Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-27 Thread Owen DeLong

On Jan 26, 2014, at 00:39 , Sander Steffann san...@steffann.nl wrote:

 Hi Owen,
 
 Same question… Will people adjust their filters, (even if only for that 
 prefix)? All over the world? I think 'will adjust their filters for XYZ' is 
 highly optimistic, but let's hope it will work, otherwise the ISPs in the 
 ARIN region will have a problem. (Or maybe not: existing ISPs (for who a 
 /2[4-8] is not a significant amount) might not mind if a new competitors 
 only gets a /2[5-8] that they cannot route globally. But I really hope it 
 doesn't come to that.)
 
 Realistically, anyone depending on IPv4 is going to has a growing problem 
 which will only continue to grow.
 
 Yes, but those last IPv4 addresses are for ISPs who work with IPv6 and need a 
 little bit of IPv4 to communicate with the legacy world. If they can't even 
 do that it will be extra hard (impossible?) for them to function.

Which is precisely why I authored that particular policy at the time.

 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on 
 https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html
 
 I'm not sure it has been determined yet, let alone announced.
 
 According to https://www.arin.net/resources/request/ipv4_countdown.html phase 
 one it should have been done in September 2012: 'IPv4 address space required 
 for NRPM 4.10, which sets aside a contiguous IPv4 /10 block to facilitate 
 IPv6 deployment, was reserved and removed from the remaining IPv4 address 
 pool.'  I can't find anything more specific though...

OK, then I'm sure it's been determined, but I can't really fault them for not 
announcing it yet.

 Consider the possibility of a policy change which allows the transfer of 
 smaller blocks (current ARIN policy limits this to /24 minimum, but ARIN 
 policy is not immutable, we have a policy development process so that 
 anyone who wants to can start the process of changing it.)
 
 I’m well aware of that, but I’ll stick to RIPE policies for now :-)
 
 I admit I'm not familiar with the details of the RIPE policy in this regard. 
 Do they allow longer prefixes to be transferred and/or acquired?
 
 Allow: yes. Anybody doing that for globally routable purposes: no. Although 
 it can be used for networks that don't need to be in the global BGP table.
 
 I will point out that the NA in NANOG mostly refers to the ARIN region.
 
 ??? No idea what this comment is supposed to mean. You may find this weird, 
 but since the Internet is actually a global network I do care about what 
 happens in NA...

You made the comment that you would ...stick to RIPE I pointed out that 
ARIN was the RIR of record for most of the territory for which this list is 
focused.

Owen




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-27 Thread Sander Steffann
 
 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on 
 https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html
 
 I'm not sure it has been determined yet, let alone announced.
 
 According to https://www.arin.net/resources/request/ipv4_countdown.html 
 phase one it should have been done in September 2012: 'IPv4 address space 
 required for NRPM 4.10, which sets aside a contiguous IPv4 /10 block to 
 facilitate IPv6 deployment, was reserved and removed from the remaining IPv4 
 address pool.'  I can't find anything more specific though...
 
 OK, then I'm sure it's been determined, but I can't really fault them for not 
 announcing it yet.

?!?!?  How are people supposed to prepare their filters for those tiny 
allocations if the corresponding prefix is not published?

This is not making any sense...
Sander




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-27 Thread Tore Anderson
* Sander Steffann

 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed
 on https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html

Probably 23.128/10:

arin||ipv4|23.128.0.0|4194304||reserved|

Tore



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-27 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi,

 Op 27 jan. 2014 om 10:49 heeft Tore Anderson t...@fud.no het volgende 
 geschreven:
 
 * Sander Steffann
 
 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed
 on https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html
 
 Probably 23.128/10:
 
 arin||ipv4|23.128.0.0|4194304||reserved|

Now that is useful information! Can someone from ARIN confirm this?

Cheers,
Sander


Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-27 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore
 [...] particularly of policies defined by a handful of folks who bother to 
 participate in the ARIN public policy processes

I love this part.

