IP addressing policies: what does this...

Preview:

Citation preview

IP addressing policies: what does this mean? Adam Gosling

Senior Policy Specialist, APNIC

APT PRF for the Pacific: August 2013

Overview

•  APNIC in the Internet ecosystem

•  Policy development

•  IPv4

•  IPv6

•  Public policy responses

2

3

Asia Pacific Network Information Centre

•  APNIC established 1993 (20 years anniversary)

•  Not-for-profit membership organization

•  Primary function the management of Internet Numbers –  Internet Protocol version 4 address numbers (IPv4) –  Internet Protocol version 6 address numbers (IPv6) –  Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs)

4

APNIC’s Vision

A global, open, stable, and secure Internet that serves the entire Asia Pacific community.

•  How we achieve this: –  Serving Members –  Supporting the Asia Pacific Region –  Collaborating with the Internet community

5

APNIC’s Mission

•  Function as the Regional Internet Registry for the Asia Pacific, in the service of the community of Members and others

•  Provide Internet registry services to the highest possible standards of trust, neutrality, and accuracy

•  Provide information, training, and supporting services to assist the community in building and managing the Internet

•  Support critical Internet infrastructure to assist in creating and maintaining a robust Internet environment

•  Provide leadership and advocacy in support of its vision and the community

•  Facilitate regional Internet development as needed throughout the APNIC community

6

All the RIRs

7

APNIC and the NRO

•  Coordinating body for the five RIRs

•  NRO exists to: –  Protect the unallocated Number

Resource pool –  Promote and protect the bottom-up

policy development process –  Act as a focal point for Internet

community input into the RIR system

•  Joint activities –  Resource certification –  Global statistics and report publication –  Internet governance –  Global policy development

8

Five RIRs •  AFRINIC

•  APNIC

•  ARIN

•  LACNIC

•  RIPE NCC

APNIC sub-regions

9

The APNIC service region includes 56 economies across the Asia Pacific

10

Policy development

is a cycle

Policy development

•  APNIC Policy Development Process –  www.apnic.net/policy/policy-development

•  SIG Guidelines –  www.apnic.net/sigs/sig-guidelines.pdf

•  Mailing list archive –  mailman.apnic.net/mailing-lists/sig-policy

•  Mailing list subscription –  mailman.apnic.net/mailman/listinfo/sig-policy

•  Mail to list –  sig-policy@apnic.net

Policy SIG Charter: Develop policies and procedures which relate to the management and use of Internet address resources by APNIC, NIRs and ISPs within the Asia Pacific region

11

Multistakeholder policy development

•  Open –  Anyone can propose, discuss, and help decide policy

•  Transparent –  APNIC publicly documents all policy discussions and decisions

•  Bottom up –  Policy Development Process (PDP) and the policies are determined

by the community they serve

12

Resource management goals

•  Conservation –  Efficient use of resources –  Based on demonstrated need

•  Aggregation –  Limit routing table growth –  Support provider-based routing

•  Registration –  Ensure uniqueness –  Facilitate trouble shooting

13

The current state of IPv4

address pools

14

IPv4 address space What is the status of each of the 256 /8s?

15

IPv4 address space issued (RIRs to customers) In terms of /8s, how much total space has each RIR issued? (Jan 1999 – Jun 2013)

16

Available IPv4 /8s in each RIR

17

In preparation for exhaustion… •  Soft landing

•  Liquidity and supply

•  Transition support

18

What measures did the APNIC policy community take to prepare for IPv4 exhaustion and the deployment of IPv6?

Soft landing austerity measures

•  Restrictions on access to the free pool

•  Enabled assignments from the final /8

•  Reduced the minimum delegation size for the final /8 policy

19

Available IPv4 /8s in each RIR

20

IPv4 last /8 delegation trend

21

0 1000000 2000000 3000000 4000000 5000000 6000000 7000000 8000000 9000000

10000000 11000000 12000000 13000000 14000000 15000000 16000000 17000000

No

of IP

v4 a

ddre

sses

Date

Membership growth

22

0

500

1000

1500

2000

2500

3000

3500

4000

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

XL

VL

LG

MD

SM

VS

AS

Num

ber o

f Mem

bers

Year As at 30 April 2013

APNIC address transfer services

•  Pre-approval service, with opt-in anonymous listing

•  Broker listing service

•  Mailing list for discussion and sourcing

•  Public transfer log (transparency)

•  Transfer fees apply (user pays)

