[rrg] Folks might be interested in these comments [dave at farber.net: [IP] the undead urban myth of the LOC/EID split]

David Meyer dmm at 1-4-5.net
Thu Oct 30 07:52:33 PDT 2008


----- Forwarded message from David Farber <dave at farber.net> -----
> From: David Farber <dave at farber.net>
> To: ip <ip at v2.listbox.com>
> Subject: [IP] the undead urban myth of the LOC/EID split
> Date: Thu, 30 Oct 2008 02:54:17 -0400
> 
>
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
> From: mo at ccr.org (Mike O'Dell)
> Date: October 29, 2008 8:28:25 PM EDT
> To: dave at farber.net
> Subject: the undead urban myth of the LOC/EID split
>
>
> Dave,
>
> an indulgence if you would.
>
> there is a persistent urban myth (which gets repeated here
> with some frequency) which states that splitting "network
> addresses" into location-dependent and location-independent
> components is the secret to life, the universe, and everything.
>
> i know that myth quite well because once upon a time i subscribed
> to it and made a serious proposal to do just that with IPv6.
>
> But if you want to find out why the myth is wrong and what it
> takes to have it work right from first principles, you're going
> to have to read a book that will likely take some work:
>
> 	"Patterns in Network Architecture:
> 	 A Return to Fundamentals"
> 	 	by John Day
>
> It contains more than a few deeply profound insights.
> Among other things, you'll discover why "global addresses" are
> an abberation, and that "NAT" is an absolutely natural technique
> to use in structure networks - it's just the introduction of an
> arbitrary abstraction encapusulation. In fact, the ugliness of
> "NAT" is directly related to how, uh, "unfortunate" the
> underlying architecture really is.
>
> this is indeed a shameless plug for John's remarkable book.
> if you really want to know what a clean, deeply elegant
> network architecture based on solid fundamentals
> can look like, read his book.
>
> 	cheers,
> 	-mo
>
> Full and Fair Disclosure:
> I reviewed the text along the way as a work in progress.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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