RFC 1518 - An Architecture for IP Address Allocation with CIDR

[フレーム]

Network Working Group Y. Rekhter
Request for Comments: 1518 T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp.
Category: Standards Track T. Li
 cisco Systems
 Editors
 September 1993
 An Architecture for IP Address Allocation with CIDR
Status of this Memo
 This RFC specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
 improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
 Official Protocol Standards" for the standardization state and status
 of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
1. Introduction
 This paper provides an architecture and a plan for allocating IP
 addresses in the Internet. This architecture and the plan are
 intended to play an important role in steering the Internet towards
 the Address Assignment and Aggregating Strategy outlined in [1].
 The IP address space is a scarce shared resource that must be managed
 for the good of the community. The managers of this resource are
 acting as its custodians. They have a responsibility to the community
 to manage it for the common good.
2. Scope
 The global Internet can be modeled as a collection of hosts
 interconnected via transmission and switching facilities. Control
 over the collection of hosts and the transmission and switching
 facilities that compose the networking resources of the global
 Internet is not homogeneous, but is distributed among multiple
 administrative authorities. Resources under control of a single
 administration form a domain. For the rest of this paper, "domain"
 and "routing domain" will be used interchangeably. Domains that
 share their resources with other domains are called network service
 providers (or just providers). Domains that utilize other domain's
 resources are called network service subscribers (or just
 subscribers). A given domain may act as a provider and a subscriber
 simultaneously.
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 There are two aspects of interest when discussing IP address
 allocation within the Internet. The first is the set of
 administrative requirements for obtaining and allocating IP
 addresses; the second is the technical aspect of such assignments,
 having largely to do with routing, both within a routing domain
 (intra-domain routing) and between routing domains (inter-domain
 routing). This paper focuses on the technical issues.
 In the current Internet many routing domains (such as corporate and
 campus networks) attach to transit networks (such as regionals) in
 only one or a small number of carefully controlled access points.
 The former act as subscribers, while the latter act as providers.
 The architecture and recommendations provided in this paper are
 intended for immediate deployment. This paper specifically does not
 address long-term research issues, such as complex policy-based
 routing requirements.
 Addressing solutions which require substantial changes or constraints
 on the current topology are not considered.
 The architecture and recommendations in this paper are oriented
 primarily toward the large-scale division of IP address allocation in
 the Internet. Topics covered include:
 - Benefits of encoding some topological information in IP
 addresses to significantly reduce routing protocol overhead;
 - The anticipated need for additional levels of hierarchy in
 Internet addressing to support network growth;
 - The recommended mapping between Internet topological entities
 (i.e., service providers, and service subscribers) and IP
 addressing and routing components;
 - The recommended division of IP address assignment among service
 providers (e.g., backbones, regionals), and service subscribers
 (e.g., sites);
 - Allocation of the IP addresses by the Internet Registry;
 - Choice of the high-order portion of the IP addresses in leaf
 routing domains that are connected to more than one service
 provider (e.g., backbone or a regional network).
 It is noted that there are other aspects of IP address allocation,
 both technical and administrative, that are not covered in this
 paper. Topics not covered or mentioned only superficially include:
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 - Identification of specific administrative domains in the
 Internet;
 - Policy or mechanisms for making registered information known to
 third parties (such as the entity to which a specific IP address
 or a portion of the IP address space has been allocated);
 - How a routing domain (especially a site) should organize its
 internal topology or allocate portions of its IP address space;
 the relationship between topology and addresses is discussed,
 but the method of deciding on a particular topology or internal
 addressing plan is not; and,
 - Procedures for assigning host IP addresses.
3. Background
 Some background information is provided in this section that is
 helpful in understanding the issues involved in IP address
 allocation. A brief discussion of IP routing is provided.
 IP partitions the routing problem into three parts:
 - routing exchanges between end systems and routers (ARP),
 - routing exchanges between routers in the same routing domain
 (interior routing), and,
 - routing among routing domains (exterior routing).
4. IP Addresses and Routing
 For the purposes of this paper, an IP prefix is an IP address and
 some indication of the leftmost contiguous significant bits within
 this address. Throughout this paper IP address prefixes will be
 expressed as <IP-address IP-mask> tuples, such that a bitwise logical
 AND operation on the IP-address and IP-mask components of a tuple
 yields the sequence of leftmost contiguous significant bits that form
 the IP address prefix. For example a tuple with the value <193.1.0.0
 255.255.0.0> denotes an IP address prefix with 16 leftmost contiguous
 significant bits.
 When determining an administrative policy for IP address assignment,
 it is important to understand the technical consequences. The
 objective behind the use of hierarchical routing is to achieve some
 level of routing data abstraction, or summarization, to reduce the
 cpu, memory, and transmission bandwidth consumed in support of
 routing.
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 While the notion of routing data abstraction may be applied to
 various types of routing information, this paper focuses on one
 particular type, namely reachability information. Reachability
 information describes the set of reachable destinations. Abstraction
 of reachability information dictates that IP addresses be assigned
 according to topological routing structures. However, administrative
 assignment falls along organizational or political boundaries. These
 may not be congruent to topological boundaries and therefore the
 requirements of the two may collide. It is necessary to find a
 balance between these two needs.
 Routing data abstraction occurs at the boundary between
 hierarchically arranged topological routing structures. An element
 lower in the hierarchy reports summary routing information to its
 parent(s).
 At routing domain boundaries, IP address information is exchanged
 (statically or dynamically) with other routing domains. If IP
 addresses within a routing domain are all drawn from non-contiguous
 IP address spaces (allowing no abstraction), then the boundary
 information consists of an enumerated list of all the IP addresses.
 Alternatively, should the routing domain draw IP addresses for all
 the hosts within the domain from a single IP address prefix, boundary
 routing information can be summarized into the single IP address
 prefix. This permits substantial data reduction and allows better
 scaling (as compared to the uncoordinated addressing discussed in the
 previous paragraph).
