APNIC new IPv4 addresses (121/8 and 122/7)
So that the US guys also know that they need to update their filters ;) -------- Original Message -------- Subject: APNIC new IPv4 addresses (121/8 and 122/7) Date: Mon, 9 Jan 2006 14:14:59 +1000 (EST) From: John Tran <john@apnic.net> Dear colleagues APNIC received IPv4 address blocks 121/8 and 122/7 from IANA in January 2006 and will be making allocations from these ranges in the near future. This announcement is being made for the information of the Internet community so that network configurations such as routing filters may be updated as appropriate. For more information on the resources administered by APNIC, see: http://www.apnic.net/db/ranges.html For information on the minimum allocation sizes within address ranges administered by APNIC, see: http://www.apnic.net/db/min-alloc.html Kind regards Son ____________________________________________________________________ Resources Services Manager <Son@apnic.net> Asia Pacific Network Information Centre phone: +61 7 3858 3100 http://www.apnic.net fax: +61 7 3858 3199 Helpdesk phone: +61 7 3858 3188 email: helpdesk@apnic.net Please send Internet Resource Requests to <hostmaster@apnic.net> _____________________________________________________________________
Next time can we have this announcement from IANA or at least from APNIC person directly to this list please? To be fair they did change and listed new ranges in http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipv4-address-space so I'm doing the same for http://www.completewhois.com/iana-ipv4-addresses.txt --- And FYI - situation with availability of IPv4 space is not looking that good. There is now only 29 blocks left (92/8 - 120/8) in the pool from which IANA is giving blocks to APNIC & RIPE and they are using 3 blocks per year each so this is enough for 5 years or less. In the block given to ARIN (63/8 and up to 79/8), it'll be most likely all allocated by end of 2006 (77/8 - 79/8 left). The only other large block of /8s left is 173/8 - 188/8, which would be enough for ARIN for 5 years as well. What is left is trying to reuse space left unallocated from Class-B pool of 128/8 - 172/8 which has around 5 /8 blocks worth of space not allocated (total of 308448 /24s when you sum up data I have at http://www.completewhois.com/statistics/ip_statistics.htm). As well there are a dozen additional non-allocated /8 blocks scattered around the pool (1/8, 2/8, 7/8, 23/8, 27/8, 31/8, 36/8, 37/8, 38/8, 42/8, 49/8, 50/8). which all together would add up to extra 2 years but likely less then that considering need for space by LACNIC & AFRINIC and possibly increases in pace of allocations by 3 big ip registries as users change to using broadband and having connection 24/7 and access internet from their cell phones... What we're left with is that IANA will run out of space (*) to give to RIRs in about 7-8 years (with RIRs having then enough space to last about 1-2 more years), i.e doomsday in around 2015! So we should all really work on accelerating IPv6 adaption in all the regions (and unfortunately myself, I'm not seeing enough interest in it from business/corporate consulting work). * - Class-E space of 240/8 - 255/8 can also possibly to be used as last resort case, that would postpone the end by another year or 2 On Mon, 9 Jan 2006, Jeroen Massar wrote:
So that the US guys also know that they need to update their filters ;)
-------- Original Message -------- Subject: APNIC new IPv4 addresses (121/8 and 122/7) Date: Mon, 9 Jan 2006 14:14:59 +1000 (EST) From: John Tran <john@apnic.net>
Dear colleagues
APNIC received IPv4 address blocks 121/8 and 122/7 from IANA in January 2006 and will be making allocations from these ranges in the near future.
This announcement is being made for the information of the Internet community so that network configurations such as routing filters may be updated as appropriate.
For more information on the resources administered by APNIC, see:
http://www.apnic.net/db/ranges.html
For information on the minimum allocation sizes within address ranges administered by APNIC, see:
http://www.apnic.net/db/min-alloc.html
Kind regards
Son
____________________________________________________________________ Resources Services Manager <Son@apnic.net> Asia Pacific Network Information Centre phone: +61 7 3858 3100 http://www.apnic.net fax: +61 7 3858 3199 Helpdesk phone: +61 7 3858 3188 email: helpdesk@apnic.net Please send Internet Resource Requests to <hostmaster@apnic.net> _____________________________________________________________________
Hi, On Jan 9, 2006, at 5:12 PM, william(at)elan.net wrote:
Next time can we have this announcement from IANA or at least from APNIC person directly to this list please?
IANA would be happy to announce allocations to mailing lists if people want to suggest which mailing lists would be appropriate. Please send mail to me directly and I'll summarize. Rgds, -drc General Manager, IANA
Next time can we have this announcement from IANA or at least from APNIC person directly to this list please?
Why? Anyone can post anything they like. I think this is more of an education issue i.e. "@iana.org" is the authoritative source and use at any other announcement at your own risk. So if you read it from @iana.org and you agree it's from them, trust it. If it's from any other source, do not trust it. For our region, I think we'd want to trust ARIN and IANA. IANA for outside ARIN region allocations, and ARIN for in. -M<
participants (4)
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David Conrad
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Jeroen Massar
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Martin Hannigan
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william(at)elan.net