I was told a billion times where and how to participate in the policy debate - 
to the point where many people complain they are being told too many times - 
yet still did not 'bother' to participate. And now I am going to bitch and moan 
about the policy because, well, OTHER PEOPLE WROTE IT WITHOUT MY INPUT.

Whot-EVA.

ARIN is community owned  operated. You don't like it, fine, but don't complain 
when policies are turned out that you don't like if you don't even 'bother' to 
participate.

-- 
TTFN,
patrick



On Jan 26, 2014, at 20:26 , David Conrad d...@virtualized.org wrote:

 On Jan 26, 2014, at 11:45 AM, John Levine jo...@iecc.com wrote:
 I wonder what will change (if anything) when ARIN runs out of IPv4 space.
 The market in used IPv4 space will come out from the shadows,
 
 It mostly has already done so in the APNIC and RIPE regions out of necessity.
 
 and we'll see endless arguments between
 buyers of IPv4 space and ARIN, when ARIN refuses the updates to the
 address registry.
 
 This would be bad. I can think of few more effective ways of destroying the 
 RIR system than by refusing to update the address registry. IMHO, the primary 
 function of the Registries is to, you know, register. Not act as policy 
 police, particularly of policies defined by a handful of folks who bother to 
 participate in the ARIN public policy processes.
 
 I don't see any reason for the people who run defaultless routers all over 
 the world to change the /24 rule.  
 
 So IIUC, the theory goes that ISPs will be encouraged by their customers 
 (upon pain of those customers becoming former customers) to announce their 
 long prefixes, even though the ISPs will say but nobody will listen.  
 However, some ISPs _do_ listen (or rather, _don't_ filter) so the long prefix 
 customers will get partial (i.e., worse than normal) reachability. Said 
 customers will then whine at their ISPs saying fix it! and said ISPs will 
 go to their peers and grovel, perhaps offering the Faustian bargain of I'll 
 accept yours if you accept mine and our respective customers will stop 
 whining at us about each other. And then the apocalypse occurs. Or something 
 like that.
 
 Regards,
 -drc
 



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Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-27 Thread Jay Ashworth
- Original Message -
 From: John R. Levine jo...@iecc.com

 The customer continues to whine about performance. Our ISP says, ah, you
 need our Preferred Thoughput Upgrade Innovation (PTUI), available at
 modest extra cost. The extra cost, of course, it what it costs to buy
 a /24 and get the customer into the real routing table.

And John wins the Internet for today.

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth  Baylink   j...@baylink.com
Designer The Things I Think   RFC 2100
Ashworth  Associates   http://www.bcp38.info  2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA  BCP38: Ask For It By Name!   +1 727 647 1274



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Owen DeLong

On Jan 25, 2014, at 23:56 , Sander Steffann san...@steffann.nl wrote:

 Hi Owen,
 
 Op 26 jan. 2014, om 05:36 heeft Owen DeLong o...@delong.com het volgende 
 geschreven:
 
 On Jan 25, 2014, at 13:59 , Sander Steffann san...@steffann.nl wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 […] But, when that happens ARIN will only have the 'Dedicated IPv4 block 
 to facilitate IPv6 Deployment' [1] left, and it will use 'a minimum size 
 allocation of /28 and a maximum size allocation of /24' for that block. 
 The block is meant for things like dual stacked DNS servers, NAT64 and 
 other IPv6 deployments where a bit of IPv4 is still necessary.
 
 I wonder how reachable those systems will be... Will people adjust their 
 filters, or will most usage of this block (and thereby all new entrants in 
 the ISP market in the ARIN region) just be doomed?
 
 That's actually may not be the best question. That block will come from 
 within a specific prefix and I suspect that ISPs and the like will adjust 
 their filters FOR THAT PREFIX.
 
 Same question… Will people adjust their filters, (even if only for that 
 prefix)? All over the world? I think 'will adjust their filters for XYZ' is 
 highly optimistic, but let's hope it will work, otherwise the ISPs in the 
 ARIN region will have a problem. (Or maybe not: existing ISPs (for who a 
 /2[4-8] is not a significant amount) might not mind if a new competitors only 
 gets a /2[5-8] that they cannot route globally. But I really hope it doesn't 
 come to that.)
 

