On 11-Oct-2005, at 11:33, Justin M. Streiner wrote:
On Tue, 11 Oct 2005, up@3.am wrote:
1) I meet the Multihoming requirement, which means I can get a block as small as a /22, which is about right for my needs. Are there still any concerns about networks (as Verio and Sprint have done in the past) filtering out longer prefixes, and if so, does it depend on whether it;s former class A, B, C or swamp space? I know when I got my current block from my upstream, I had to make sure I got swamp space, because the former class B block they initially allocated to me wouldn't have made it past Verio's filters at that time.
Most if not all of the /8s that get assigned to ARIN have a prescribed minimum allocation size. How rigorously that is followed is another story :-)
I believe it is followed rigourously for new assignments, and that / 22 assignments are made from a range of addresses whose minimum allocation size is /22 (or longer). ISPs who filter based on prefix length according to RIR minimum allocation sizes should not block a route based on such an assignment, assuming their filters are up-to-date. Whether or not any particular prefix is blocked is best determined experimentally (e.g. feed a box with two interface addresses from different ranges a list of hosts to ping at a polite, low frequency, and compare the results sourced from each address). I have had dealings with many ISPs who have announced blocks based on fairly long-prefix assignments from RIRs, following policies such as ARIN's multi-homing assignment policy, and I haven't heard of any substantial problems due to the prefix length. James' MMV, of course.
I don't think you can specifically request that ARIN assign you space out of the swamp these days.
You can request anything you like. Whether it makes a difference is another thing entirely :-) Joe