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- Network Working Group V. Fuller
- Request for Comments: 1338 BARRNet
- T. Li
- cisco
- J. Yu
- MERIT
- K. Varadhan
- OARnet
- June 1992
-
-
- Supernetting: an Address Assignment and Aggregation Strategy
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
- not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is
- unlimited.
-
- Abstract
-
- This memo discusses strategies for address assignment of the existing
- IP address space with a view to conserve the address space and stem
- the explosive growth of routing tables in default-route-free routers
- run by transit routing domain providers.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- Acknowledgements ................................................. 2
- 1. Problem, goal, and motivation ................................ 2
- 2. Scheme plan .................................................. 3
- 2.1. Aggregation and its limitations ............................ 3
- 2.2. Distributed network number allocation ...................... 5
- 3. Cost-benefit analysis ........................................ 6
- 3.1. Present allocation figures ................................. 7
- 3.2. Historic growth rates ...................................... 8
- 3.3. Detailed analysis .......................................... 8
- 3.3.1. Benefits of new addressing plan .......................... 9
- 3.3.2. Growth rate projections .................................. 9
- 4. Changes to Inter-Domain routing protocols .................... 11
- 4.1. General semantic changes ................................... 11
- 4.2. Rules for route advertisement .............................. 11
- 4.3. How the rules work ......................................... 13
- 4.4. Responsibility for and configuration of aggregation ........ 14
- 5. Example of new allocation and routing ........................ 15
- 5.1. Address allocation ......................................... 15
- 5.2. Routing advertisements ..................................... 17
- 6. Transitioning to a long term solution ........................ 18
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- Fuller, Li, Yu, & Varadhan [Page 1]
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- RFC 1338 Supernetting June 1992
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- 7. Conclusions .................................................. 18
- 8. Recommendations .............................................. 18
- 9. Bibliography ................................................. 19
- 10. Security Considerations ...................................... 19
- 11. Authors' Addresses ........................................... 19
-
- Acknowledgements
-
- The authors wish to express their appreciation to the members of the
- ROAD group with whom many of the ideas contained in this document
- were inspired and developed.
-
- 1. Problem, Goal, and Motivation
-
- As the Internet has evolved and grown over in recent years, it has
- become painfully evident that it is soon to face several serious
- scaling problems. These include:
-
- 1. Exhaustion of the class-B network address space. One
- fundamental cause of this problem is the lack of a network
- class of a size which is appropriate for mid-sized
- organization; class-C, with a maximum of 254 host
- addresses, is too small while class-B, which allows up to
- 65534 addresses, is to large to be widely allocated.
-
- 2. Growth of routing tables in Internet routers beyond the
- ability of current software (and people) to effectively
- manage.
-
- 3. Eventual exhaustion of the 32-bit IP address space.
-
- It has become clear that the first two of these problems are likely
- to become critical within the next one to three years. This memo
- attempts to deal with these problems by proposing a mechanism to slow
- the growth of the routing table and the need for allocating new IP
- network numbers. It does not attempt to solve the third problem,
- which is of a more long-term nature, but instead endeavors to ease
- enough of the short to mid-term difficulties to allow the Internet to
- continue to function efficiently while progress is made on a longer-
- term solution.
-
- The proposed solution is to hierarchically allocate future IP address
- assignment, by delegating control of segments of the IP address space
- to the various network service providers.
-
- It is proposed that this scheme of allocating IP addresses be
- undertaken as soon as possible. It is also believed that the scheme
- will suffice as a short term strategy, to fill the gap between now
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- and the time when a viable long term plan can be put into place and
- deployed effectively. It is believed that this scheme would be
- viable for at least three (3) years, in which time frame, a suitable
- long term solution would be expected to be deployed.
-
- Note that this plan neither requires nor assumes that already
- assigned addresses will be reassigned, though if doing so were
- possible, it would further reduce routing table sizes. It is assumed
- that routing technology will be capable of dealing with the current
- routing table size and with some reasonably-small rate of growth.
- The emphasis of this plan is on significantly slowing the rate of
- this growth.
-
- This scheme will not affect the deployment of any specific long term
- plan, and therefore, this document will not discuss any long term
- plans for routing and address architectures.
-
- 2. Scheme Plan
-
- There are two basic components of this addressing and routing scheme:
- one, to distribute the allocation of Internet address space and two,
- to provide a mechanism for the aggregation of routing information.
