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IPv6: Getting Addresses, Differences from IPv4

IPv6: Getting Addresses, Differences from IPv4. 30 November 2010 7 IPv4 /8s Remaining. Regional Internet Registries. About IPv4 and IPv6. IPv4 Address Space Utilization. * as of 30 November 2010. Available IPv4 Space in /8s.

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IPv6: Getting Addresses, Differences from IPv4

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  1. IPv6: Getting Addresses, Differences from IPv4 30 November 2010 7 IPv4 /8s Remaining

  2. Regional Internet Registries

  3. About IPv4 and IPv6

  4. IPv4 Address Space Utilization *as of 30 November 2010

  5. Available IPv4 Space in /8s In 2010, RIRs have been allocated nineteen /8 blocks as of 30 November, leaving seven /8s unallocated (7/256 - 2.73%).

  6. There are 7 /8s remaining in the IANA pool as of 30 November 2010. Demand for IPv4 continues to grow from organizations around the world. Once IANA free pool depletes, ARIN’s inventory will deplete anywhere from days to months. IPv4 Depletion Situation Report

  7. ARIN actively attempts reclamations We have reclaimed large underutilized blocks and will continue Our successes will not significantly extend the lifetime of the IPv4 free pool What about underutilized blocks?

  8. What if? • Current demand globally is ~24 Million IP addresses per month • What if we have all IPv4 unicast to start over • Counting /32s it would take ~ 12 years to fully re-deplete the IPv4 resource • What if we have all of IPv6 to start (we do) • Counting /64 subnets it would take ~ 768 Billion years to deplete the resource • Counting /48 subnets it would take ~ 11.7 Million years to deplete the resource

  9. Long standing merger & acquisitions transfer policy remains New policy: Transfers to specified recipients (8.3 of NRPM) IPv4 Registration Transfers

  10. 8.3 Transfer Policy In addition to transfers under section 8.2, IPv4 number resources within the ARIN region may be released to ARIN by the authorized resource holder, in whole or in part, for transfer to another specified organizational recipient. Such transferred number resources may only be received under RSA by organizations that are within the ARIN region and can demonstrate the need for such resources, as a single aggregate, in the exact amount which they can justify under current ARIN policies.

  11. ARIN will set aside a /10 from our last/8 from IANA Allocations are for IPv6 transition only Allocation sizes: /28 minimum - /24 maximum IPv4 /10 Dedicated for IPv6 Deployment

  12. IPv4 /24s are back! Only for multi-homed end-users Must still show at least 25% used immediately and at least 50% used within one year NRPM 4.3.6.2

  13. IPv6 Policies • ISPs • Known, existing ISPs automatically qualify • /32 minimum • Really really really big; ~4.2 Billion subnets • End-users • Typically qualify by showing you qualify for IPv4 • /48 minimum • 65,536 subnets • Qualify for larger by showing proposed use • Guidelines: /48 for a large site, /56 for a small site

  14. We’re running out of IPv4 address space. New demand surge could quickly deplete remaining IPv4 IPv6 must be adopted for continued Internet growth. We must maintain IPv4 and IPv6 simultaneously for many years. IPv6 deployment has begun. IPv4 & IPv6 - The Bottom Line

  15. RIRs have been allocatingIPv6 address space since 1999. Thousands of organizations havereceived an IPv6 allocation to date. ARIN has IPv6 distribution policies for service providers, community networks, and end-user organizations. IPv6 Deployment has begun

  16. Exhibit and Speaking Events Recent Events • Internet Governance Forum • CompTel • State CIOs & Technology Directors • Caribbean Internet Governance Forum • Caribbean ICT Road Shows • DEF CON • Catalyst Conference • OPASTCO • HostingCon • CANTO • InfoComm • Rocky Mountain IPv6 Summit • International Telecoms Week • Cable Show • Interop Las Vegas Current / Upcoming • Game Developers Conference • Texas IPv6 Task Force Summit • Interop New York • IT Roadmap – DC • gogoNET Live! • IT Roadmap – San Francisco • LISA • ICT Road Show Trinidad • SC’10 • CES

  17. 2007: Laughter and Denial 2008: Skepticism 2009: Despair and Anger 2010: Moving toward Acceptance Attitude Shift about IPv6 Adoption

  18. Sample Media Coverage

  19. 23 July 2010

  20. ARIN Resource Links • TeamARIN Micrositehttp://TeamARIN.net • Event Calendar • Education • Blogs • Spread the word • Public use slide deck • Materials support request • ARIN IPv6 wikihttp://getipv6.info

  21. Resources • Community Use Slide Deck • IPv6 Wiki • Information Page at www.arin.net/knowledge/v4-v6.html • Outreach Microsite:www.TeamARIN.net • Social Media at ARINwww.arin.net/social.html • ARIN Board Resolution • Letter to CEOs

  22. ARIN on Social Media Facebook – www.facebook.com/TeamARIN Twitter – www.twitter.com/TeamARIN LinkedIn – www.linkedin.com YouTube – www.youtube.com/TeamARIN

  23. Learn more about IPv6 www.arin.net www.getipv6.info www.TeamARIN.net Get Involved in ARIN Public Policy Mailing List Attend a Meeting http://www.arin.net/participate/ Learn More and Get Involved

  24. Thank You

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