On Fri, Apr 26, 2013 at 3:12 AM, Geoff Huston <gih@apnic.net> wrote:
On 26/04/2013, at 4:27 PM, joel jaeggli <joelja@bogus.com> wrote:
I also find it a bit strange that the runout in APNIC and RIPE was very different. APNIC address allocation rate accelerated at the end, whereas RIPE exhaustion date kept creeping forward in time instead of closer in time, giving me the impression that there wasn't any panic there.
apnic allocation reserved the final /8 for /22 maximal allocations. Couple that with some qualifying very large assignments towards the end of stage two e.g between feb 1 and april 14 2011 7 provider assignments combined soaked up more than 2 /8s and you get rapid runout towards the endgame.
APNIC used a 12 month allocation window right up to the point of exhaustion, while RIPE was operating on a 3 month window, as is ARIN. That may be a contributing factor in explaining the differences in behaviour in the final months / weeks.
But its not just that.
Other factors include large developing countries with massive DSL deployments underway (China, India) mean that in the APNIC region we were not looking at a wired infrastructure market sector that was already saturated. Quite the opposite. Similarly the wireless market in Asia was / is expanding rapidly for much the same reason (wireless is cheaper to deploy than wired if you have absolutely no pre-installed wireless infrastructure). i.e. the unmet demand overhang as compared to the available address pools was massive in Asia. Now that does not imply that Europe and the Middle East has no demand overhang, but perhaps not on the same scale as was experienced by APNIC in early 2011.
Also in September last year the European financial situation was still impacting on the problems of the service industry (and still is in many countries). So the underlying capital-driven demand factors were different between Europe and Asia. Perhaps it was more challenging for European entities to demonstrate an expansion of their Internet service infrastructure over rolling 3 months windows due to a slow down in consumer demand in parts of Europe.
What factors will play out in the North American market? It might be interesting to look at address allocations by country by year. One such table of the top 10 countries in terms of IPv4 allocations since 2007 is at http://www.potaroo.net/ispcol/2013-01/2012.html, table 3.The peak US year was 2007 with 48M addresses. in 2011 ARIN introduced the 3 month allocation window, and allocating that year halved from the previous year. Last year they were a little higher at 28M addresses. What drove last year's numbers in ARIN was a total of 16M addresses allocated to Canadian entities. So to what extent is this a saturated market already in terms of the deployment of service infrastructure? To what extent are new devices simply replacing old, and to what extent are the dynamics of the market in that region driven by provider churn as distinct from greenfields expansion? Obviously the answers to such questions have a strong impact on the underlying model of overall demand for more addresses in the region.
One interesting twist in all of this is that several of these new "slow-start" players in the ARIN region seem to be servicing customers outside of the region with equipment and services hosted here inside the ARIN region (see slide 12 on the ARIN 31 "Policy Implementation and Experience Report" https://www.arin.net/participate/meetings/reports/ARIN_31/PDF/monday/nobile_...). This fact may negate the market saturation affect completely. Cheers, ~Chris
And of course one of the hardest factors of all: Panic is extremely difficult to model. Most forms of predictive modelling reach back in time and then use that date to push forward. but panic is of course different. It does not drive off past behaviour but feeds off itself. The APNIC runout was exceptionally hard to model at the time because the incidence of large allocations rose very quickly in March. Yes, I'd ascribe that to panic. That reaction was not so evident in RIPE in August / September last year. So it appears that panic, or the level of panic, is not a constant factor. Different regions at different times appear to elicit different responses to impending exhaustion.
Geoff
-- @ChrisGrundemann http://chrisgrundemann.com