-
- 2.1. Aggregation and its limitations
-
- One major goal of this addressing plan is to allocate Internet
- address space in such a manner as to allow aggregation of routing
- information along topological lines. For simple, single-homed
- clients, the allocation of their address space out of a service
- provider's space will accomplish this automatically - rather than
- advertise a separate route for each such client, the service provider
- may advertise a single, aggregate, route which describes all of the
- destinations contained within it. Unfortunately, not all sites are
- singly-connected to the network, so some loss of ability to aggregate
- is realized for the non simple cases.
-
- There are two situations that cause a loss of aggregation efficiency.
-
- o Organizations which are multi-homed. Because multi-homed
- organizations must be advertised into the system by each of
- their service providers, it is often not feasible to aggregate
- their routing information into the address space any one of
- those providers. Note that they still may receive their
- address allocation out of a service provider's address space
- (which has other advantages), but their routing information
- must still be explicitly advertised by most of their service
- providers (the exception being that if the site's allocation
- comes out of its least-preferable service provider, then that
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- service provider need not advertise the explicit route -
- longest-match will insure that its aggregated route is used to
- get to the site on a non-primary basis). For this reason, the
- routing cost for these organizations will typically be about
- the same as it is today.
-
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- o Organizations which move from one service provider to another.
- This has the effect of "punching a hole" in the aggregation of
- the original service provider's advertisement. This plan will
- handle the situation by requiring the newer service provider
- to advertise a specific advertisement for the new client,
- which is preferred by virtue of being the longest match. To
- maintain efficiency of aggregation, it is recommended that
- organizations which do change service providers plan to
- eventually migrate their address assignments from the old
- provider's space to that of the new provider. To this end, it
- is recommended that mechanisms to facilitate such migration,
- including improved protocols and procedures for dynamic host
- address assignment, be developed.
-
- Note that some aggregation efficiency gain can still be had for
- multi-homed sites (and, in general, for any site composed of
- multiple, logical IP network numbers) - by allocating a contiguous
- block of network numbers to the client (as opposed to multiple,
- independently represented network numbers) the client's routing
- information may be aggregated into a single (net, mask) pair. Also,
- since the routing cost associated with assigning a multi-homed site
- out of a service provider's address space is no greater than the
- current method of a random allocation by a central authority, it
- makes sense to allocate all address space out of blocks assigned to
- service providers.
-
- It is also worthwhile to mention that since aggregation may occur
- at multiple levels in the system, it may still be possible to
- aggregate these anomalous routes at higher levels of whatever
- hierarchy may be present. For example, if a site is multi-homed to
- two NSFNet regional networks both of whom obtain their address
- space from the NSFNet, then aggregation by the NSFNet of routes
- from the regionals will include all routes to the multi-homed site.
-
- Finally, it should also be noted that deployment of the new
- addressing plan described in this document may (and should) begin
- almost immediately but effective use of the plan to aggregate
- routing information will require changes to some Inter-Domain
- routing protocols. Likewise, deploying the supernet-capable Inter-
- Domain protocols without deployment of the new address plan will
- not allow useful aggregation to occur (in other words, the
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- addressing plan and routing protocol changes are both required for
- supernetting, and its resulting reduction in table growth, to be
- effective.) Note, however, that during the period of time between
- deployment of the addressing plan and deployment of the new
- protocols, the size of routing tables may temporarily grow very
- rapidly. This must be considered when planning the deployment of
- the two plans.
-
- Note: in the discussion and examples which follow, the network+mask
- notation is used to represent routing destinations. This is used
- for illustration only and does not require that routing protocols
- use this representation in their updates.
-
- 2.2. Distributed allocation of address space
-
- The basic idea of the plan is to allocate one or more blocks of
- Class-C network numbers to each network service provider.
- Organizations using the network service provider for Internet
- connectivity are allocated bitmask-oriented subsets of the
- provider's address space as required.
-
- Note that in contrast to a previously described scheme of
- subnetting a class-A network number, this plan should not require
- difficult host changes to work around domain system limitations -
- since each sub-allocated piece of the address space looks like a
- class-C network number, delegation of authority for the IN-
- ADDR.ARPA domain works much the same as it does today - there will
- just be a lot of class-C network numbers whose IN-ADDR.ARPA
- delegations all point to the same servers (the same will be true of
- the root delegating a large block of class-Cs to the network
- provider, unless the delegation just happens to fall on a byte
- boundary). It is also the case that this method of aggregating
- class-C's is somewhat easier to deploy, since it does not require
- the ability to split a class-A across a routing domain boundary
- (i.e., non-contiguous subnets).