Realistically, anyone depending on IPv4 is going to has a growing problem which 
will only continue to grow.

 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on 
 https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html

I'm not sure it has been determined yet, let alone announced.

 
 Consider the possibility of a policy change which allows the transfer of 
 smaller blocks (current ARIN policy limits this to /24 minimum, but ARIN 
 policy is not immutable, we have a policy development process so that anyone 
 who wants to can start the process of changing it.)
 
 I’m well aware of that, but I’ll stick to RIPE policies for now :-)

I admit I'm not familiar with the details of the RIPE policy in this regard. Do 
they allow longer prefixes to be transferred and/or acquired?

I will point out that the NA in NANOG mostly refers to the ARIN region.

Owen




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi Owen,

 Same question… Will people adjust their filters, (even if only for that 
 prefix)? All over the world? I think 'will adjust their filters for XYZ' is 
 highly optimistic, but let's hope it will work, otherwise the ISPs in the 
 ARIN region will have a problem. (Or maybe not: existing ISPs (for who a 
 /2[4-8] is not a significant amount) might not mind if a new competitors 
 only gets a /2[5-8] that they cannot route globally. But I really hope it 
 doesn't come to that.)
 
 Realistically, anyone depending on IPv4 is going to has a growing problem 
 which will only continue to grow.

Yes, but those last IPv4 addresses are for ISPs who work with IPv6 and need a 
little bit of IPv4 to communicate with the legacy world. If they can't even do 
that it will be extra hard (impossible?) for them to function.

 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on 
 https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html
 
 I'm not sure it has been determined yet, let alone announced.

According to https://www.arin.net/resources/request/ipv4_countdown.html phase 
one it should have been done in September 2012: 'IPv4 address space required 
for NRPM 4.10, which sets aside a contiguous IPv4 /10 block to facilitate IPv6 
deployment, was reserved and removed from the remaining IPv4 address pool.'  I 
can't find anything more specific though...

 Consider the possibility of a policy change which allows the transfer of 
 smaller blocks (current ARIN policy limits this to /24 minimum, but ARIN 
 policy is not immutable, we have a policy development process so that 
 anyone who wants to can start the process of changing it.)
 
 I’m well aware of that, but I’ll stick to RIPE policies for now :-)
 
 I admit I'm not familiar with the details of the RIPE policy in this regard. 
 Do they allow longer prefixes to be transferred and/or acquired?

Allow: yes. Anybody doing that for globally routable purposes: no. Although it 
can be used for networks that don't need to be in the global BGP table.

 I will point out that the NA in NANOG mostly refers to the ARIN region.

??? No idea what this comment is supposed to mean. You may find this weird, but 
since the Internet is actually a global network I do care about what happens in 
NA...

Cheers,
Sander




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Dave Bell
 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on
https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html

100.64/10

http://tools.ietf.org/search/rfc6598


Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Randy Bush
sander,

i suspect that, as multi-homing continues to grow and ipv4 space
fragments to be used in core-facing nat[64]-like things, a decade from
now we'll see the boundary move to the right.

randy



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Alexander Neilson

Regards
Alexander

Alexander Neilson
Neilson Productions Limited

alexan...@neilson.net.nz
021 329 681
022 456 2326

On 26/01/2014, at 10:35 pm, Dave Bell m...@geordish.org wrote:

 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on
 https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html
 
 100.64/10
 
 http://tools.ietf.org/search/rfc6598

Correct me if I am wrong but this is the space reserved for internal use by 
providers for space for CGN systems that is not 1918 space so it doesn’t 
conflict with customers internal network IP Space.

If I am correct the question is for which block has been reserved by ARIN for 
“address space for v6 devices they need to talk to v4 world” which is a 
globally unique allocation from their final /8 which they reference Per 
policy, a /10 was reserved out of the last /8 to facilitate IPv6 deployment and 
that space is not included in our inventory count.” at 
https://www.arin.net/resources/request/ipv4_countdown.html which I think nobody 
has yet answered.

