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ARINNANOG22

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'Guidelines for Management of IP Address Space' Released ... Reverse Delegation. WHOIS Directory Service. Routing Registry Service. NANOG 22. Scottsdale, AZ ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ARINNANOG22


1
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2
ARIN Policies and Guidelines An Introduction
Presented by Richard Jimmerson Director of
Operations
NANOG 22
Scottsdale, AZ
3
Overview
  • About ARIN
  • Registry Activities
  • Open Policy Process
  • Current Policies
  • Using ARIN Services
  • Top 10 Questions About ARIN

4
RIR Basis
  • Proposed by IETF in early 1990s
  • RFC 1174 (1990)
  • IAB Recommended Policy on Distributing Internet
    Identifier Assignment
  • RFC1366 (1992)
  • Guidelines for Management of IP Address Space
  • Released with RFC1367 (CIDR)
  • Documents provided rationale for RIRs
  • Criteria for establishment
  • Operating guidelines

5
ARIN
  • American Registry for Internet Numbers
  • Founded in 1993, as division of InterNIC
  • Independent association since 1997
  • 1,317 members
  • Service Region North South America, the
    Caribbean, Africa south of equator
  • 70 countries
  • Located in Chantilly, Virginia, US

6
Other RIRs
  • APNIC
  • Service Region Asia, Oceania and Western Pacific
  • Located in Brisbane, Australia
  • RIPE NCC
  • Service Region Europe, Middle East, Central
    Asia, Africa north of equator
  • Located in Amsterdam, the Netherlands
  • Emerging RIRs
  • LACNIC
  • Proposed Region Latin America
  • www.lacnic.org
  • AFRINIC
  • Proposed Region Continental Africa
  • www.afrinic.org

7
ARIN Membership
95
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3
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8
RIR Model - Structure
  • Bottom-up, industry, self-regulatory structure
  • Open and transparent
  • Neutral and impartial
  • Not for profit organizations
  • Membership open to all interested parties
  • Membership elects Board of Trustees and Advisory
    Council
  • Membership approves activities budget
  • RIRs do NOT register domain names

9
Formation of ICANN
  • US Government decision to end USG management of
    the global Internet
  • Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
    Numbers (ICANN) formed as the industry
    self-regulatory body

10
AFRINIC?
LACNIC?
11
ICANN ASO
  • Formed by RIRs based on existing and proven
    regional policy structures
  • Responsible for global policy coordination within
    ICANN framework
  • Advisory Council elected by RIR communities

12
Role of the AC
  • ...is to be a catalyst in the policy process,
  • not to develop policy,
  • but to oversee and coordinate the policy
    development process facilitated by the RIRs
  • Make recommendations to the ICANN board on
    addressing issues
  • Elect three members of the ICANN Board of
    Directors

13
RIR Activities
  • Address space management
  • Registration
  • Policy development
  • Outreach

14
Address ManagementChallenges
  • Address space depletion
  • IPv4 address space is finite
  • Historically, many wasteful allocations
  • Routing chaos
  • Legacy routing structure, router overload
  • CIDR aggregation are now vital
  • Inequitable management
  • Unstructured and wasteful address space
    distribution

15
Address ManagementObjectives
  • Conservation
  • efficient use of resources
  • allocation based on demonstrated need
  • Aggregation
  • Limiting growth of routing table
  • provider-based addressing policies
  • Registration
  • Ensuring uniqueness
  • Troubleshooting
  • Fairness and Consistency
  • In the interests of regional and global
    communities

16
Registration
  • IPv4 and IPv6 Numbers Registration
  • AS Number Registration
  • Registration Call Center
  • Reverse Delegation
  • WHOIS Directory Service
  • Routing Registry Service

17
IPv4 Allocation Rate in 2000
(1.28 /8)
(1.5 /8)
APNIC
RIPE NCC
ARIN
(2.0 /8)
18
IPv4 Unallocated
  • Currently 38 of all IPv4 address space has not
    been allocated
  • (Reserved by the IANA)

19
IPv6 Allocations
  • Allocations since 1999
  • A total of 75 IPv6 address blocks (/35s)
    allocated collectively
  • APNIC 26
  • ARIN 15
  • RIPE NCC 34

20
Outreach
  • Training and Education
  • Registration help desk
  • Standardized registration training programs
  • Attendance at local (state) ISP association
    meetings
  • Information dissemination
  • News agencies
  • Industry specific meetings (like the GSMNA)
  • Government Advisory Committee to the ICANN

21
Policy Development
  • Developed in open policy forums
  • within industry self-regulatory framework
  • with consensus of community
  • Participation open to everyone
  • Responsive policy development
  • fair to all
  • changing requirements of industry
  • new technology (G3 phones, GPRS, cable)
  • evolution of process
  • Technical challenges
  • high level of planning and expertise required
  • meeting demands of a changing environment