 If routing domains are interconnected in a more-or-less random (i.e.,
 non-hierarchical) scheme, it is quite likely that no further
 abstraction of routing data can occur. Since routing domains would
 have no defined hierarchical relationship, administrators would not
 be able to assign IP addresses within the domains out of some common
 prefix for the purpose of data abstraction. The result would be flat
 inter-domain routing; all routing domains would need explicit
 knowledge of all other routing domains that they route to. This can
 work well in small and medium sized internets. However, this does
 not scale to very large internets. For example, we expect growth in
 the future to an Internet which has tens or hundreds of thousands of
 routing domains in North America alone. This requires a greater
 degree of the reachability information abstraction beyond that which
 can be achieved at the "routing domain" level.
 In the Internet, however, it should be possible to significantly
 constrain the volume and the complexity of routing information by
 taking advantage of the existing hierarchical interconnectivity, as
 discussed in Section 5. Thus, there is the opportunity for a group of
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 routing domains each to be assigned an address prefix from a shorter
 prefix assigned to another routing domain whose function is to
 interconnect the group of routing domains. Each member of the group
 of routing domains now has its (somewhat longer) prefix, from which
 it assigns its addresses.
 The most straightforward case of this occurs when there is a set of
 routing domains which are all attached to a single service provider
 domain (e.g., regional network), and which use that provider for all
 external (inter-domain) traffic. A small prefix may be given to the
 provider, which then gives slightly longer prefixes (based on the
 provider's prefix) to each of the routing domains that it
 interconnects. This allows the provider, when informing other routing
 domains of the addresses that it can reach, to abbreviate the
 reachability information for a large number of routing domains as a
 single prefix. This approach therefore can allow a great deal of
 hierarchical abbreviation of routing information, and thereby can
 greatly improve the scalability of inter-domain routing.
 Clearly, this approach is recursive and can be carried through
 several iterations. Routing domains at any "level" in the hierarchy
 may use their prefix as the basis for subsequent suballocations,
 assuming that the IP addresses remain within the overall length and
 structure constraints.
 At this point, we observe that the number of nodes at each lower
 level of a hierarchy tends to grow exponentially. Thus the greatest
 gains in the reachability information abstraction (for the benefit of
 all higher levels of the hierarchy) occur when the reachability
 information aggregation occurs near the leaves of the hierarchy; the
 gains drop significantly at each higher level. Therefore, the law of
 diminishing returns suggests that at some point data abstraction
 ceases to produce significant benefits. Determination of the point at
 which data abstraction ceases to be of benefit requires a careful
 consideration of the number of routing domains that are expected to
 occur at each level of the hierarchy (over a given period of time),
 compared to the number of routing domains and address prefixes that
 can conveniently and efficiently be handled via dynamic inter-domain
 routing protocols.
4.1 Efficiency versus Decentralized Control
 If the Internet plans to support a decentralized address
 administration [4], then there is a balance that must be sought
 between the requirements on IP addresses for efficient routing and
 the need for decentralized address administration. A proposal
 described in [3] offers an example of how these two needs might be
 met.
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 The IP address prefix <198.0.0.0 254.0.0.0> provides for
 administrative decentralization. This prefix identifies part of the
 IP address space allocated for North America. The lower order part of
 that prefix allows allocation of IP addresses along topological
 boundaries in support of increased data abstraction. Clients within
 North America use parts of the IP address space that is underneath
 the IP address space of their service providers. Within a routing
 domain addresses for subnetworks and hosts are allocated from the
 unique IP prefix assigned to the domain.
5. IP Address Administration and Routing in the Internet
 The basic Internet routing components are service providers (e.g.,
 backbones, regional networks), and service subscribers (e.g., sites
 or campuses). These components are arranged hierarchically for the
 most part. A natural mapping from these components to IP routing
 components is that providers and subscribers act as routing domains.
 Alternatively, a subscriber (e.g., a site) may choose to operate as a
 part of a domain formed by a service provider. We assume that some,
 if not most, sites will prefer to operate as part of their provider's
 routing domain. Such sites can exchange routing information with
 their provider via interior routing protocol route leaking or via an
 exterior routing protocol. For the purposes of this discussion, the
 choice is not significant. The site is still allocated a prefix from
 the provider's address space, and the provider will advertise its own
 prefix into inter-domain routing.
 Given such a mapping, where should address administration and
 allocation be performed to satisfy both administrative
 decentralization and data abstraction? The following possibilities
 are considered:
 - at some part within a routing domain,
 - at the leaf routing domain,
 - at the transit routing domain (TRD), and
 - at the continental boundaries.
 A point within a routing domain corresponds to a subnetwork. If a
 domain is composed of multiple subnetworks, they are
 interconnected via routers. Leaf routing domains correspond to
 sites, where the primary purpose is to provide intra-domain
 routing services. Transit routing domains are deployed to carry
 transit (i.e., inter-domain) traffic; backbones and providers are
 TRDs.
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 The greatest burden in transmitting and operating on routing
 information is at the top of the routing hierarchy, where routing
 information tends to accumulate. In the Internet, for example,
 providers must manage the set of network numbers for all networks
 reachable through the provider. Traffic destined for other
 providers is generally routed to the backbones (which act as
 providers as well). The backbones, however, must be cognizant of
 the network numbers for all attached providers and their
 associated networks.
 In general, the advantage of abstracting routing information at a
 given level of the routing hierarchy is greater at the higher
 levels of the hierarchy. There is relatively little direct benefit
 to the administration that performs the abstraction, since it must
 maintain routing information individually on each attached
 topological routing structure.
 For example, suppose that a given site is trying to decide whether
 to obtain an IP address prefix directly from the IP address space
 allocated for North America, or from the IP address space
 allocated to its service provider. If considering only their own
 self-interest, the site itself and the attached provider have
 little reason to choose one approach or the other. The site must
 use one prefix or another; the source of the prefix has little
 effect on routing efficiency within the site. The provider must
 maintain information about each attached site in order to route,
 regardless of any commonality in the prefixes of the sites.
 However, there is a difference when the provider distributes
 routing information to other providers (e.g., backbones or TRDs).
 In the first case, the provider cannot aggregate the site's
 address into its own prefix; the address must be explicitly listed
 in routing exchanges, resulting in an additional burden to other
 providers which must exchange and maintain this information.
 In the second case, each other provider (e.g., backbone or TRD)
 sees a single address prefix for the provider, which encompasses
 the new site. This avoids the exchange of additional routing
 information to identify the new site's address prefix. Thus, the
 advantages primarily accrue to other providers which maintain
 routing information about this site and provider.