Looking at 4.10 it doesn’t require the /10 block to be taken from their “Final 
/8” allocation (104/8) so I think it would be nice for someone from ARIN to 
come on here and confirm for all of us what the /10 is and ARIN’s thinking 
around the use of this space and their allocations being a max /24. Knowing the 
space now and whether larger transit providers will be issued it in /24’s for 
their transit customers which would mean they could announce the entire /24 and 
not require action from most AS’s or if the allocations will range in size 
directly to end users as standard issued space and ARIN asks us to accept it in 
our filters would be useful to know now so I can prepare the filters and it 
gives most AS’s time to implement this next large edit rather than make it a 
tweak when it begins to cause issues / issues are reported.





smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature


Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi,

 On 26/01/2014, at 10:35 pm, Dave Bell m...@geordish.org wrote:
 But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on
 https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html
 
 100.64/10
 
 http://tools.ietf.org/search/rfc6598
 
 Correct me if I am wrong but this is the space reserved for internal use by 
 providers for space for CGN systems that is not 1918 space so it doesn’t 
 conflict with customers internal network IP Space.

You're correct. I actually assumed the 100.64/10 answer was meant as a joke :-)

Cheers,
Sander




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi Randy,

 i suspect that, as multi-homing continues to grow and ipv4 space
 fragments to be used in core-facing nat[64]-like things, a decade from
 now we'll see the boundary move to the right.

Maybe, if the equipment can handle the number of routes. I actually see two 
opposing things: the scarcity will require more fragmentation with smaller 
fragments, which requires less strict filtering. On the other hand the 
fragmentation will already start with e.g. /20s being fragmented into /24s. 
That might already cause problems for current hardware, which might cause 
people to filter more strictly. Unfortunately my crystal ball is broken at the 
moment.

When ARIN starts allocating /28s from the reserved /10 in ±12 months I wonder 
which direction it will go... I hope for the ARIN region that the majority of 
operators globally will loosen up their filters for at least that /10 within 
those 12 months so the allocations will actually be usable. For that to happen 
it would be very useful to know *which* /10 has been reserved in 2012 though... 
12 months is not much for global communication, education and filter 
adjustments.

And anyway, who needs IPv4 a decade from now? ;)

Cheers,
Sander




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread John Levine
I wonder what will change (if anything) when ARIN runs out of IPv4 space.

In routing, probably not much.  The market in used IPv4 space will
come out from the shadows, and we'll see endless arguments between
buyers of IPv4 space and ARIN, when ARIN refuses the updates to the
address registry.

I don't see any reason for the people who run defaultless routers all
over the world to change the /24 rule.  If they accept longer prefixes
it'll cost them real money as their route tables bloat, and all they
get is some marginal connectivity to people too dumb or too cheap to
find a /24 of their own.  Anyone who buys a /27 without an arrangement
for backup routing from whoever routes the surrounding /24 is a fool.

Regards,
John Levine, jo...@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of The Internet for Dummies,
Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly

PS: Yes, I know you don't buy space from ARIN.



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread David Conrad
On Jan 26, 2014, at 11:45 AM, John Levine jo...@iecc.com wrote:
 I wonder what will change (if anything) when ARIN runs out of IPv4 space.
 The market in used IPv4 space will come out from the shadows,

It mostly has already done so in the APNIC and RIPE regions out of necessity.

 and we'll see endless arguments between
 buyers of IPv4 space and ARIN, when ARIN refuses the updates to the
 address registry.

This would be bad. I can think of few more effective ways of destroying the 
RIR system than by refusing to update the address registry. IMHO, the primary 
function of the Registries is to, you know, register. Not act as policy police, 
particularly of policies defined by a handful of folks who bother to 
participate in the ARIN public policy processes.

 I don't see any reason for the people who run defaultless routers all over 
 the world to change the /24 rule.  

