On Tue, 12 Sep 2006, Scott Weeks wrote:
----- Original Message Follows ----- From: Joe Abley <jabley@ca.afilias.info>
Le 2006-09-12 à 15:10, <andrew2@one.net> <andrew2@one.net> a écrit :
It makes me wonder just how much space like that there is out there artifically increasing IP scarcity.
The fact that there is a lot of space assigned/allocated and not used in any easily observable way is well known to those who track the address exhaustion issue, I think.
How much, though, is used, but not routed publically?
----------------------- TOTAL FOR IPV4 BLOCKS: Allocated: 9302367 (/24 blocks) - 63% Not Allocated: 5377697 (/24 blocks) - 37% Currently Routed: 6183529 (/24 blocks) - 42% Not Routed: 8496535 (/24 blocks) - 58% ----------------------- Simple math from above: Allocated & Not Routed: 3118838 (/24 blocks) - 21% This is from my data available at www.completewhois.com/statistics/ (which is for some reason partially broken right now - has all the correct data but coloring of bars did not happen). The percent calculation does not include class-d and class-e (i.e. only blocks 0/8 - 223/8 are counted).
Something that has been brought up from time to time here. It's not easily observable, but allowed.
Not easily observable means some ip blocks maybe used but are not adverised in public BGP. This is a bit of an issue with certain part of US Gov.
scott
-- William Leibzon Elan Networks william@elan.net