 One might apply a supplier/consumer model to this problem: the
 higher level (e.g., a backbone) is a supplier of routing services,
 while the lower level (e.g., a TRD) is the consumer of these
 services. The price charged for services is based upon the cost of
 providing them. The overhead of managing a large table of
 addresses for routing to an attached topological entity
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 contributes to this cost.
 The Internet, however, is not a market economy. Rather, efficient
 operation is based on cooperation. The recommendations discussed
 below describe simple and tractable ways of managing the IP
 address space that benefit the entire community.
5.1 Administration of IP addresses within a domain
 If individual subnetworks take their IP addresses from a myriad of
 unrelated IP address spaces, there will be effectively no data
 abstraction beyond what is built into existing intra-domain
 routing protocols. For example, assume that within a routing
 domain uses three independent prefixes assigned from three
 different IP address spaces associated with three different
 attached providers.
 This has a negative effect on inter-domain routing, particularly
 on those other domains which need to maintain routes to this
 domain. There is no common prefix that can be used to represent
 these IP addresses and therefore no summarization can take place
 at the routing domain boundary. When addresses are advertised by
 this routing domain to other routing domains, an enumerated list
 of the three individual prefixes must be used.
 This situation is roughly analogous to the present dissemination
 of routing information in the Internet, where each domain may have
 non-contiguous network numbers assigned to it. The result of
 allowing subnetworks within a routing domain to take their IP
 addresses from unrelated IP address spaces is flat routing at the
 A/B/C class network level. The number of IP prefixes that leaf
 routing domains would advertise is on the order of the number of
 attached network numbers; the number of prefixes a provider's
 routing domain would advertise is approximately the number of
 network numbers attached to the client leaf routing domains; and
 for a backbone this would be summed across all attached providers.
 This situation is just barely acceptable in the current Internet,
 and as the Internet grows this will quickly become intractable. A
 greater degree of hierarchical information reduction is necessary
 to allow continued growth in the Internet.
5.2 Administration at the Leaf Routing Domain
 As mentioned previously, the greatest degree of data abstraction
 comes at the lowest levels of the hierarchy. Providing each leaf
 routing domain (that is, site) with a prefix from its provider's
 prefix results in the biggest single increase in abstraction. From
 outside the leaf routing domain, the set of all addresses
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 reachable in the domain can then be represented by a single
 prefix. Further, all destinations reachable within the provider's
 prefix can be represented by a single prefix.
 For example, consider a single campus which is a leaf routing
 domain which would currently require 4 different IP networks.
 Under the new allocation scheme, they might instead be given a
 single prefix which provides the same number of destination
 addresses. Further, since the prefix is a subset of the
 provider's prefix, they impose no additional burden on the higher
 levels of the routing hierarchy.
 There is a close relationship between subnetworks and routing
 domains implicit in the fact that they operate a common routing
 protocol and are under the control of a single administration. The
 routing domain administration subdivides the domain into
 subnetworks. The routing domain represents the only path between
 a subnetwork and the rest of the internetwork. It is reasonable
 that this relationship also extend to include a common IP
 addressing space. Thus, the subnetworks within the leaf routing
 domain should take their IP addresses from the prefix assigned to
 the leaf routing domain.
5.3 Administration at the Transit Routing Domain
 Two kinds of transit routing domains are considered, direct
 providers and indirect providers. Most of the subscribers of a
 direct provider are domains that act solely as service subscribers
 (they carry no transit traffic). Most of the subscribers of an
 indirect provider are domains that, themselves, act as service
 providers. In present terminology a backbone is an indirect
 provider, while a TRD is a direct provider. Each case is discussed
 separately below.
5.3.1 Direct Service Providers
 It is interesting to consider whether direct service providers'
 routing domains should use their IP address space for assigning IP
 addresses from a unique prefix to the leaf routing domains that
 they serve. The benefits derived from data abstraction are greater
 than in the case of leaf routing domains, and the additional
 degree of data abstraction provided by this may be necessary in
 the short term.
 As an illustration consider an example of a direct provider that
 serves 100 clients. If each client takes its addresses from 4
 independent address spaces then the total number of entries that
 are needed to handle routing to these clients is 400 (100 clients
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 times 4 providers). If each client takes its addresses from a
 single address space then the total number of entries would be
 only 100. Finally, if all the clients take their addresses from
 the same address space then the total number of entries would be
 only 1.
 We expect that in the near term the number of routing domains in
 the Internet will grow to the point that it will be infeasible to
 route on the basis of a flat field of routing domains. It will
 therefore be essential to provide a greater degree of information
 abstraction.
 Direct providers may give part of their address space (prefixes)
 to leaf domains, based on an address prefix given to the provider.
 This results in direct providers advertising to backbones a small
 fraction of the number of address prefixes that would be necessary
 if they enumerated the individual prefixes of the leaf routing
 domains. This represents a significant savings given the expected
 scale of global internetworking.
 Are leaf routing domains willing to accept prefixes derived from
 the direct providers? In the supplier/consumer model, the direct
 provider is offering connectivity as the service, priced according
 to its costs of operation. This includes the "price" of obtaining
 service from one or more indirect providers (e.g., backbones). In
 general, indirect providers will want to handle as few address
 prefixes as possible to keep costs low. In the Internet
 environment, which does not operate as a typical marketplace, leaf
 routing domains must be sensitive to the resource constraints of
 the providers (both direct and indirect). The efficiencies gained
 in inter-domain routing clearly warrant the adoption of IP address
 prefixes derived from the IP address space of the providers.
 The mechanics of this scenario are straightforward. Each direct
 provider is given a unique small set of IP address prefixes, from
 which its attached leaf routing domains can allocates slightly
 longer IP address prefixes. For example assume that NIST is a
 leaf routing domain whose inter-domain link is via SURANet. If
 SURANet is assigned an unique IP address prefix <198.1.0.0
 255.255.0.0>, NIST could use a unique IP prefix of <198.1.0.0
 255.255.240.0>.
