1 / 18

IPv6 Address Allocation APNIC

IPv6 Address Allocation APNIC. IPv6 Summit July 2-6 2001, Korea Anne Lord, APNIC. Overview. Address Policy Gobal policy document status Current issues Deployment Status Allocation analysis Database registrations Routing announcements. Policy Development.

gfogel
Télécharger la présentation

IPv6 Address Allocation APNIC

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. IPv6 Address Allocation APNIC IPv6 Summit July 2-6 2001, Korea Anne Lord, APNIC

  2. Overview • Address Policy • Gobal policy document status • Current issues • Deployment Status • Allocation analysis • Database registrations • Routing announcements

  3. Policy Development • Oct 1998 Initial discussions RIRs/IETF and RIR communities • Jul 1999 Provisional policy document released • Aug 1999 IPv6 allocation service began • Oct 1999 Review of policy document after early deployment experience • 2001 Revised policy document to be published following extensive IETF/community input • 2002… Policies always subject to change

  4. Current Status • Consensus on • /48 for a “site” • If no need for subnets, less can be used • Discussion ongoing • Almost 100 SubTLA’s allocated • End of bootstrap period? • PI assignments • Policy needed in IPv6? • Address architecture • IETF/RIR recommendations – revision of rfc2374

  5. FP TLA ID Reserved NLA ID SLA ID Interface ID 3 bits 13 bits 8 bits 24 bits 16 bits 64 bits Public toplogy (48 bits) Site topology (16 bits) Interface Identifier (64 bits) IPv6 Addressing – RFC2374 • Aggregatable Global Unicast Format • RFC2374 (FP001) • 128 bit addresses • Mixes technology and policy

  6. FP IPv6 Addressing - Proposal • IPv6 Unicast Addressing • Proposal: Separate technology and policy Interface ID Site 001 16 bits 45 bits 64 bits Recommended IANA allocation Recommended “site” boundary

  7. Next APNIC Meeting • APNIC 12, Taipei • http://www.apnic.net/meetings • Policy discussions • Joint IPv6/Address Policy SIG • Wed 29th August • A warm welcome! • To anyone with interest in IPv6 policy development especially this community • Feedback and input requested

  8. IPv6 Allocations In the Asia Pacific Region

  9. IPv6 Allocations by RIRs • APNIC 2001:0200::/23 • 29 allocations (/35) • ARIN 2001:0400::/23 • 17 allocations (/35) • RIPE NCC 2001:0600::/23 • 37 allocations (/35)

  10. APNIC Allocations by Country Total Allocations: 29

  11. IPv6 Allocations Over Time • APNIC allocations to 18 June 2001 • Since August 1999 • 7 in 1999 • 15 in 2000 • 7 in 2001 • By organisation • 6 Research ISPs • 3 Government ISPs • 20 Commercial ISPs

  12. Registry Coordination • Request evaluation • Peer review by all RIRs of IPv6 SubTLA requests • Ensures global consistency • Accuracy • Discussion of difficult cases • Consult with 6Bone • Policy document • Needs global agreement on policy

  13. IPV6 Members Update • Feedback from members > 1 year • Type of services being provided • IPv6 connectivity, interoperability tests, experimental services, ftp servers , web browsing • Connectivity • Connected to 6TAP and other IPv6 networks in the region • Network implementation • Native IPv6 & tunneling

  14. APNIC IPv6 Dissemination • Training courses • Expanded module on IPv6 architecture • Open seminars • Introduction to IPv6 • Tutorials • In conjunction with APNIC meetings • FAQ • http://www.apnic.net/faq/IPv6-FAQ.html

  15. Database Registrations by RIR

  16. Prefix Distribution – APNIC Router Total Prefixes: 192

  17. Routing Table Analysis • Registration does not indicate usage • Allocation records are reliable to determine who “might” use address space • Assignment records may be incomplete • Actual usage shown by routing tables • However, this is a subjective view depending on point of observation • Also, view changes constantly with time

  18. Questions?

More Related