And as a follow up to that.
ARIN announced today that they are down to their last /8
https://www.arin.net/announcements/2014/20140423.html
This means that their allocation policy changes in line with their 4
phase approach.
APNIC has called for organisations to accelerate their adoption of IPv6.
http://www.apnic.net/publications/news/2014/shift-to-ipv6-to-accelerate-as-g...
Time to put some money into those billing systems eh =)
Dean
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 6:54 PM, Dean Pemberton
Thanks for that Leo,
For those interested in when these returned addresses will be able to be allocated to end users, the policy which covers this is:
Global Policy for Post Exhaustion IPv4 Allocation Mechanisms by the IANA | (Ratified 6 May 2012)
http://www.icann.org/en/resources/policy/global-addressing/allocation-ipv4-p...
It basically says that this pool of returned addresses becomes active when the first of the RIRs has only a /9 left in its free pool.
You can read the details of how this works at the above link (I'm massively oversimplifying here and will happily ignore pedants), but essentially it means that once that happens the IANA free pool will be divided up equally among the five RIRs.
So when is this likely to happen?
Well Geoff's excellent page at http://www.potaroo.net/tools/ipv4/ Tells us the following:
Projected RIR Address Pool Exhaustion Dates: RIR Remaining Addresses in RIR Pool (/8s) APNIC: 0.7900 RIPE NCC: 0.8207 LACNIC: 0.6517 ARIN: 1.2527 AFRINIC: 3.1313
So when the first of those RIRs gets down to 0.5 /8 (a /9) then IANA will allocate out what is left in the returned address pool. Don't get excited though, we're not talking about a huge amount of additional address space.
The way that APNIC plans to allocate this additional address space was covered off in prop-105 (http://www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-105).
Leo, It would be great if IANA could put the total amount of returned space in these summary mails.
Something like:
"There is a total of a /XX of space currently in the pool. If the pool were to become active today, each RIR would receive /YY of space"
Hope this helps to make things a bit clearer.
Dean
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 11:20 AM, Leo Vegoda
wrote: Hi,
In April 2014, ICANN updated the IANA IPv4 Recovered Address Space registry to reflect the return of 14 /24 prefixes (5,376 IPv4 addresses) by the RIPE NCC. The updated registry can be found at: https://www.iana.org/assignments/ipv4-recovered-address-space
Kind regards,
Leo Vegoda
ICANN
IANA
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