 If a direct service provider is connected to another provider(s)
 (either direct or indirect) via multiple attachment points, then
 in certain cases it may be advantageous to the direct provider to
 exert a certain degree of control over the coupling between the
 attachment points and flow of the traffic destined to a particular
 subscriber. Such control can be facilitated by first partitioning
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 all the subscribers into groups, such that traffic destined to all
 the subscribers within a group should flow through a particular
 attachment point. Once the partitioning is done, the address space
 of the provider is subdivided along the group boundaries. A leaf
 routing domain that is willing to accept prefixes derived from its
 direct provider gets a prefix from the provider's address space
 subdivision associated with the group the domain belongs to. Note
 that the advertisement by the direct provider of the routing
 information associated with each subdivision must be done with
 care to ensure that such an advertisement would not result in a
 global distribution of separate reachability information
 associated with each subdivision, unless such distribution is
 warranted for some other purposes (e.g., supporting certain
 aspects of policy-based routing).
5.3.2 Indirect Providers (Backbones)
 There does not appear to be a strong case for direct providers to
 take their address spaces from the the IP space of an indirect
 provider (e.g., backbone). The benefit in routing data abstraction
 is relatively small. The number of direct providers today is in
 the tens and an order of magnitude increase would not cause an
 undue burden on the backbones. Also, it may be expected that as
 time goes by there will be increased direct interconnection of the
 direct providers, leaf routing domains directly attached to the
 backbones, and international links directly attached to the
 providers. Under these circumstances, the distinction between
 direct and indirect providers may become blurred.
 An additional factor that discourages allocation of IP addresses
 from a backbone prefix is that the backbones and their attached
 providers are perceived as being independent. Providers may take
 their long- haul service from one or more backbones, or may switch
 backbones should a more cost-effective service be provided
 elsewhere. Having IP addresses derived from a backbone is
 inconsistent with the nature of the relationship.
5.4 Multi-homed Routing Domains
 The discussions in Section 5.3 suggest methods for allocating IP
 addresses based on direct or indirect provider connectivity. This
 allows a great deal of information reduction to be achieved for
 those routing domains which are attached to a single TRD. In
 particular, such routing domains may select their IP addresses
 from a space delegated to them by the direct provider. This allows
 the provider, when announcing the addresses that it can reach to
 other providers, to use a single address prefix to describe a
 large number of IP addresses corresponding to multiple routing
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 domains.
 However, there are additional considerations for routing domains
 which are attached to multiple providers. Such "multi-homed"
 routing domains may, for example, consist of single-site campuses
 and companies which are attached to multiple backbones, large
 organizations which are attached to different providers at
 different locations in the same country, or multi-national
 organizations which are attached to backbones in a variety of
 countries worldwide. There are a number of possible ways to deal
 with these multi-homed routing domains.
 One possible solution is for each multi-homed organization to
 obtain its IP address space independently from the providers to
 which it is attached. This allows each multi-homed organization
 to base its IP assignments on a single prefix, and to thereby
 summarize the set of all IP addresses reachable within that
 organization via a single prefix. The disadvantage of this
 approach is that since the IP address for that organization has no
 relationship to the addresses of any particular TRD, the TRDs to
 which this organization is attached will need to advertise the
 prefix for this organization to other providers. Other providers
 (potentially worldwide) will need to maintain an explicit entry
 for that organization in their routing tables.
 For example, suppose that a very large North American company
 "Mega Big International Incorporated" (MBII) has a fully
 interconnected internal network and is assigned a single prefix as
 part of the North American prefix. It is likely that outside of
 North America, a single entry may be maintained in routing tables
 for all North American destinations. However, within North
 America, every provider will need to maintain a separate address
 entry for MBII. If MBII is in fact an international corporation,
 then it may be necessary for every provider worldwide to maintain
 a separate entry for MBII (including backbones to which MBII is
 not attached). Clearly this may be acceptable if there are a small
 number of such multi-homed routing domains, but would place an
 unacceptable load on routers within backbones if all organizations
 were to choose such address assignments. This solution may not
 scale to internets where there are many hundreds of thousands of
 multi-homed organizations.
 A second possible approach would be for multi-homed organizations
 to be assigned a separate IP address space for each connection to
 a TRD, and to assign a single prefix to some subset of its
 domain(s) based on the closest interconnection point. For example,
 if MBII had connections to two providers in the U.S. (one east
 coast, and one west coast), as well as three connections to
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 national backbones in Europe, and one in the far east, then MBII
 may make use of six different address prefixes. Each part of MBII
 would be assigned a single address prefix based on the nearest
 connection.
 For purposes of external routing of traffic from outside MBII to a
 destination inside of MBII, this approach works similarly to
 treating MBII as six separate organizations. For purposes of
 internal routing, or for routing traffic from inside of MBII to a
 destination outside of MBII, this approach works the same as the
 first solution.
 If we assume that incoming traffic (coming from outside of MBII,
 with a destination within MBII) is always to enter via the nearest
 point to the destination, then each TRD which has a connection to
 MBII needs to announce to other TRDs the ability to reach only
 those parts of MBII whose address is taken from its own address
 space. This implies that no additional routing information needs
 to be exchanged between TRDs, resulting in a smaller load on the
 inter-domain routing tables maintained by TRDs when compared to
 the first solution. This solution therefore scales better to
 extremely large internets containing very large numbers of multi-
 homed organizations.
 One problem with the second solution is that backup routes to
 multi-homed organizations are not automatically maintained. With
 the first solution, each TRD, in announcing the ability to reach
 MBII, specifies that it is able to reach all of the hosts within
 MBII. With the second solution, each TRD announces that it can
 reach all of the hosts based on its own address prefix, which only
 includes some of the hosts within MBII. If the connection between
 MBII and one particular TRD were severed, then the hosts within
 MBII with addresses based on that TRD would become unreachable via
 inter-domain routing. The impact of this problem can be reduced
 somewhat by maintenance of additional information within routing
 tables, but this reduces the scaling advantage of the second
 approach.
 The second solution also requires that when external connectivity
 changes, internal addresses also change.
 Also note that this and the previous approach will tend to cause
 packets to take different routes. With the first approach, packets
 from outside of MBII destined for within MBII will tend to enter
 via the point which is closest to the source (which will therefore
 tend to maximize the load on the networks internal to MBII). With
 the second solution, packets from outside destined for within MBII
 will tend to enter via the point which is closest to the
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 destination (which will tend to minimize the load on the networks
 within MBII, and maximize the load on the TRDs).
