RFC 2008:Implications of Various Address Allocatio...
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routing information


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... Public Internet. The document also recommends that organizations that do not provide a sufficient degree of routing information aggregation, but wish to obtain access to the Internet ...


... network, a switch need not keep detailed routing information about every possible subscriber in a distant area code. Instead, the switch ...


... uninterrupted continuous growth of the Public Internet, deploying mechanisms that contain the growth rate of the routing information is essential. ...
... Lacking mechanisms to contain the growth rate of the routing information, the growth of the Internet would have to be either limited or frozen, or the Internet ...
... deployed since late 1992 in the Public Internet as the primary mechanism to contain the growth rate of the routing information - without CIDR the Internet ...
... are some possible levels in the hierarchy. For example, a router within a site need not keep detailed routing information about every possible host in that site. Instead, the router ...
... possible host in that site. Instead, the router maintains routing information on a per subnet basis. Likewise, a router within a ...
... router within a provider need not keep detailed routing information about individual subnets within its subscribers ...
... subscribers. Instead, the router could maintain routing information on a per subscriber basis. Moreover, a router ...
... router within a provider need not keep detailed routing information about stub (single home) subscribers of other providers by maintaining ...
... stub (single home) subscribers of other providers by maintaining routing information on a per provider basis. ...


... under the loan. This document recommends a grace period of at least 30 days. Further, to contain the routing information overhead, this document suggests that a grace period ...
... provider's block, then the provider can advertise a single address prefix. This reduces the routing information that needs to be carried by the Internet routing system ...


... hierarchical routing in the Internet is not to reduce the total amount of routing information in the Internet to the theoretically possible minimum, but just to contain the volume of ...
... Internet to the theoretically possible minimum, but just to contain the volume of routing information within the limits of technology, price/performance, and human factors. Therefore, organizations that ...
... Carrying routing information has a cost associated with it. This cost, at some point, may be passed back in full to the organizations that inject the routing information ...
... routing information has a cost associated with it. This cost, at some point, may be passed back in full to the organizations that inject the routing information. Aggregation of addressing ...
... its direct provider) by limiting the distribution scope of its routing information to its direct provider. Connectivity to the rest of the Internet ...
... Both renumbering (due to the "address lending" policy), and non- aggregated routing information (due to the "address ownership" policy), and the use of mediating gateways ...


... address allocation policies in the Public Internet. Second, organizations that do not provide a sufficient degree of routing information aggregation to obtain access to the Internet routing ...



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