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archive:internet:ipaddr

Date: Wed, 12 Nov 86 21:59:15 pst From: wally%net1.ucsd.edu@flash.bellcore.com (Wally Linstruth) (tty00)

      To: tcpgroup
      Regarding: IP addressing
           The  intent  of  this paper is to  document  the  background 
      behind the current IP address assignments which I have offered to 
      coordinate.   The proposed scheme has been reviewed by Phil Karn, 
      Bdale Garbee and (verbally with) Mike Chepponis, all of whom have 
      encouraged that it be used.
           Phil's  code  does  NOT  currently  support  the  subnetwork 
      aspects of the scheme but will do so in the future.   There is no 
      real  reason  for  any national coordination of  these  addresses 
      until  actual  networks or at  least  geographically  coordinated 
      groups of experimenters are formed.
           I  have offered to issue and keep track of SUBNET  addresses 
      and  their  "owners"  who are  presumably  responsible  *NETWORK* 
      implementors and managers.
           The  basic premise behind the proposed plan is that  amateur 
      radio  networks will be politically defined.   The plan is  based 
      upon  the  presumption  that current voice networks  serve  as  a 
      proper  analog by which to predict general characteristics of the 
      as yet unconstructed digital networks.   Political entities  will 
      build networks; funded, controlled, maintained and used primarily 
      by their own members and guests.
           Each  of these separately managed networks should be  viewed 
      as  a  subnetwork  of AMPRNET (with the  idea  being  to  somehow 
      rationally  partition the 044.xxx.xxx.xxx AMPRNET address space).  
      Each  subnetwork within AMPRNET will maintain routing tables  for 
      its  own  constituents.   Each will provide its own hosts  (TACs, 
      Gateways, i.e. the mechanism by which users with simple terminals 
      and AX25 level 2 boxes will access network resources),  switches, 
      rules  (network  administration),  security  measures  and  quite 
      possibly its own link level protocols.
           The  natural  limitations on span of control  will  probably 
      limit  the  service  area of each of  these  networks.   This  is 
      another factor leading to the partitioning of the AMPRNET address 
      space with respect to separate subnetworks.
           This  partitioning  of  the  address space  will  allow  for 
      much  simplified  routing tables in each  host.   Internetworking 
      gateways will connect these independently controlled subnetworks. 
      Each  gateway will maintain routing tables only for  local  hosts 
      and for gateways to other networks.  Hosts and  relay switches on 
      a   given  subnet  will  need  to  maintain  routing  information 
      regarding  only  members  of that subnet and  gateways  to  other 
      networks.   The  required routing tables should prove to be  very 
      manageable  and make any kind of geographically  based  hueristic 
      addressing schemes such as ZIP codes, area codes etc. moot.
                                      1
           I  would  also  like to propose that we  coordinate  logical 
      network  names and their corresponding addresses based  on  these 
      political   network  subdivisions.    The  concept  of  a  naming 
      convention  which maps directly into an IP address is purely  for 
      the  convenience  of  network developers and  is  not  considered 
      necessary.  There is,  however, some good reasoning behind making 
      network and host names hierarchical and meaningful to end  users.  
      It  will  considerably aid in bootstrapping the initial  networks 
      and in being comprehensible to the non-network folks who will  be 
      the  primary  users  of these networks.   The  naming  convention 
      proposed   is  of  the   form   USERID@HOST.SUBNET[.AMPRNET.RES].  
      WESTNET,  SBARCnet  (Santa  Barbara ARC) and  GFRN-net  represent 
      three  hypothetical  networks  with which this  writer  could  be 
      involved, perhaps as a provider of gateway and/or host services.
           Each  of  these  subnetwork entities could have  a  distinct 
      address  and  perhaps several internally  administered  host/user 
      addresses.
           [NOTE:  Throughout this paper,  Host or Host/User represents 
           any  host  or any user running IP protocols that has  direct 
           network  access.  Also,  for the purposes of  the  following 
           example,   WA6JPR  is  not  a  network  address,  rather  it 
           represents  a user-id on a local host.   It is the  writer's 
           opinion that the majority of packet users for the forseeable 
           future  will  be using simple TNCs connected  to  hosts  via 
           AX.25 level 2 protocols.]
           WA6JPR  may  be "a user" on hosts on more than  one  network 
      such  that  a station in Washington D.C.,logged onto  an  AMPRNET 
      host,    may    send    internet    traffic    successfully    to 
      WA6JPR@JPRHOST.WESTNET  (this traffic would be routed to  Westnet 
      via various AMPRNET gateways and subnetwork level relays and then 
      to  a  Santa  Barbara  host known internally  by  Westnet  to  be 
      reachable  via  the  W6AMT-2  switch).   Traffic  could  also  be 
      directed  to  Wally@SBARC   (presuming  that  the  Santa  Barbara 
      Amateur  Radio Club maintains a message server host gatewayed  to 
      the AMPRNET catenet).
           Based  upon  the  presumption  of  the   AMPRNET/SUBNET/HOST 
      hierarchy,  it  would  seem  that we could easily decide  how  to 
      allocate  the 044.xxx.xxx.xxx 24 bit IP address field  such  that 
      there  are bits allocated for a sufficient number of individually 
      managed  subnetworks  while leaving  a  correspondingly  adequate 
      number  of  assignable bits for the internal addressing needs  of 
      each individual subnetwork.
           Accordingly,   the  following  is  proposed  as  an  initial 
      addressing  scheme and methodology for address assignment.   [Bit 
      numbering is per RFC-960 Pg.2]