 These solutions also have different effects on policies. For
 example, suppose that country "X" has a law that traffic from a
 source within country X to a destination within country X must at
 all times stay entirely within the country. With the first
 solution, it is not possible to determine from the destination
 address whether or not the destination is within the country. With
 the second solution, a separate address may be assigned to those
 hosts which are within country X, thereby allowing routing
 policies to be followed. Similarly, suppose that "Little Small
 Company" (LSC) has a policy that its packets may never be sent to
 a destination that is within MBII. With either solution, the
 routers within LSC may be configured to discard any traffic that
 has a destination within MBII's address space. However, with the
 first solution this requires one entry; with the second it
 requires many entries and may be impossible as a practical matter.
 There are other possible solutions as well. A third approach is to
 assign each multi-homed organization a single address prefix,
 based on one of its connections to a TRD. Other TRDs to which the
 multi-homed organization are attached maintain a routing table
 entry for the organization, but are extremely selective in terms
 of which other TRDs are told of this route. This approach will
 produce a single "default" routing entry which all TRDs will know
 how to reach (since presumably all TRDs will maintain routes to
 each other), while providing more direct routing in some cases.
 There is at least one situation in which this third approach is
 particularly appropriate. Suppose that a special interest group of
 organizations have deployed their own backbone. For example, lets
 suppose that the U.S. National Widget Manufacturers and
 Researchers have set up a U.S.-wide backbone, which is used by
 corporations who manufacture widgets, and certain universities
 which are known for their widget research efforts. We can expect
 that the various organizations which are in the widget group will
 run their internal networks as separate routing domains, and most
 of them will also be attached to other TRDs (since most of the
 organizations involved in widget manufacture and research will
 also be involved in other activities). We can therefore expect
 that many or most of the organizations in the widget group are
 dual-homed, with one attachment for widget-associated
 communications and the other attachment for other types of
 communications. Let's also assume that the total number of
 organizations involved in the widget group is small enough that it
 is reasonable to maintain a routing table containing one entry per
 organization, but that they are distributed throughout a larger
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 internet with many millions of (mostly not widget-associated)
 routing domains.
 With the third approach, each multi-homed organization in the
 widget group would make use of an address assignment based on its
 other attachment(s) to TRDs (the attachments not associated with
 the widget group). The widget backbone would need to maintain
 routes to the routing domains associated with the various member
 organizations. Similarly, all members of the widget group would
 need to maintain a table of routes to the other members via the
 widget backbone. However, since the widget backbone does not
 inform other general worldwide TRDs of what addresses it can reach
 (since the backbone is not intended for use by other outside
 organizations), the relatively large set of routing prefixes needs
 to be maintained only in a limited number of places. The addresses
 assigned to the various organizations which are members of the
 widget group would provide a "default route" via each members
 other attachments to TRDs, while allowing communications within
 the widget group to use the preferred path.
 A fourth solution involves assignment of a particular address
 prefix for routing domains which are attached to precisely two (or
 more) specific routing domains. For example, suppose that there
 are two providers "SouthNorthNet" and "NorthSouthNet" which have a
 very large number of customers in common (i.e., there are a large
 number of routing domains which are attached to both). Rather than
 getting two address prefixes these organizations could obtain
 three prefixes. Those routing domains which are attached to
 NorthSouthNet but not attached to SouthNorthNet obtain an address
 assignment based on one of the prefixes. Those routing domains
 which are attached to SouthNorthNet but not to NorthSouthNet would
 obtain an address based on the second prefix. Finally, those
 routing domains which are multi-homed to both of these networks
 would obtain an address based on the third prefix. Each of these
 two TRDs would then advertise two prefixes to other TRDs, one
 prefix for leaf routing domains attached to it only, and one
 prefix for leaf routing domains attached to both.
 This fourth solution is likely to be important when use of public
 data networks becomes more common. In particular, it is likely
 that at some point in the future a substantial percentage of all
 routing domains will be attached to public data networks. In this
 case, nearly all government-sponsored networks (such as some
 current regionals) may have a set of customers which overlaps
 substantially with the public networks.
 There are therefore a number of possible solutions to the problem
 of assigning IP addresses to multi-homed routing domains. Each of
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 these solutions has very different advantages and disadvantages.
 Each solution places a different real (i.e., financial) cost on
 the multi-homed organizations, and on the TRDs (including those to
 which the multi-homed organizations are not attached).
 In addition, most of the solutions described also highlight the
 need for each TRD to develop policy on whether and under what
 conditions to accept addresses that are not based on its own
 address prefix, and how such non-local addresses will be treated.
 For example, a somewhat conservative policy might be that non-
 local IP address prefixes will be accepted from any attached leaf
 routing domain, but not advertised to other TRDs. In a less
 conservative policy, a TRD might accept such non-local prefixes
 and agree to exchange them with a defined set of other TRDs (this
 set could be an a priori group of TRDs that have something in
 common such as geographical location, or the result of an
 agreement specific to the requesting leaf routing domain). Various
 policies involve real costs to TRDs, which may be reflected in
 those policies.
5.5 Private Links
 The discussion up to this point concentrates on the relationship
 between IP addresses and routing between various routing domains
 over transit routing domains, where each transit routing domain
 interconnects a large number of routing domains and offers a
 more-or-less public service.
 However, there may also exist a number of links which interconnect
 two routing domains in such a way, that usage of these links may
 be limited to carrying traffic only between the two routing
 domains. We'll refer to such links as "private".
 For example, let's suppose that the XYZ corporation does a lot of
 business with MBII. In this case, XYZ and MBII may contract with a
 carrier to provide a private link between the two corporations,
 where this link may only be used for packets whose source is
 within one of the two corporations, and whose destination is
 within the other of the two corporations. Finally, suppose that
 the point-to-point link is connected between a single router
 (router X) within XYZ corporation and a single router (router M)
 within MBII. It is therefore necessary to configure router X to
 know which addresses can be reached over this link (specifically,
 all addresses reachable in MBII). Similarly, it is necessary to
 configure router M to know which addresses can be reached over
 this link (specifically, all addresses reachable in XYZ
 Corporation).
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 The important observation to be made here is that the additional
 connectivity due to such private links may be ignored for the
 purpose of IP address allocation, and do not pose a problem for
 routing. This is because the routing information associated with
 such connectivity is not propagated throughout the Internet, and
 therefore does not need to be collapsed into a TRD's prefix.