22
New Policy Life-Cycle
PolicyProposed
23
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24
Public Mailing Lists
  • ARIN Public Mailing Lists
  • ARIN Public Policy Mailing List
  • IP Allocation Policy Mailing List
  • Virtual Webhosting Committee
  • IPv6 Working Group
  • Database Implementation Working Group
  • Community Learning and Education Working Group
    (CLEW)
  • Routing Table Measurement and Analysis
  • Visit http//www.arin.net/members/mailing.htm to
    participate

25
Mailing List Discussions
  • IPv6 Working Group (v6wg_at_arin.net)
  • IPv6 allocations for exchange points
  • IPv6 reassignment policy (/48)
  • Public Policy (ppml_at_arin.net)
  • Single organizations with multi-homed, discrete
    networks
  • Virtual Web Hosting Working Group (vwp_at_arin.net)
  • Name-based web hosting policy
  • Database Working Group (dbwg_at_arin.net)
  • Reassignment options
  • Database redesign

26
Request Criteria for IPv4 Address Space (ISPs)
  • ARINs Minimum Assignment Size is a /20
  • Demonstrate Efficient Utilization of a /20 from
    Upstream
  • Report reassignment information via SWIP or
    RWHOIS
  • Share utilization information for Dial-up,
    Virtual Web Hosting,and like services
  • Multi-homed Policy
  • Demonstrate Efficient Utilization of a /21 and
    Renumber
  • Use ISP Network Template to Request IP Addresses

27
Request Criteria for Additional IPv4 Addresses
(ISPs)
  • Demonstrate Prior Allocations from ARIN 80
    Efficiently Utilized
  • SWIP or RWHOIS server for reassignment
    information
  • Internal utilization detail
  • Adhere to any Agreed to Renumbering
  • Indicate 3-month Need for IP Address Space
  • Use ISP Network Template to Request Additional IP
    Addresses

28
Request Criteria for IPv4 AddressesEnd-Users
  • The following information must be provided with
    request
  • Immediate and 1 Year addressing plans
  • Description of network topology
  • Description of network routing plans
  • Must demonstrate immediate need for 25 and a 1
    year need for 50 of the netblock being requested.

29
IPv6 Policy Phases
  • Bootstrap Phase
  • Transitional and temporary
  • Concludes
  • After first 100 sub-TLA IDs (/29s) have been
    allocated worldwide, or
  • After ARIN has allocated 60 sub-TLA IDs
  • General Phase

30
Bootstrap Phase Criteria
  • BGP peering relationships with at least three
    other public ASes in IPv4 default-free zone
  • Must demonstrate production IPv6 within 12 months
    and either
  • Must be IPv4 provider to 40 sites that merit /48
    IPv6 allocations or
  • 3 months of 6bone pTLA experience in overall
    6-month 6bone

31
General Phase Criteria
  • BGP peering relationships with 3 other IPv6
    networks with sub-TLA IDs and either
  • Requesting organization must have reassigned
    addresses from upstream providers to 40 SLA
    customer sites or
  • Requesting organization must demonstrate a clear
    intent to provide IPv6 within 12 months

32
Request Criteria forAS Numbers
  • Unique Routing Policy
  • Must demonstrate that routing policies are
    different from border gateway peers
  • Multi-homed Site
  • Must be multi-homed or will immediately become
    multi-homed, and must describe
  • Exterior gateway protocol to be used
  • IP network addresses that will make up the AS
  • Technical POC information for each upstream
    provider/peer, including
  • Full name
  • Email address

33
Top 10 Questions
  • Can I have a copy of ARINs database?
  • How do I change the organization name on my
    network (or AS) registration?

34
Top 10 Questions
  • How do I add in-addr servers to my network?
  • The criteria do not apply to me. Can the ARIN
    staff change the policy to accommodate my need?

35
Top 10 Questions
  • Can ARIN stop somebody from sending spam?
    announcing a bogus route? pinging my network?
  • What can ARIN do if I have routing difficulties
    with the CIDR prefix ARIN allocates/assigns my
    network?

36
Top 10 Questions
  • What is the difference between an assignment and
    allocation?
  • How long does it take for ARIN to look at my
    request?

37
Top 10 Questions
  • Does ARIN prefer SWIP or RWHOIS as a reassignment
    option?
  • Does ARIN accept credit cards for registration
    fees?

38
Common Misconceptions
  • ARIN staff make up the rules as they go along.
  • ARIN is difficult to deal with.
  • ARIN is the Internet police.

39
Contact Information
  • Help Desk
  • (703)227-0660
  • Monday Friday7 AM 7 PM US Eastern time
  • Hostmaster Email
  • Hostmaster_at_arin.net
  • Ticketing system for request/inquiry tracking
  • www.arin.net

40
Questions?
NANOG 22
Scottsdale, AZ
41
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