So IIUC, the theory goes that ISPs will be encouraged by their customers (upon 
pain of those customers becoming former customers) to announce their long 
prefixes, even though the ISPs will say but nobody will listen.  However, 
some ISPs _do_ listen (or rather, _don't_ filter) so the long prefix customers 
will get partial (i.e., worse than normal) reachability. Said customers will 
then whine at their ISPs saying fix it! and said ISPs will go to their peers 
and grovel, perhaps offering the Faustian bargain of I'll accept yours if you 
accept mine and our respective customers will stop whining at us about each 
other. And then the apocalypse occurs. Or something like that.

Regards,
-drc



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Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread John R. Levine
and we'll see endless arguments between buyers of IPv4 space and ARIN, 
when ARIN refuses the updates to the address registry.


This would be bad. I can think of few more effective ways of 
destroying the RIR system than by refusing to update the address 
registry.


I completely agree, but there are other places to argue about that 
particular question.


I don't see any reason for the people who run defaultless routers all 
over the world to change the /24 rule.


So IIUC, the theory goes that ISPs will be encouraged by their customers 
(upon pain of those customers becoming former customers) to announce 
their long prefixes, even though the ISPs will say but nobody will 
listen.  ...


Well, maybe.  My vision is that the ISP calls up their upstreams and/or 
peers, some say OK, many say, sorry, unless you're offering to fund some 
very expen$ive router upgrade$, we can't do it.  Even the ones who say OK 
will have little incentive to push their peers, so there will be flaky 
islands of routing.


The customer will continue to whine, of course, at which point the ISP has 
the bright idea to do some traceroutes and figure out which ISP announces 
the enclosing block.  They call up that ISP and ask, what would you charge 
to tunnel that traffic back to us?  The other ISP, who's been throwing 
away the /27's traffic anyway, quotes a reasonable price, and now we have 
universal reachability, accompanied by endless route flaps and very 
inconsistent performance.


The customer continues to whine about performance.  Our ISP says, ah, you 
need our Preferred Thoughput Upgrade Innovation (PTUI), available at 
modest extra cost.  The extra cost, of course, it what it costs to buy a 
/24 and get the customer into the real routing table.


Regards,
John Levine, jo...@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of The Internet for Dummies,
Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly

PS: In the sequel, some ill-advised LIR starts handing out /27s with no 
enclosing block, so a bunch of little ISPs get into a flapping contest to 
see who's going to announce the /24 and get everyone else to pay them to 
tunnel the traffic back.




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Jimmy Hess
On Sun, Jan 26, 2014 at 8:02 PM, John R. Levine jo...@iecc.com wrote:

I don't see ARIN recognizing bogus transfers in the registry -- if the
transfer policy wasn't followed, then no transfer occurred.


  Well, maybe.  My vision is that the ISP calls up their upstreams and/or
 peers, some say OK, many say, sorry, unless you're offering to fund some
 very expen$ive router upgrade$, we can't do it.  Even the ones who say OK
 will have little incentive to push their peers, so there will be flaky
 islands of routing.

 The customer will continue to whine, of course, at which point the ISP has
 the bright idea to do some traceroutes and figure out which ISP announces
 the enclosing block.  They call up that ISP and ask, what would you charge
 to tunnel that traffic back to us?

[snip]


If it's a /28 allocation under ARIN NRPM 4.10;  there is no  assignee that
gets to announce the enclosing /24.

I do not see in the cards, a lot of /28 allocations occuring.

Since 4.10 addresses are exclusively for IPv6 transition,  immediate need
criteria must be met, and the applicant must demonstrate that no other
allocations or assignments will meet this need;  I doubt there will be a
significant number of /28s that will fit the need.

More likely, those that would utilize 4.10 will be asking for a /24
 allocation, if addresses need to be routed.

Or a /28;  if the transition function where the addresses are required are
small,  and they do not require global reachability.