-
- It is also worthy to mention that once Inter-Domain protocols which
- support classless network destinations are widely deployed, the
- rules described by the "supernetting" plan generalize to permit
- arbitrary super/subnetting of the remaining class-A and class-B
- address space (the assumption being that classless Inter-Domain
- protocols will either allow for non-contiguous subnets to exist in
- the system or that all components of a sub-allocated class-A/B will
- be contained within a single routing domain). This will allow this
- plan to continue to be used in the event that the class-C space is
- exhausted before implementation of a long-term solution is deployed
- (there may, however, be further implementation considerations
- before doing this).
-
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- Hierarchical sub-allocation of addresses in this manner implies
- that clients with addresses allocated out of a given service
- provider are, for routing purposes, part of that service provider
- and will be routed via its infrastructure. This implies that
- routing information about multi-homed organizations, i.e.,
- organizations connected to more than one network service provider,
- will still need to be known by higher levels in the hierarchy.
-
- The advantages of hierarchical assignment in this fashion are
-
- a) It is expected to be easier for a relatively small number of
- service providers to obtain addresses from the central
- authority, rather than a much larger, and monotonically
- increasing, number of individual clients. This is not to be
- considered as a loss of part of the service providers' address
- space.
-
- b) Given the current growth of the Internet, a scalable and
- delegatable method of future allocation of network numbers has
- to be achieved.
-
- For these reasons, and in the interest of providing a consistent
- procedure for obtaining Internet addresses, it is recommended that
- most, if not all, network numbers be distributed through service
- providers.
-
- 3. Cost-benefit analysis
-
- This new method of assigning address through service providers can be
- put into effect immediately and will, from the start, have the
- benefit of distributing the currently centralized process of
- assigning new addresses. Unfortunately, before the benefit of
- reducing the size of globally-known routing destinations can be
- achieved, it will be necessary to deploy an Inter-Domain routing
- protocol capable of handling arbitrary network+mask pairs. Only then
- will it be possible to aggregate individual class-C networks into
- larger blocks represented by single routing table entries.
-
- This means that upon introduction, the new addressing plan will not
- in and of itself help solve the routing table size problem. Once the
- new Inter-Domain routing protocol is deployed, however, an immediate
- drop in the number of destinations which clients of the new protocol
- must carry will occur. A detailed analysis of the magnitude of this
- expected drop and the permanent reduction in rate of growth is given
- in the next section.
-
- In should also be noted that the present method of flat address
- allocations imposes a large bureaucratic cost on the central address
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- allocation authority. For scaling reasons unrelated to address space
- exhaustion or routing table overflow, this should be changed. Using
- the mechanism proposed in this paper will have the happy side effect
- of distributing the address allocation procedure, greatly reducing
- the load on the central authority.
-
- 3.1. Present Allocation Figures
-
- A back-of-the-envelope analysis of "network-contacts.txt"
- (available from the DDN NIC) indicates that as of 2/25/92, 46 of
- 126 class-A network numbers have been allocated (leaving 81) and
- 5467 of 16256 class-B numbers have been allocated, leaving 10789.
- Assuming that recent trends continue, the number of allocated
- class-B's will continue to double approximately once a year. At
- this rate of grown, all class-B's will be exhausted within about
- 15 months.
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- 3.2. Historic growth rates
-
- MM/YY ROUTES MM/YY ROUTES
- ADVERTISED ADVERTISED
- ------------------------ -----------------------
- Feb-92 4775 Apr-90 1525
- Jan-92 4526 Mar-90 1038
- Dec-91 4305 Feb-90 997
- Nov-91 3751 Jan-90 927
- Oct-91 3556 Dec-89 897
- Sep-91 3389 Nov-89 837
- Aug-91 3258 Oct-89 809
- Jul-91 3086 Sep-89 745
- Jun-91 2982 Aug-89 650
- May-91 2763 Jul-89 603
- Apr-91 2622 Jun-89 564
- Mar-91 2501 May-89 516
- Feb-91 2417 Apr-89 467
- Jan-91 2338 Mar-89 410
- Dec-90 2190 Feb-89 384
- Nov-90 2125 Jan-89 346
- Oct-90 2063 Dec-88 334
- Sep-90 1988 Nov-88 313
- Aug-90 1894 Oct-88 291
- Jul-90 1727 Sep-88 244
- Jun-90 1639 Aug-88 217
- May-90 1580 Jul-88 173
-
- Table I : Growth in routing table size, total numbers
- Source for the routing table size data is MERIT
-
- 3.3. Detailed Analysis
-
- There is no technical cost and minimal administrative cost
- associated with deployment of the new address assignment plan. The
- administrative cost is basically that of convincing the NIC, the
- IANA, and the network service providers to agree to this plan,
- which is not expected to be too difficult. In addition,
- administrative cost for the central numbering authorities (the NIC
- and the IANA) will be greatly decreased by the deployment of this
- plan. To take advantage of aggregation of routing information,
- however, it is necessary that the capability to represent routes
- as arbitrary network+mask fields (as opposed to the current
- class-A/B/C distinction) be added to the common Internet inter-
- domain routing protocol(s).
