RFC1518
An Architecture for IP Address Allocation with CIDR
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. [STANDARDS-TRACK]
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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 astuples, 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. Rekhter & Li [Page 3]
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