Another answer for end users may well be instead of accepting /28s into
your table:  implement IPv6 instead,  so you are not needing IPv4  to
connect to these networks that have deployed IPv6 and are requiring the /28
for a special IPv4 to IPv6 transition purpose.

-- 
-JH


Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread John R. Levine

I don't see ARIN recognizing bogus transfers in the registry -- if the
transfer policy wasn't followed, then no transfer occurred.


I expect the party that paid good money for the address space, and the 
party who they paid, and their respective attorneys, will strenously 
disagree with you, but as I noted, there's other places to discuss this.



Another answer for end users may well be instead of accepting /28s into
your table:  implement IPv6 instead,  so you are not needing IPv4  to
connect to these networks that have deployed IPv6 and are requiring the /28
for a special IPv4 to IPv6 transition purpose.


Yeah, yeah, we did that, we have buttloads of V6 space, but we need this 
stuff to work now, not in 2025.


I'm fully dual stack both at home (T-W native) and on my servers (HE 
tunnel to my LAN), and v6 is still painfully flaky.  Just this afternoon, 
my home network started acting like someone had poured glue into it, 
because of an internal T-W routing screwup so that my router was reachable 
over v6, but the /64 they assign to my home network wasn't.  When I turned 
off v6, everything worked just dandy again.  Now the v6 routing seems to 
be OK, until the next time it happens.


Re the /28 with no enclosing space, see the PS to my previous note you 
seem to have missed.


Regards,
John Levine, jo...@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of The Internet for Dummies,
Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Masataka Ohta

Sander Steffann wrote:


i suspect that, as multi-homing continues to grow and ipv4 space
fragments to be used in core-facing nat[64]-like things, a decade
from now we'll see the boundary move to the right.


Maybe, if the equipment can handle the number of routes. I actually
see two opposing things: the scarcity will require more fragmentation
with smaller fragments, which requires less strict filtering.


The problem is not prefix length (it is a problem if 32, which is
the case with IPv6) but the number of routes, which grows because
of not fragmentation but poor way of multihoming through routing.

Note that if IPv6 will be as popular as IPv4, it has almost equal
number of routes for multihoming.


On the
other hand the fragmentation will already start with e.g. /20s being
fragmented into /24s. That might already cause problems for current
hardware, which might cause people to filter more strictly.
Unfortunately my crystal ball is broken at the moment.


Considering that a fast cheap 18bit 16M entry 1 chip SRAM has been
available for many years, route vendors do not have to deploy
slow and complicated logic for route look up, unless they want
to make IPv4 route look up as slow as that of IPv6.

Even 4G entry will not be a problem, except that it may cause BGP
update computation slower.

Masataka Ohta




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-26 Thread Randy Bush
 I don't see ARIN recognizing bogus transfers in the registry -- if the
 transfer policy wasn't followed, then no transfer occurred.

do you share what you are smoking?



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Seth Mattinen

On 1/25/14, 13:17, Drew Linsalata wrote:

Yeah, its been a while since I had to get involved in this.  We have a
customer with their own IPv4 allocation that wants us to announce a /27 for
them. Back in the day, it was /24 or larger or all bets were off.  Is
that still the case now?




/24 hasn't changed and is not likely to.

~Seth



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Laszlo Hanyecz
Yes, a /27 is too small.  You need at least a /24.

On Jan 25, 2014, at 9:17 PM, Drew Linsalata drew.linsal...@gmail.com wrote:

 Yeah, its been a while since I had to get involved in this.  We have a
 customer with their own IPv4 allocation that wants us to announce a /27 for
 them. Back in the day, it was /24 or larger or all bets were off.  Is
 that still the case now?




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Sat, Jan 25, 2014 at 4:17 PM, Drew Linsalata
drew.linsal...@gmail.com wrote:
 Yeah, its been a while since I had to get involved in this.  We have a
 customer with their own IPv4 allocation that wants us to announce a /27 for
 them. Back in the day, it was /24 or larger or all bets were off.  Is
 that still the case now?

yes.