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- 3.3.1. Benefits of the new addressing plan
-
- There are two benefits to be had by deploying this plan:
-
- o The current problem with depletion of the available class-B
- address space can be ameliorated by assigning more-
- appropriately sized blocks of class-C's to mid-sized
- organizations (in the 200-4000 host range).
-
- o When the improved inter-domain routing protocol is deployed,
- an immediate decrease in the number routing table entries
- followed by a significant reduction in the rate growth of
- routing table size should occur (for default-free routers).
-
- 3.3.2. Growth rate projections
-
- Currently, a default-free routing table (for example, the routing
- tables maintained by the routers in the NSFNET backbone) contains
- approximately 4700 entries. This number reflects the current size
- of the NSFNET routing database. Historic data shows that this
- number, on average, has doubled every 10 months between 1988 and
- 1991. Assuming that this growth rate is going to persist in the
- foreseeable future (and there is no reason to assume otherwise),
- we expect the number of entries in a default-free routing table to
- grow to approximately 30000 in two(2) years time. In the
- following analysis, we assume that the growth of the Internet has
- been, and will continue to be, exponential.
-
- It should be stressed that these projections do not consider that
- the current shortage of class-B network numbers may increase the
- number of instances where many class-C's are used rather than a
- class-B. Using an assumption that new organizations which formerly
- obtained class-B's will now obtain somewhere between 4 and 16
- class-C's, the rate of routing table growth can conservatively be
- expected to at least double and probably quadruple. This means the
- number of entries in a default-free routing table may well exceed
- 10,000 entries within six months and 20,000 entries in less than a
- year.
-
- Under the proposed plan, growth of the routing table in a
- default-free router is greatly reduced since most new address
- assignment will come from one of the large blocks allocated to the
- service providers. For the sake of this analysis, we assume
- prompt implementation of this proposal and deployment of the
- revised routing protocols. We make the initial assumption that any
- initial block given to a provider is sufficient to satisfy its
- needs for two years.
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- Since under this plan, multi-homed networks must continue to be
- explicitly advertised throughout the system (according to Rule#1
- described in section 4.2), the number multi-homed routes is
- expected to be the dominant factor in future growth of routing
- table size, once the supernetting plan is applied.
-
- Presently, it is estimated that there are fewer than 100 multi-
- homed organizations connected to the Internet. Each such
- organization's network is comprised of one or more network
- numbers. In many cases (and in all future cases under this plan),
- the network numbers used by an organization are consecutive,
- meaning that aggregation of those networks during route
- advertisement may be possible. This means that the number of
- routes advertised within the Internet for multi-homed networks may
- be approximated as the total number of multi-homed organizations.
- Assuming that the number of multi-homed organization will double
- every year (which may be a over-estimation, given that every
- connection costs money), the number of routes for multi-homed
- networks would be expected to grow to approximately 800 in three
- years.
-
- If we further assume that there are approximately 100 service
- providers, then each service provider will also need to advertise
- its block of addresses. However, due to aggregation, these
- advertisements will be reduced to only 100 additional routes. We
- assume that after the initial two years, new service providers
- combined with additional requests from existing providers will
- require an additional 50 routes per year. Thus, the total is 4700
- + 800 + 150 = 5650. This represents an annual grown rate of
- approximately 6%. This is in clear contrast to the current annual
- growth of 150%. This analysis also assumes an immediate
- deployment of this plan with full compliance. Note that this
- analysis assumes only a single level of route aggregation in the
- current Internet - intelligent address allocation should
- significantly improve this.
-
- Clearly, this is not a very conservative assumption in the
- Internet environment nor can 100% adoption of this proposal be
- expected. Still, with only a 90% participation in this proposal by
- service providers, at the end of the target three years, global
- routing table size will be "only" 4700 + 800 + 145 + 7500 = 13145
- routes -- without any action, the routing table will grow to
- approximately 75000 routes during that time period.