23

IPv4 Market Transfer Size

0

200000

400000

600000

800000

1000000

1200000

1400000 N

ov-1

0

Dec

-10

Jan-

11

Feb-

11

Mar

-11

Apr

-11

May

-11

Jun-

11

Jul-1

1

Aug

-11

Sep

-11

Oct

-11

Nov

-11

Dec

-11

Jan-

12

Feb-

12

Mar

-12

Apr

-12

May

-12

Jun-

12

Jul-1

2

Aug

-12

Sep

-12

Oct

-12

Nov

-12

Dec

-12

Jan-

13

Feb-

13

24

Num

ber o

f add

ress

es

As at 30 April 2013 Month

IPv4 Market Transfers

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Mar

-11

Apr

-11

May

-11

Jun-

11

Jul-1

1

Aug

-11

Sep

-11

Oct

-11

Nov

-11

Dec

-11

Jan-

12

Feb-

12

Mar

-12

Apr

-12

May

-12

Jun-

12

Jul-1

2

Aug

-12

Sep

-12

Oct

-12

Nov

-12

Dec

-12

Jan-

13

Feb-

13

Mar

-13

Inter-RIR transfers

Market transfers

25

As at 30 April 2013

Num

ber o

f tra

nsfe

rs

Month

Transition support

•  Policy responses –  IPv6 Kickstart –  Remove aggregation criteria –  Remove multihoming requirement –  Alternative criteria for allocations

•  Training

•  Outreach

26

Policy changes encourage IPv6 delegations, while training and outreach build awareness and capacity

IPv6 delegations by year

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

27

Num

ber o

f del

egat

ions

Year As at 30 April 2013

Cumulative IPv6 delegations (/32s)

0

5000

10000

15000

20000

25000

30000

35000

40000

45000

50000

2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

28

Num

ber o

f /32

s

Year As at 30 April 2013

Percentage of Members with both IPv4 and IPv6 in each RIR

29

IPv6 address space How much has been allocated to the RIRs?

30

IPv6 end-user capability

31

APNIC Labs: IPv6 measurement

•  Comprehensive reports on IPv6 uptake –  Global, economy, and network levels

•  IPv6 Capability Tracker –  Free tool for website operators to measure client IPv6 capabilities

•  Measuring IPv6 –  IPv6 readiness data for intergovernmental organizations and

economies

•  http://labs.apnic.net

32

Barriers to IPv6 transition

•  Soft landing reduces immediate need

•  More urgent operational issues

•  Lack of: –  Financial benefit compared to cost –  Demand –  First mover advantage

•  To be effective it needs to be deployed everywhere –  Regional and local transit providers –  Access providers –  Content providers

33

IPv6 needs to be deployed by

•  Service providers

•  Mobile network operators

•  Content providers

•  Data centers, hosting, and cloud providers

•  Enterprise networks

•  Hardware / software providers

•  Government

•  End users

34

APNIC IPv6 outreach and training

•  APNIC Conference program

•  APNIC supports NOG activities

•  Work with NIRs to reach their community

•  Inter-governmental outreach

•  www.apnic.net/ipv6

35

APNIC training activities

•  Continuing focus on IPv6 deployment –  30 courses per year –  500 participants per year

•  eLearning –  Every Wednesday in three time zones –  24 modules (1-hour duration per module)

•  Face-to-Face –  Extensive hand-on exercises –  Physical and Virtual Training Labs

•  training.apnic.net

36

The Role of Governments?

37

•  Implementation: –  Government services should support IPv6

•  Procurement: –  Contract should require IPv6 compliance

•  Standards: –  Requirements should reference specific standards (RFCs)

•  Certification: –  Certification recognizing specific products as “IPv6 ready”

38

Potential public policy responses

Potential public policy responses

•  Incentives: –  Consider tax relief

•  Capacity building: –  IPv6 training and related services

•  Leadership: –  Promote IPv6 activities

•  Monitoring: –  Monitor progress towards IPv6 goals

39

Meetings

40

APNIC Conferences

•  APNIC 36: Xi-an, China –  20 to 30 August 2013 –  conference.apnic.net/36/home

•  APNIC 37: Bangkok, Thailand –  18 to 28 February 2014 –  In conjunction with APRICOT 2014 –  www.apricot2014.net

41

8th annual Internet Governance Forum 22-25 October 2013 - Bali, Indonesia

•  APNIC strong supporter –  Only global, multistakeholder venue for Internet Governance –  NRO doubled its financial contribution in 2013 –  Paul Wilson on the IGF’s Multistakeholder Advisory Group (MAG)

•  Organizers –  Government-led multistakeholder group –  Strongly supported by industry (APJII)

•  Theme –  Building Bridges - Enhancing Multistakeholder Cooperation for Growth

and Sustainable Development –  Six sub-themes

•  Local IGFs, Australia, India, NetHui •  APrIGF 4-6 September 2013 – Seoul RoK

–  www.aprigf.asia

42

Questions? Adam Gosling

adam@apnic.net

Recommended