 In our example, let's suppose that the XYZ corporation has a
 single connection to a regional, and has therefore uses the IP
 address space from the space given to that regional. Similarly,
 let's suppose that MBII, as an international corporation with
 connections to six different providers, has chosen the second
 solution from Section 5.4, and therefore has obtained six
 different address allocations. In this case, all addresses
 reachable in the XYZ Corporation can be described by a single
 address prefix (implying that router M only needs to be configured
 with a single address prefix to represent the addresses reachable
 over this link). All addresses reachable in MBII can be described
 by six address prefixes (implying that router X needs to be
 configured with six address prefixes to represent the addresses
 reachable over the link).
 In some cases, such private links may be permitted to forward
 traffic for a small number of other routing domains, such as
 closely affiliated organizations. This will increase the
 configuration requirements slightly. However, provided that the
 number of organizations using the link is relatively small, then
 this still does not represent a significant problem.
 Note that the relationship between routing and IP addressing
 described in other sections of this paper is concerned with
 problems in scaling caused by large, essentially public transit
 routing domains which interconnect a large number of routing
 domains. However, for the purpose of IP address allocation,
 private links which interconnect only a small number of private
 routing domains do not pose a problem, and may be ignored. For
 example, this implies that a single leaf routing domain which has
 a single connection to a "public" backbone, plus a number of
 private links to other leaf routing domains, can be treated as if
 it were single-homed to the backbone for the purpose of IP address
 allocation. We expect that this is also another way of dealing
 with multi-homed domains.
5.6 Zero-Homed Routing Domains
 Currently, a very large number of organizations have internal
 communications networks which are not connected to any service
 providers. Such organizations may, however, have a number of
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 private links that they use for communications with other
 organizations. Such organizations do not participate in global
 routing, but are satisfied with reachability to those
 organizations with which they have established private links.
 These are referred to as zero-homed routing domains.
 Zero-homed routing domains can be considered as the degenerate
 case of routing domains with private links, as discussed in the
 previous section, and do not pose a problem for inter-domain
 routing. As above, the routing information exchanged across the
 private links sees very limited distribution, usually only to the
 routing domain at the other end of the link. Thus, there are no
 address abstraction requirements beyond those inherent in the
 address prefixes exchanged across the private link.
 However, it is important that zero-homed routing domains use valid
 globally unique IP addresses. Suppose that the zero-homed routing
 domain is connected through a private link to a routing domain.
 Further, this routing domain participates in an internet that
 subscribes to the global IP addressing plan. This domain must be
 able to distinguish between the zero-homed routing domain's IP
 addresses and any other IP addresses that it may need to route to.
 The only way this can be guaranteed is if the zero-homed routing
 domain uses globally unique IP addresses.
5.7 Continental aggregation
 Another level of hierarchy may also be used in this addressing
 scheme to further reduce the amount of routing information
 necessary for inter-continental routing. Continental aggregation
 is useful because continental boundaries provide natural barriers
 to topological connection and administrative boundaries. Thus, it
 presents a natural boundary for another level of aggregation of
 inter-domain routing information. To make use of this, it is
 necessary that each continent be assigned an appropriate subset of
 the address space. Providers (both direct and indirect) within
 that continent would allocate their addresses from this space.
 Note that there are numerous exceptions to this, in which a
 service provider (either direct or indirect) spans a continental
 division. These exceptions can be handled similarly to multi-
 homed routing domains, as discussed above.
 Note that, in contrast to the case of providers, the aggregation
 of continental routing information may not be done on the
 continent to which the prefix is allocated. The cost of inter-
 continental links (and especially trans-oceanic links) is very
 high. If aggregation is performed on the "near" side of the link,
 then routing information about unreachable destinations within
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 that continent can only reside on that continent. Alternatively,
 if continental aggregation is done on the "far" side of an inter-
 continental link, the "far" end can perform the aggregation and
 inject it into continental routing. This means that destinations
 which are part of the continental aggregation, but for which there
 is not a corresponding more specific prefix can be rejected before
 leaving the continent on which they originated.
 For example, suppose that Europe is assigned a prefix of
 <194.0.0.0 254.0.0.0>, such that European routing also contains
 the longer prefixes <194.1.0.0 255.255.0.0> and <194.2.0.0
 255.255.0.0>. All of the longer European prefixes may be
 advertised across a trans-Atlantic link to North America. The
 router in North America would then aggregate these routes, and
 only advertise the prefix <194.0.0.0 255.0.0.0> into North
 American routing. Packets which are destined for 194.1.1.1 would
 traverse North American routing, but would encounter the North
 American router which performed the European aggregation. If the
 prefix <194.1.0.0 255.255.0.0> is unreachable, the router would
 drop the packet and send an ICMP Unreachable without using the
 trans-Atlantic link.
5.8 Transition Issues
 Allocation of IP addresses based on connectivity to TRDs is
 important to allow scaling of inter-domain routing to an internet
 containing millions of routing domains. However, such address
 allocation based on topology implies that in order to maximize the
 efficiency in routing gained by such allocation, certain changes
 in topology may suggest a change of address.
 Note that an address change need not happen immediately. A domain
 which has changed service providers may still advertise its prefix
 through its new service provider. Since upper levels in the
 routing hierarchy will perform routing based on the longest
 prefix, reachability is preserved, although the aggregation and
 scalability of the routing information has greatly diminished.
 Thus, a domain which does change its topology should change
 addresses as soon as convenient. The timing and mechanics of such
 changes must be the result of agreements between the old service
 provider, the new provider, and the domain.
 This need to allow for change in addresses is a natural,
 inevitable consequence of routing data abstraction. The basic
 notion of routing data abstraction is that there is some
 correspondence between the address and where a system (i.e., a
 routing domain, subnetwork, or end system) is located. Thus if the
 system moves, in some cases the address will have to change. If it
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 were possible to change the connectivity between routing domains
 without changing the addresses, then it would clearly be necessary
 to keep track of the location of that routing domain on an
 individual basis.
 In the short term, due to the rapid growth and increased
 commercialization of the Internet, it is possible that the
 topology may be relatively volatile. This implies that planning
 for address transition is very important. Fortunately, there are a
 number of steps which can be taken to help ease the effort
 required for address transition. A complete description of address
 transition issues is outside of the scope of this paper. However,
 a very brief outline of some transition issues is contained in
 this section.
