prop-160: Change IPv6 Initial assignment to /44 for Organizations Eligible for multihoming

Proposal text prop-160-v002
Objective This proposal suggests an account holder with an IPv4 assignment and multi-homed network infrastructure be eligible for a /44 IPv6 address block, as well as changing the minimum assignment size for multi-homing to /44.
Current status Did not reach consensus at APNIC 58
Author Md. Rafeeun Noby Babir and Muhammad Redwanul Karim
Relevant forum Policy SIG
Previous versions prop-160-v001
Secretariat impact assessment

Impact assessment for v001

The Secretariat notes that this proposal suggests assigning a /48 IPv6 to account holders with a /24 IPv4 assignment, and a /44 IPv6 to account holders with a /23 IPv4 assignment.

Questions/Comments:

  • The policy proposal uses “assignment” and “allocation” interchangeably which creates confusion regarding intention, interpretation, and implementation. We request the author clarify the policy wording.
  • APNIC account holders that are eligible for a /23 IPv4 allocation are automatically eligible to get a /32 IPv6 not /48. Some of these account holders choose to take a /48 assignment for various reasons but they can still apply for a larger IPv6 assignment under existing policy.
  • The problem statement acknowledges that a /48 has technical limitations, yet the proposed policy solution specifies that ‘An account holder with a /24 IPv4 assignment is eligible for a /48 IPv6 address block’. The policy as written is meant to benefit account holders who utilize /23 IPv4, not /24 IPv4.

Implementation:

This proposal may require changes to APNIC systems. If this proposal reaches consensus, implementation may be completed within three months.

Proposal history
05 August 2024 Version 1 posted to the Policy SIG mailing list for discussion and community development.
31 August 2024 Withdrawn by the author.
01 September 2024 Resubmitted with a new version.
01 September 2024 Version 2 posted to the Policy SIG mailing list for discussion and community development.
06 September 2024 Version 2 did not reach consensus at APNIC 58. Sent back to the mailing list for further development.