What we do need to make up our collective minds is:
- do we want to see IPv6 deployed? (some of the comments can be read as "let's not deploy IPv6, because the IPv4 routing table is already too large!" - and I'm not convinced that this line of reasoning is conclusive) My answer - yes.
- do we think that the group of networks that would get IPv6 PI under the changed policy, but can't get IPv6 PI now is...
a) large enough that it makes a difference regarding IPv6 deployment? No.
b) small enough to avoid exploding the routing table?
No.
As for "b)", the numbers given by Alex Le Heux set a certain upper boundary for the number of IPv6 PI prefixes to expect - if every user of an
IPv4
PI routing table slot today (in the RIPE region) will get an IPv6 PI block, we're "in the 10.000s" of routes, but not "in the millions". So we have some numbers. There is rather uneasy answers to this as soon as times changes. As soon as IPv6 PI would be easy to get and easy to hold - there will be a "market" for it. It would be presented as a gift, got for prestige, "future", "presence in the Internet", "cool practice" and so on. So you cannot rely on digits for rather tough IPv4 PI policy. Such "blocks" will be nothing (in terms of traffic and usefulness of the deployment), but will clog the routing table a lot, inspiring ISPs to constantly change the equipments and delaying full deployment of full-working IPv6. As soon as the first answers (a) is "No" in my opinion, it is preferable for me to postpone the easing of the requirement until IPv6 starts.
Regards, Vladislav Potapov