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- 4. Changes to Inter-Domain routing protocols
-
- In order to support supernetting efficiently, it is clear that some
- changes will need to be made to both routing protocols themselves and
- to the way in which routing information is interpreted. In the case
- of "new" inter-domain protocols, the actual protocol syntax changes
- should be relatively minor. This mechanism will not work with older
- inter-domain protocols such as EGP2; the only ways to interoperate
- with old systems using such protocols are either to use existing
- mechanisms for providing "default" routes or b) require that new
- routers talking to old routers "explode" supernet information into
- individual network numbers. Since the first of these is trivial
- while the latter is cumbersome (at best -- consider the memory
- requirements it imposes on the receiver of the exploded information),
- it is recommended that the first approach be used -- that older
- systems to continue to the mechanisms they currently employ for
- default handling.
-
- Note that a basic assumption of this plan is that those organizations
- which need to import "supernet" information into their routing
- systems must run IGPs (such as OSPF[RFC1267]) which support classless
- routes. Systems running older IGPs may still advertise and receive
- "supernet" information, but they will not be able to propagate such
- information through their routing domains.
-
- 4.1. Protocol-independent semantic changes
-
- There are two fundamental changes which must be applied to Inter-
- Domain routing protocols in order for this plan to work. First, the
- concept of network "class" needs to be deprecated - this plan assumes
- that routing destinations are represented by network+mask pairs and
- that routing is done on a longest-match basis (i.e., for a given
- destination which matches multiple network+mask pairs, the match with
- the longest mask is used). Second, current Inter-Domain protocols
- generally do not support the concept of route aggregation, so the new
- semantics need to be implemented mechanisms that routers use to
- interpret routing information returned by the Inter-Domain protocols.
- In particular, when doing aggregation, dealing with multi-homed sites
- or destinations which change service providers is difficult.
- Fortunately, it is possible to define several fairly simple rules for
- dealing with such cases.
-
- 4.2. Rules for route advertisement
-
- 1. Routing to all destinations must be done on a longest-match
- basis only. This implies that destinations which are multi-
- homed relative to a routing domain must always be explicitly
- announced into that routing domain - they cannot be summarized
-
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- (this makes intuitive sense - if a network is multi-homed, all
- of its paths into a routing domain which is "higher" in the
- hierarchy of networks must be known to the "higher" network).
-
- 2. A routing domain which performs summarization of multiple
- routes must discard packets which match the summarization but
- do not match any of the explicit routes which makes up the
- summarization. This is necessary to prevent routing loops in
- the presence of less-specific information (such as a default
- route). Implementation note - one simple way to implement
- this rule would be for the border router to maintain a "sink"
- route for each of its aggregations. By the rule of longest
- match, this would cause all traffic destined to components of
- the aggregation which are not explicitly known to be
- discarded.
-
- Note that during failures, partial routing of traffic to a site which
- takes its address space from one service provider but which is
- actually reachable only through another (i.e., the case of a site
- which has change service providers) may occur because such traffic
- will be routed along the path advertised by the aggregated route.
- Rule #2 will prevent any real problem from occurring by forcing such
- traffic to be discarded by the advertiser of the aggregated route,
- but the output of "traceroute" and other similar tools will suggest
- that a problem exists within the service provider advertising the
- aggregate, which may be confusing to network operators (see the
- example in section 5.2 for details). Solutions to this problem appear
- to be challenging and not likely to be implementable by current
- Inter-Domain protocols within the time-frame suggested by this
- document. This decision may need to be revisited as Inter-Domain
- protocols evolve.
-
- An implementation following these rules should also make the
- implementation be generalized, so that arbitrary network number and
- mask are accepted for all routing destinations. The only outstanding
- constraint is that the mask must be left contiguous. Note that the
- degenerate route 0.0.0.0 mask 0.0.0.0 is used as a default route and
- MUST be accepted by all implementations. Further, to protect against
- accidental advertisements of this route via the inter-domain
- protocol, this route should never be advertised unless there is
- specific configuration information indicating to do so.
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- Systems which process route announcements must also be able to verify
- that information which they receive is correct. Thus, implementations
- of this plan which filter route advertisements must also allow masks
- in the filter elements. To simplify administration, it would be
- useful if filter elements automatically allowed more specific network
- numbers and masks to pass in filter elements given for a more general
- mask. Thus, filter elements which looked like:
-
- accept 128.32.0.0
- accept 128.120.0.0
- accept 134.139.0.0
- accept 36.0.0.0
-
- would look something like:
-
- accept 128.32.0.0 255.255.0.0
- accept 128.120.0.0 255.255.0.0
- accept 134.139.0.0 255.255.0.0
- deny 36.2.0.0 255.255.0.0
- accept 36.0.0.0 255.0.0.0
-
- This is merely making explicit the network mask which was implied by
- the class-A/B/C classification of network numbers.
