in centralized fashion than to have, so called, SLAAC, >> which is full of address configuration state, which is >> maintained in fully distributed manner involving all the nodes. > YMMV. > > I was working on TCP/IP, Novell and AppleTalk nets in the mid 90s and > as network engineers we hated to maintain a database of static IP > addresses for users, I think you mean "a database of static IP addresses" DNS, not HOSTS.TXT. Then, neither Novell nor AppleTalk enables it. Today, with DNS dynamic update, you don't have to maintain the database manually. The difference is that DHCP with centralized state is a lot more good at automatic maintenance of the database than so stateful SLAAC with fully distributed state. > and we loved how AT for example was totally > automatic (IPX was in the middle because we also hated the long addresses). So is most NAT boxes behaving as a DHCP server. > But any how, I agree with Brian that it was a good idea at that time. Not at all. It was merely that those who had little operational insight had thought so. Rest of the people developed DHCP and, now, you can see which is better. Masataka Ohta