Hi Radu, Good questions, and the concrete answers probably explain the proposal better than my original mail did, so thank you. Lifetime predictability: some of them, not all. In our deployment every AI agent gets its own IPv6 /128 as its network identity. Some agents are long-lived residents; many are created for one task or one session and retired when it ends. For the session-shaped ones we know the order of magnitude at creation time; for the rest the end is only known when it happens. What lives only minutes: exactly those, an agent spun up for one job, egressing from its own /128 for the duration, then gone. The same shape is appearing in ephemeral compute generally; we are just an early and extreme case of it. Who queries during that window: the counterparties the agent talks to while it is alive. A service receiving a connection from one of our /128s can ask "who is this, and who answers for it" at connection time, with RDAP as one leg of that check alongside reverse DNS. So queries are concentrated exactly inside the assignment's lifetime, which is why read-time referral fits better than write-time sync. And after the fact, a holder can choose to keep serving the historical record of what was assigned when, something the central database never carried at this granularity. Sizes: in our case IPv6 only, /128 per agent, out of our own allocation. The mechanism itself is size- and family-agnostic; nothing in it assumes a prefix length. Voluntary: precisely. At this granularity nothing requires these assignments to be in the database; aggregation exists for that reason. This is information a holder wants to publish because it makes their infrastructure legible to the rest of the internet. The aim of the proposal is to make that voluntary publication useful instead of penalising it with bulk-load and drift. Availability requirements: yes, and thank you for the ARIN reminder; broken referrals are worse than no referrals. I would make emission conditional: the NCC validates the designated endpoint before publishing the referral and re-validates periodically, withdrawing it if it rots. And because the referral is advisory, a client that gets nothing from the holder's server still has the covering object from the NCC, so the failure mode is exactly today's behaviour, never worse. All the best, Kaveh On Mon, Jul 06, 2026 12:57 PM, Radu Anghel via db-wg <db-wg@ripe.net> wrote:
Hi Kaveh,
Just trying to better understand the use case, some questions come to mind:
Are you able to predict the time length those assignments exist?
What type of assignments exist only for a few minutes?
If it is so short lived who is expected to query during that timespan?
Are the assignments for /27 to /32 prefixes or >/26? Also IPv6?
Is this something voluntary, some extra info you/others *want* to publish that is not required to be in the db by any policy?
Do you think there should be some availability requirements for the referral? In ARIN land there are a lot of less than working referrals.
Best,
Radu
On 7/6/2026 2:32 PM, Kaveh Ranjbar via db-wg wrote:
Hi Leo,
Good to hear from you, and a fair challenge.
You are right that for many holders IPAM-to-RIPE synchronisation is the right answer, and nothing in this proposal takes that path away. The referral is for the cases where sync stops working well, and I think those cases are becoming more common:
1. Update rate. Our assignments are created and retired programmatically, some of them living minutes. Syncing that into the central database means a high-frequency stream of writes for objects that may be gone before the next consumer ever reads them, and there is always a staleness window between what the IPAM knows and what the database serves. A referral serves the live answer at read time instead of pushing state at write time.
2. Community cost. Every synced assignment is an object the NCC stores, indexes and serves for everyone. AGGREGATED-BY-LIR exists precisely because the community preferred not to carry every assignment centrally. The referral keeps that lean default and adds only a pointer to where the detail lives.
3. Expressiveness. The holder's RDAP can carry per-assignment detail that does not map cleanly onto inetnum attributes (richer entities, operational metadata, extensions). Central sync caps the published data at what the central schema can express.
On the cost point, I agree nobody should build infrastructure just for this. A holder operating at this scale already runs the authoritative source, and an RDAP view over an IPAM is a thin read-only front end. Once regext standardises the redirect I would expect IPAM products to grow it as a feature, rather than each holder building something bespoke. And because it is opt-in on both sides, holders for whom sync is cheaper simply keep syncing; nothing is taken away from them.
So: sync where it fits, referral where the data moves faster than sync can follow. The proposal only adds the second option.
All the best, Kaveh
On Mon, Jul 06, 2026 11:21 AM, Leo Vegoda <leo@vegoda.org <mailto:leo@vegoda.org>> wrote:
Hi Kaveh,
On 6 Jul 2026, at 11:12, Kaveh Ranjbar via db-wg <db-wg@ripe.net <mailto:db-wg@ripe.net>> wrote:
[…]
> The real prize, I think, is registration data hygiene. A holder with a lot of assignment activity has two poor options today. Register nothing below the allocation, which leaves coarse, unhelpful data for abuse handling, research and routing. Or bulk- load large numbers of assignment objects that start drifting out of date the day they land, which means stale data and central database bloat. An optional referral to the place where the data is actually maintained gives the community accurate, current, granular registration data served from the source, keeps the central database lean, and preserves an unbroken, machine-walkable chain from the bootstrap to the exact object. It rewards holders for publishing good, live data rather than penalising them for it. >
It sounds like a great idea but I don’t understand this part.
Why would a resource holder not prefer to have their IPAM synchronise what it knows to be true with the RIPE Database instead of spending money on building and maintaining some infrastructure? Yes, I’m assuming that anyone who wants to run their own RDAP server has an IPAM of some kind.
Thanks,
Leo
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