-
- 4.3. How the rules work
-
- Rule #1 guarantees that the routing algorithm used is consistent
- across implementations and consistent with other routing protocols,
- such as OSPF. Multi-homed networks are always explicitly advertised
- by every service provider through which they are routed even if they
- are a specific subset of one service provider's aggregate (if they
- are not, they clearly must be explicitly advertised). It may seem as
- if the "primary" service provider could advertise the multi-homed
- site implicitly as part of its aggregate, but the assumption that
- longest-match routing is always done causes this not to work.
-
- Rule #2 guarantees that no routing loops form due to aggregation.
- Consider a mid-level network which has been allocated the 2048
- class-C networks starting with 192.24.0.0 (see the example in section
- 5 for more on this). The mid-level advertises to a "backbone"
- 192.24.0.0/255.248.0.0. Assume that the "backbone", in turn, has been
- allocated the block of networks 192.0.0.0/255.0.0.0. The backbone
- will then advertise this aggregate route to the mid-level. Now, if
- the mid-level loses internal connectivity to the network
- 192.24.1.0/255.255.255.0 (which is part of its aggregate), traffic
- from the "backbone" to the mid-level to destination 192.24.1.1 will
- follow the mid-level's advertised route. When that traffic gets to
- the mid-level, however, the mid-level *must not* follow the route
-
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-
- 192.0.0.0/255.0.0.0 it learned from the backbone, since that would
- result in a routing loop. Rule #2 says that the mid-level may not
- follow a less-specific route for a destination which matches one of
- its own aggregated routes. Note that handling of the "default" route
- (0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0) is a special case of this rule - a network must not
- follow the default to destinations which are part of one of it's
- aggregated advertisements.
-
- 4.4. Responsibility for and configuration of aggregation
-
- The AS which owns a range of addresses has the sole authority for
- aggregation of its address space. In the usual case, the AS will
- install manual configuration commands in its border routers to
- aggregate some portion of its address space. As AS can also delegate
- aggregation authority to another AS. In this case, aggregation is
- done in the other AS by one of its border routers.
-
- When an inter-domain border router performs route aggregation, it
- needs to know the range of the block of IP addresses to be
- aggregated. The basic principle is that it should aggregate as much
- as possible but not to aggregate those routes which cannot be treated
- as part of a single unit due to multi-homing, policy, or other
- constraints.
-
- One mechanism is to do aggregation solely based on dynamically
- learned routing information. This has the danger of not specifying a
- precise enough range since when a route is not present, it is not
- always possible to distinguish whether it is temporarily unreachable
- or that it does not belong in the aggregate. Purely dynamic routing
- also does not allow the flexibility of defining what to aggregate
- within a range. The other mechanism is to do all aggregation based on
- ranges of blocks of IP addresses preconfigured in the router. It is
- recommended that preconfiguration be used, since it more flexible and
- allows precise specification of the range of destinations to
- aggregate.
-
- Preconfiguration does require some manually-maintained configuration
- information, but not excessively more so than what router
- administrators already maintain today. As an addition to the amount
- of information that must be typed in and maintained by a human,
- preconfiguration is just a line or two defining the range of the
- block of IP addresses to aggregate. In terms of gathering the
- information, if the advertising router is doing the aggregation, its
- administrator knows the information because the aggregation ranges
- are assigned to its domain. If the receiving domain has been granted
- the authority to and task of performing aggregation, the information
- would be known as part of the agreement to delegate aggregation.
- Given that it is common practice that a network administrator learns
-
-
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- Fuller, Li, Yu, & Varadhan [Page 14]
-
- RFC 1338 Supernetting June 1992
-
-
- from its neighbor which routes it should be willing to accept,
- preconfiguration of aggregation information does not introduce
- additional administrative overhead.
-
- 5. Example of new allocation and routing
-
- 5.1. Address allocation
-
- Consider the block of 2048 class-C network numbers beginning with
- 192.24.0.0 (0xC0180000 and ending with 192.31.255.0 (0xC01FFF00)
- allocated to a single network provider, "RA". A "supernetted" route
- to this block of network numbers would be described as 192.24.0.0
- with mask of 255.248.0.0 (0xFFF80000).