                                      2
      Bit  8  to  be 0 for USA stations and  1  for  non-USA  stations.  
      [Note.   This  is  not  meant  to imply a  geographic  basis  for 
      assignments.   It  is  meant to provide a very  quick  means  for 
      segregating FCC controlled participants from non-FCC stations.]
      Bits  9 - 18 to represent politically separate subnetworks within 
      AMPRNET.   These  bits  are to be assigned in an  inverse  binary 
      sequence   (see   example   below)  beginning  with   the   *MOST 
      SIGNIFICANT* bit first.
      Bits 19 - 23 to be unassigned and reserved for future  allocation 
      as  network addresses,  to network administrations for internally 
      assigned  host  and/or user addresses,  to a combination  of  the 
      above or to a completely new intermediate class of addresses.
      Bits  24  - 31  to be used within  politically  separate  AMPRNET 
      subnetworks for individual hosts,  switches, workstations etc. as 
      determined  by  local  network  administration.    It  would   be 
      recommended  that these bits be assigned in binary sequence  with 
      the *LEAST SIGNIFICANT* bits being assigned first.
           The  resulting  network  addresses would be as follows:
      AMPRNET
      ||
      || SUBNET----+
      || |         |
      || |         | HOST--+
      || |         | |     |
      44:0...127:000:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
      44:0...127:001:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:031:0...255--+
      44:0...127:032:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
      44:0...127:033:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:063:0...255--+
      44:0...127:064:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
      44:0...127:065:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:095:0...255--+
      44:0...127:096:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
      44:0...127:097:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:127:0...255--+
      44:0...127:128:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
      44:0...127:129:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:159:0...255--+
      44:0...127:160:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
      44:0...127:161:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:191:0...255--+
      44:0...127:192:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
                                      3
      44:0...127:193:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:223:0...255--+
      44:0...127:224:0...255------- 32,768 addresses assignable
      44:0...127:225:0...255--+
                  |           +- 1,015,808 addresses reserved
      44:0...127:255:0...255--+
      44:128:xxx:xxx----------+
          |                   +- 8,388,608 addresses assignable (non USA)
      44:255:xxx:xxx----------+
           The  above  allocation and assignment scheme allows  network 
      (subnet)  and  intranet  (host/user) addresses  to  begin  to  be 
      immediately assigned to experimenters while retaining the largest 
      possible  contiguous  block of unassigned bits whose  assignments 
      can  be  defined  in  the future with  little  or  no  impact  on 
      previously   allocated   addresses.    The  USER  @  HOSTNAME   . 
      SUBNET/ADMINISTRATION  naming scheme represents a  human-friendly 
      network  naming  convention  which  maps  easily  into  numerical 
      network  addresses.   I  believe that the above  approach  is  in 
      general  conformance with the requirements of RFC-950,  "Internet 
      Standard Subnetting Procedure."
           The  numbering scheme as initially proposed allows for up to 
      1024  AMPRNET  subnetworks  of up to 256 hosts in the  USA  while 
      retaining  five  bits  for  future  expansion.    That's  262,144 
      individual AMPRNET addressable entities.   If the proposed method 
      of  address  assignment is followed and we run out  of  Host/User 
      addresses before we run out of network addresses,  we can  simply 
      pick  up  the  least  significant reserved bit  and  assign  more 
      Host/User addresses.   Conversely,  if network addresses are more 
      popular  we  could easily expand by taking the  most  significant 
      reserved  bit and allocating it for network  addressing.
      If it should become clear that every user on a network needs  his 
      or her own IP address, each network could allocate user blocks in 
      256  user  increments from the least significant  reserved  bits.  
      Possible  combinations  are  1024 networks each with up  to  8192 
      individually  addressable units or 2048 networks each  with  4096 
      hosts/users (8,388,608 individually addressable entities).
           The  writer presumes that 8 million plus addresses ought  to 
      last the US amateur population for some time to come. All we need 
      to  do to avoid painting ourselves in a corner is to assign  them 
      in a logical sequence rather than randomly.
                                      4
           The  following table serves as an example of the  "high  bit 
      first"  network  address  assignment table and  some  actual  and 
      requested initial networking assignments.
           "this"         44.000.000.xxx      ;special case
           KARNnet        44.064.000.xxx      ;network admin: KA9Q
           BDALEnet       44.032.000.xxx      ;network admin: N3EUA
           DCnet1         44.096.000.xxx      ;network admin: WB6RQN
           SOCALnet1      44.016.000.xxx      ;network admin: WB5EKU
           DCnet2         44.080.000.xxx      ;network admin: WB6RQN
           SOCALnet2      44.048.000.xxx      ;network admin: WA6JPR
           PITTNET        44.112.000.xxx      ;network admin: N3CVL
           next           44.008.000.xxx
           next           44.072.000.xxx
                              .
                              .
                              .
           last           44.063.000.xxx
           "all"          44.127.000.xxx      ;special case
                                      5



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