 Also note that the possible requirement to transition addresses
 based on changes in topology imply that it is valuable to
 anticipate the future topology changes before finalizing a plan
 for address allocation. For example, in the case of a routing
 domain which is initially single-homed, but which is expecting to
 become multi-homed in the future, it may be advantageous to assign
 IP addresses based on the anticipated future topology.
 In general, it will not be practical to transition the IP
 addresses assigned to a routing domain in an instantaneous "change
 the address at midnight" manner. Instead, a gradual transition is
 required in which both the old and the new addresses will remain
 valid for a limited period of time. During the transition period,
 both the old and new addresses are accepted by the end systems in
 the routing domain, and both old and new addresses must result in
 correct routing of packets to the destination.
 During the transition period, it is important that packets using
 the old address be forwarded correctly, even when the topology has
 changed. This is facilitated by the use of "longest match"
 inter-domain routing.
 For example, suppose that the XYZ Corporation was previously
 connected only to the NorthSouthNet regional. The XYZ Corporation
 therefore went off to the NorthSouthNet administration and got an
 IP address prefix assignment based on the IP address prefix value
 assigned to the NorthSouthNet regional. However, for a variety of
 reasons, the XYZ Corporation decided to terminate its association
 with the NorthSouthNet, and instead connect directly to the
 NewCommercialNet public data network. Thus the XYZ Corporation now
 has a new address assignment under the IP address prefix assigned
 to the NewCommercialNet. The old address for the XYZ Corporation
 would seem to imply that traffic for the XYZ Corporation should be
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 routed to the NorthSouthNet, which no longer has any direct
 connection with XYZ Corporation.
 If the old TRD (NorthSouthNet) and the new TRD (NewCommercialNet)
 are adjacent and cooperative, then this transition is easy to
 accomplish. In this case, packets routed to the XYZ Corporation
 using the old address assignment could be routed to the
 NorthSouthNet, which would directly forward them to the
 NewCommercialNet, which would in turn forward them to XYZ
 Corporation. In this case only NorthSouthNet and NewCommercialNet
 need be aware of the fact that the old address refers to a
 destination which is no longer directly attached to NorthSouthNet.
 If the old TRD and the new TRD are not adjacent, then the
 situation is a bit more complex, but there are still several
 possible ways to forward traffic correctly.
 If the old TRD and the new TRD are themselves connected by other
 cooperative transit routing domains, then these intermediate
 domains may agree to forward traffic for XYZ correctly. For
 example, suppose that NorthSouthNet and NewCommercialNet are not
 directly connected, but that they are both directly connected to
 the BBNet backbone. In this case, all three of NorthSouthNet,
 NewCommercialNet, and the BBNet backbone would need to maintain a
 special entry for XYZ corporation so that traffic to XYZ using the
 old address allocation would be forwarded via NewCommercialNet.
 However, other routing domains would not need to be aware of the
 new location for XYZ Corporation.
 Suppose that the old TRD and the new TRD are separated by a non-
 cooperative routing domain, or by a long path of routing domains.
 In this case, the old TRD could encapsulate traffic to XYZ
 Corporation in order to deliver such packets to the correct
 backbone.
 Also, those locations which do a significant amount of business
 with XYZ Corporation could have a specific entry in their routing
 tables added to ensure optimal routing of packets to XYZ. For
 example, suppose that another commercial backbone
 "OldCommercialNet" has a large number of customers which exchange
 traffic with XYZ Corporation, and that this third TRD is directly
 connected to both NorthSouthNet and NewCommercialNet. In this case
 OldCommercialNet will continue to have a single entry in its
 routing tables for other traffic destined for NorthSouthNet, but
 may choose to add one additional (more specific) entry to ensure
 that packets sent to XYZ Corporation's old address are routed
 correctly.
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 Whichever method is used to ease address transition, the goal is
 that knowledge relating XYZ to its old address that is held
 throughout the global internet would eventually be replaced with
 the new information. It is reasonable to expect this to take
 weeks or months and will be accomplished through the distributed
 directory system. Discussion of the directory, along with other
 address transition techniques such as automatically informing the
 source of a changed address, are outside the scope of this paper.
 Another significant transition difficulty is the establishment of
 appropriate addressing authorities. In order not to delay the
 deployment of this addressing scheme, if no authority has been
 created at an appropriate level, a higher level authority may
 allocated addresses instead of the lower level authority. For
 example, suppose that the continental authority has been allocated
 a portion of the address space and that the service providers
 present on that continent are clear, but have not yet established
 their addressing authority. The continental authority may foresee
 (possibly with information from the provider) that the provider
 will eventually create an authority. The continental authority
 may then act on behalf of that provider until the provider is
 prepared to assume its addressing authority duties.
 Finally, it is important to emphasize, that a change of addresses
 due to changes in topology is not mandated by this document. The
 continental level addressing hierarchy, as discussed in Section
 5.7, is intended to handle the aggregation of reachability
 information in the cases where addresses do not directly reflect
 the connectivity between providers and subscribers.
5.9 Interaction with Policy Routing
 We assume that any inter-domain routing protocol will have
 difficulty trying to aggregate multiple destinations with
 dissimilar policies. At the same time, the ability to aggregate
 routing information while not violating routing policies is
 essential. Therefore, we suggest that address allocation
 authorities attempt to allocate addresses so that aggregates of
 destinations with similar policies can be easily formed.
6. Recommendations
 We anticipate that the current exponential growth of the Internet
 will continue or accelerate for the foreseeable future. In
 addition, we anticipate a rapid internationalization of the
 Internet. The ability of routing to scale is dependent upon the
 use of data abstraction based on hierarchical IP addresses. As
 CIDR [1] is introduced in the Internet, it is therefore essential
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 to choose a hierarchical structure for IP addresses with great
 care.
 It is in the best interests of the internetworking community that
 the cost of operations be kept to a minimum where possible. In the
 case of IP address allocation, this again means that routing data
 abstraction must be encouraged.
 In order for data abstraction to be possible, the assignment of IP
 addresses must be accomplished in a manner which is consistent
 with the actual physical topology of the Internet. For example, in
 those cases where organizational and administrative boundaries are
 not related to actual network topology, address assignment based
 on such organization boundaries is not recommended.