-
- Assume this service provider connects six clients in the following
- order (significant because it demonstrates how temporary "holes" may
- form in the service provider's address space):
-
- "C1" requiring fewer than 2048 addresses (8 class-C networks)
-
- "C2" requiring fewer than 4096 addresses (16 class-C networks)
-
- "C3" requiring fewer than 1024 addresses (4 class-C networks)
-
- "C4" requiring fewer than 1024 addresses (4 class-C networks)
-
- "C5" requiring fewer than 512 addresses (2 class-C networks)
-
- "C6" requiring fewer than 512 addresses (2 class-C networks)
-
- In all cases, the number of IP addresses "required" by each client is
- assumed to allow for significant growth. The service provider
- allocates its address space as follows:
-
- C1: allocate 192.24.0 through 192.24.7. This block of networks is
- described by the "supernet" route 192.24.0.0 and mask
- 255.255.248.0
-
- C2: allocate 192.24.16 through 192.24.31. This block is described
- by the route 192.24.16.0, mask 255.255.240.0
-
- C3: allocate 192.24.8 through 192.24.11. This block is described
- by the route 192.24.8.0, mask 255.255.252.0
-
- C4: allocate 192.24.12 through 192.24.15. This block is described
- by the route 192.24.12.0, mask 255.255.252.0
-
- C5: allocate 192.24.32 and 192.24.33. This block is described by
-
-
-
- Fuller, Li, Yu, & Varadhan [Page 15]
-
- RFC 1338 Supernetting June 1992
-
-
- the route 192.24.32.0, mask 255.255.254.0
-
- C6: allocate 192.24.34 and 192.24.35. This block is described by
- the route 192.24.34.0, mask 255.255.254.0
-
- Note that if the network provider uses an IGP which can support
- classless networks, he can (but doesn't have to) perform
- "supernetting" at the point where he connects to his clients and
- therefore only maintain six distinct routes for the 36 class-C
- network numbers. If not, explicit routes to all 36 class-C networks
- will have to be carried by the IGP.
-
- To make this example more realistic, assume that C4 and C5 are multi-
- homed through some other service provider, "RB". Further assume the
- existence of a client "C7" which was originally connected to "RB" but
- has moved to "RA". For this reason, it has a block of network numbers
- which are allocated out "RB"'s block of (the next) 2048 class-C
- network numbers:
-
- C7: allocate 192.32.0 through 192.32.15. This block is described
- by the route 192.32.0, mask 255.255.240.0
-
- For the multi-homed clients, we will assume that C4 is advertised as
- primary via "RA" and secondary via "RB"; C5 is primary via "RB" and
- secondary via "RA". To connect this mess together, we will assume
- that "RA" and "RB" are connected via some common "backbone" provider
- "BB".
-
- Graphically, this simple topology looks something like this:
-
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- Fuller, Li, Yu, & Varadhan [Page 16]
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- RFC 1338 Supernetting June 1992
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-
- C1
- 192.24.0.0 -- 192.24.7.0 \ _ 192.32.0.0 - 192.32.15.0
- 192.24.0.0/255.255.248.0 \ / 192.32.0.0/255.255.240.0
- \ / C7
- C2 +----+ +----+
- 192.24.16.0 - 192.24.31.0 \| | | |
- 192.24.16.0/255.255.240.0 | | _ 192.24.12.0 - 192.24.15.0 _ | |
- | | / 192.24.12.0/255.255.252.0 \ | |
- C3 -| |/ C4 \| |
- 192.24.8.0 - 192.24.11.0 | RA | | RB |
- 192.24.8.0/255.255.252.0 | |___ 192.24.32.0 - 192.24.33.0 ___| |
- /| | 192.24.32.0/255.255.254.0 | |
- C6 | | C5 | |
- 192.24.34.0 - 192.24.35.0 | | | |
- 192.24.34.0/255.255.254.0 | | | |
- +----+ +----+
- \\ \\
- 192.24.12.0/255.255.252.0 (C4) || 192.32.12.0/255.255.252.0 (C4) ||
- 192.24.32.0/255.255.254.0 (C5) || 192.32.32.0/255.255.192.0 (C5) ||
- 192.32.0.0/255.255.240.0 (C7) || 192.32.0.0/255.248.0.0 (RB) ||
- 192.24.0.0/255.248.0.0 (RA) || ||
- VV VV
- +--------------- BACKBONE PEER BB ---------------+
-
-
- 5.2. Routing advertisements
-
- To follow rule #1, RA will need to advertise the block of addresses
- that it was given and C7. Since C4 and C5 are multi-homed, they must
- also be advertised.
