[rrg] Folks might be interested in these comments [dave at farber.net: [IP] ...
HeinerHummel at aol.com
HeinerHummel at aol.com
Fri Nov 14 00:15:37 PST 2008
In einer eMail vom 14.11.2008 04:59:05 Westeuropäische Normalzeit schreibt
damian.lezama at hotmail.com:
What I understand is that en EID could be
considered as a "name" under the book's nomenclature (a terrible format for
a name, but you can always translate it to something you like) and a RLOC is
an "address".
Yes. You are 100 % right. IMO, a lot of trouble is due to mixed up
terminology.
EID is clearly endpoint identifier.
RLOC (this is so far only my opinion) ought to identify LOCATION. You call
it "address" i.e. with quotes meaning real address.
Indeed IPv4 addresses (as well as IPv6 addresses) are values of the EID.
On a postal letter we would write name + address of the receiver.
On an email letter I would prefer to write EID:= IPv4-addr or IPv6-addr or
host name or..
and RLOC:= geolocation-id
> In fact, the ugliness of "NAT" is directly
> related to how, uh, "unfortunate" the underlying architecture really
> is.
I would rather say " how terrible wrong" the underlying archtecture really
is". An archtecture which tries to update the entire internet whenever some
user moves to another place would be impossible for a postal service and it is
not any better just because the internet runs with electronic speed. The
wasted time for producing and dealing with the update churn could be used for
much much better things.
Heiner
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://www.irtf.org/pipermail/rrg/attachments/20081114/fab8fe54/attachment.htm>
More information about the rrg
mailing list