 The intra-domain routing protocols allow for information
 abstraction to be maintained within a domain. For zero-homed and
 single-homed routing domains (which are expected to remain zero-
 homed or single-homed), we recommend that the IP addresses
 assigned within a single routing domain use a single address
 prefix assigned to that domain. Specifically, this allows the set
 of all IP addresses reachable within a single domain to be fully
 described via a single prefix.
 We anticipate that the total number of routing domains existing on
 a worldwide Internet to be great enough that additional levels of
 hierarchical data abstraction beyond the routing domain level will
 be necessary.
 In most cases, network topology will have a close relationship
 with national boundaries. For example, the degree of network
 connectivity will often be greater within a single country than
 between countries. It is therefore appropriate to make specific
 recommendations based on national boundaries, with the
 understanding that there may be specific situations where these
 general recommendations need to be modified.
6.1 Recommendations for an address allocation plan
 We anticipate that public interconnectivity between private
 routing domains will be provided by a diverse set of TRDs,
 including (but not necessarily limited to):
 - backbone networks (Alternet, ANSnet, CIX, EBone, PSI,
 SprintLink);
 - a number of regional or national networks; and,
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 - a number of commercial Public Data Networks.
 These networks will not be interconnected in a strictly hierarchical
 manner (for example, there is expected to be direct connectivity
 between regionals, and all of these types of networks may have direct
 international connections). However, the total number of such TRDs
 is expected to remain (for the foreseeable future) small enough to
 allow addressing of this set of TRDs via a flat address space. These
 TRDs will be used to interconnect a wide variety of routing domains,
 each of which may comprise a single corporation, part of a
 corporation, a university campus, a government agency, or other
 organizational unit.
 In addition, some private corporations may be expected to make use of
 dedicated private TRDs for communication within their own
 corporation.
 We anticipate that the great majority of routing domains will be
 attached to only one of the TRDs. This will permit hierarchical
 address aggregation based on TRD. We therefore strongly recommend
 that addresses be assigned hierarchically, based on address prefixes
 assigned to individual TRDs.
 To support continental aggregation of routes, we recommend that all
 addresses for TRDs which are wholly within a continent be taken from
 the continental prefix.
 For the proposed address allocation scheme, this implies that
 portions of IP address space should be assigned to each TRD
 (explicitly including the backbones and regionals). For those leaf
 routing domains which are connected to a single TRD, they should be
 assigned a prefix value from the address space assigned to that TRD.
 For routing domains which are not attached to any publically
 available TRD, there is not the same urgent need for hierarchical
 address abbreviation. We do not, therefore, make any additional
 recommendations for such "isolated" routing domains. Where such
 domains are connected to other domains by private point-to-point
 links, and where such links are used solely for routing between the
 two domains that they interconnect, again no additional technical
 problems relating to address abbreviation is caused by such a link,
 and no specific additional recommendations are necessary.
 Further, in order to allow aggregation of IP addresses at national
 and continental boundaries into as few prefixes as possible, we
 further recommend that IP addresses allocated to routing domains
 should be assigned based on each routing domain's connectivity to
 national and continental Internet backbones.
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
6.2 Recommendations for Multi-Homed Routing Domains
 There are several possible ways that these multi-homed routing
 domains may be handled, as described in Section 5.4. Each of these
 methods vary with respect to the amount of information that must be
 maintained for inter-domain routing and also with respect to the
 inter-domain routes. In addition, the organization that will bear the
 brunt of this cost varies with the possible solutions. For example,
 the solutions vary with respect to:
 - resources used within routers within the TRDs;
 - administrative cost on TRD personnel; and,
 - difficulty of configuration of policy-based inter-domain routing
 information within leaf routing domains.
 Also, the solution used may affect the actual routes which packets
 follow, and may effect the availability of backup routes when the
 primary route fails.
 For these reasons it is not possible to mandate a single solution for
 all situations. Rather, economic considerations will require a
 variety of solutions for different routing domains, service
 providers, and backbones.
6.3 Recommendations for the Administration of IP addresses
 A companion document [3] provides recommendations for the
 administrations of IP addresses.
7. Acknowledgments
 The authors would like to acknowledge the substantial contributions
 made by the authors of RFC 1237 [2], Richard Colella, Ella Gardner,
 and Ross Callon. The significant concepts (and a large portion of
 the text) in this document are taken directly from their work.
 The authors would like to acknowledge the substantial contributions
 made by the members of the following two groups, the Federal
 Engineering Planning Group (FEPG) and the International Engineering
 Planning Group (IEPG). This document also reflects many concepts
 expressed at the IETF Addressing BOF which took place in Cambridge,
 MA in July 1992.
 We would also like to thank Peter Ford (Los Alamos National
 Laboratory), Elise Gerich (MERIT), Steve Kent (BBN), Barry Leiner
 (ADS), Jon Postel (ISI), Bernhard Stockman (NORDUNET/SUNET), Claudio
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
 Topolcic (CNRI), and Kannan Varadhan (OARnet) for their review and
 constructive comments.
8. References
 [1] Fuller, V., Li, T., Yu, J., and K. Varadhan, "Supernetting: an
 Address Assignment and Aggregation Strategy", RFC 1338, BARRNet,
 cicso, Merit, OARnet, June 1992.
 [2] Colella, R., Gardner, E, and R. Callon, "Guidelines for OSI NSAP
 Allocation in the Internet", RFC 1237, JuNIST, Mitre, DEC, July
 1991.
 [3] Gerich, E., "Guidelines for Management of IP Address Space", RFC
 1466, Merit, May 1993.
 [4] Cerf, V., "IAB Recommended Policy on Distributing Internet
 Identifier Assignment and IAB Recommended Policy Change to
 Internet "Connected" Status", RFC 1174, CNRI, August 1990.
9. Security Considerations
 Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
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RFC 1518 CIDR Address Allocation Architecture September 1993
10. Authors' Addresses
 Yakov Rekhter
 T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corporation
 P.O. Box 218
 Yorktown Heights, NY 10598
 Phone: (914) 945-3896
 EMail: yakov@watson.ibm.com
 Tony Li
 cisco Systems, Inc.
 1525 O'Brien Drive
 Menlo Park, CA 94025
 EMail: tli@cisco.com
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