-
- Advertisements from "RA" to "BB" will be:
-
- 192.24.12.0/255.255.252.0 primary (advertises C4)
- 192.24.32.0/255.255.254.0 secondary (advertises C5)
- 192.32.0.0/255.255.240.0 primary (advertises C7)
- 192.24.0.0/255.248.0.0 primary (advertises remainder of RA)
-
- For RB, the advertisements must also include C4 and C5 as well as
- it's block of addresses. Further, RB may advertise that C7 is
- unreachable.
-
- Advertisements from "RB" to "BB" will be:
-
- 192.24.12.0/255.255.252.0 secondary (advertises C4)
- 192.24.32.0/255.255.254.0 primary (advertises C5)
- 192.32.0.0/255.248.0.0 primary (advertises remainder of RB)
-
-
-
- Fuller, Li, Yu, & Varadhan [Page 17]
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- RFC 1338 Supernetting June 1992
-
-
- To illustrate the problem alluded to by the "note" in section 4.2,
- consider what happens if RA loses connectivity to C7 (the client
- which is allocated out of RB's space). In a stateful protocol, RA
- will announce to BB that 192.32.0.0/255.255.240.0 has become
- unreachable. Now, when BB flushes this information out of its routing
- table, any future traffic sent through it for this destination will
- be forwarded to RB (where it will be dropped according to Rule #2) by
- virtue of RB's less specific match 192.32.0.0/255.248.0.0. While
- this does not cause an operational problem (C7 is unreachable in any
- case), it does create some extra traffic across "BB" (and may also
- prove confusing to a network manager debugging the outage with
- "traceroute"). A mechanism to cache such unreachability information
- would help here, but is beyond the scope of this document (such a
- mechanism is also not implementable in the near-term).
-
- 6. Transitioning to a long term solution
-
- This solution does not change the Internet routing and addressing
- architectures. Hence, transitioning to a more long term solution is
- not affected by the deployment of this plan.
-
- 7. Conclusions
-
- We are all aware of the growth in routing complexity, and the rapid
- increase in allocation of network numbers. Given the rate at which
- this growth is being observed, we expect to run out in a few short
- years.
-
- If the inter-domain routing protocol supports carrying network routes
- with associated masks, all of the major concerns demonstrated in this
- paper would be eliminated.
-
- One of the influential factors which permits maximal exploitation of
- the advantages of this plan is the number of people who agree to use
- it. It is hoped that having the IAB and the Internet society bless
- this plan would go a long way in the wide deployment, and hence
- benefit of this plan.
-
- If service providers start charging networks for advertising network
- numbers, this would be a very great incentive to share the address
- space, and hence the associated costs of advertising routes to
- service providers.
-
- 8. Recommendations
-
- The NIC should begin to hand out large blocks of class-C addresses to
- network service providers. Each block must fall on bit boundaries
- and should be large enough to serve the provider for two years.
-
-
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- RFC 1338 Supernetting June 1992
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- Further, the NIC should distribute very large blocks to continental
- and national network service organizations to allow additional levels
- of aggregation to take place at the major backbone networks.
-
- Service providers will further allocate power-of-two blocks of
- class-C addresses from their address space to their subscribers.
-
- All organizations, including those which are multi-homed, should
- obtain address space from their provider (or one of their providers,
- in the case of the multi-homed). These blocks should also fall on
- bit boundaries to permit easy route aggregation.
-
- To allow effective use of this new addressing plan to reduce
- propagated routing information, appropriate IETF WGs will specify the
- modifications needed to Inter-Domain routing protocols.
- Implementation and deployment of these modifications should occur as
- quickly as possible.
-
- 9. Bibliography
-
- [RFC1247] Moy, J, "The OSPF Specification Version 2", January 1991.
-
- 10. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- 11. Authors' Addresses
-
- Vince Fuller
- BARRNet
- Pine Hall 115
- Stanford, CA, 94305-4122
- email: vaf@Stanford.EDU
-
-
- Tony Li
- cisco Systems, Inc.
- 1525 O'Brien Drive
- Menlo Park, CA 94025
- email: tli@cisco.com
-
- Jessica (Jie Yun) Yu
- Merit Network, Inc.
- 1071 Beal Ave.
- Ann Arbor, MI 48109
- email: jyy@merit.edu
-
-
-
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-
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- RFC 1338 Supernetting June 1992
-
-
- Kannan Varadhan
- Internet Engineer, OARnet
- 1224, Kinnear Road,
- Columbus, OH 43212
- email: kannan@oar.net
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