@techreport{ietf-ipngwg-esd-analysis-05, number = {draft-ietf-ipngwg-esd-analysis-05}, type = {Internet-Draft}, institution = {Internet Engineering Task Force}, publisher = {Internet Engineering Task Force}, note = {Work in Progress}, url = {https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ipngwg-esd-analysis/05/}, author = {Lixia Zhang and Allison J. Mankin and John W. Stewart III and Dr. Thomas Narten and Dr. Matt Crawford}, title = {{Separating Identifiers and Locators in Addresses: An Analysis of the GSE Proposal for IPv6}}, pagetotal = 52, year = 1999, month = oct, day = 19, abstract = {On February 27-28, 1997, the IPng Working Group held an interim meeting in Palo Alto, California to consider adopting Mike O'Dell's 'GSE - An Alternate Addressing Architecture for IPv6' proposal {[}GSE{]}. In GSE, 16-byte IPv6 addresses are split into distinct portions for global routing, local routing and end-point identification. GSE includes the feature of configuring a node internal to a site with only the local routing and end-point identification portions of the address, thus hiding the full address from the node. When such a node generates a packet, only the low-order bytes of the source address are specified; the high-order bytes of the address are filled in by a border router when the packet leaves the site.}, }