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Justin M. Streiner

On Sat, 25 Jan 2014, Drew Linsalata wrote:


Yeah, its been a while since I had to get involved in this.  We have a
customer with their own IPv4 allocation that wants us to announce a /27 for
them. Back in the day, it was /24 or larger or all bets were off.  Is
that still the case now?


Things haven't changed.  /24 is the smallest IPv4 prefix many providers 
will accept.


jms



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi,

 Yeah, its been a while since I had to get involved in this.  We have a
 customer with their own IPv4 allocation that wants us to announce a /27 for
 them. Back in the day, it was /24 or larger or all bets were off.  Is
 that still the case now?

This is still the case today.

I wonder what will change (if anything) when ARIN runs out of IPv4 space. 
Geoff's current predictions say Feb 2015, but I wouldn't be surprised if it 
turns out to be sooner than that. But, when that happens ARIN will only have 
the 'Dedicated IPv4 block to facilitate IPv6 Deployment' [1] left, and it will 
use 'a minimum size allocation of /28 and a maximum size allocation of /24' for 
that block. The block is meant for things like dual stacked DNS servers, NAT64 
and other IPv6 deployments where a bit of IPv4 is still necessary.

I wonder how reachable those systems will be... Will people adjust their 
filters, or will most usage of this block (and thereby all new entrants in the 
ISP market in the ARIN region) just be doomed?

Cheers,
Sander


[1] https://www.arin.net/policy/nrpm.html#four10




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Jeff Kell
(snip)

I doubt that anything  /24 will ever be eligible as a portable
provider independent block.  If within a provider, you can slice and
dice as you wish.

Jeff




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi,

Op 25 jan. 2014, om 23:05 heeft Jeff Kell jeff-k...@utc.edu het volgende 
geschreven:

 (snip)
 
 I doubt that anything  /24 will ever be eligible as a portable
 provider independent block.  If within a provider, you can slice and
 dice as you wish.

Sure, but the text I quoted is about ARIN allocations, so ARIN - ISP. So the 
/28 is not provider-independent. It *is* the provider... And yes: I think this 
will become a mess in ARIN land :(

Cheers,
Sander




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Phil Fagan
I would imagine this should be announced with the larger block owner.
On Jan 25, 2014 2:19 PM, Drew Linsalata drew.linsal...@gmail.com wrote:

 Yeah, its been a while since I had to get involved in this.  We have a
 customer with their own IPv4 allocation that wants us to announce a /27 for
 them. Back in the day, it was /24 or larger or all bets were off.  Is
 that still the case now?



Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Jimmy Hess
On Sat, Jan 25, 2014 at 4:15 PM, Sander Steffann san...@steffann.nl wrote:


 Sure, but the text I quoted is about ARIN allocations, so ARIN - ISP. So
 the /28 is not provider-independent. It *is* the provider... And yes: I
 think this will become a mess in ARIN land :(


There aren't any /27 or /28 Allocations from ARIN to an ISP
A /28 is longer than the ARIN Minimum allocation block size of /22,  and
longer than the minimum transfer size of a /24 block.


--
-JH


Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi Jimmy,

 There aren't any /27 or /28 Allocations from ARIN to an ISP
 A /28 is longer than the ARIN Minimum allocation block size of /22,  and 
 longer than the minimum transfer size of a /24 block.

Now: yes. Soon: no. Read https://www.arin.net/policy/nrpm.html#four10
Sander




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Owen DeLong

On Jan 25, 2014, at 13:59 , Sander Steffann san...@steffann.nl wrote:

 Hi,
 
 Yeah, its been a while since I had to get involved in this.  We have a
 customer with their own IPv4 allocation that wants us to announce a /27 for
 them. Back in the day, it was /24 or larger or all bets were off.  Is
 that still the case now?
 
 This is still the case today.
 
 I wonder what will change (if anything) when ARIN runs out of IPv4 space. 
 Geoff's current predictions say Feb 2015, but I wouldn't be surprised if it 
 turns out to be sooner than that. But, when that happens ARIN will only have 
 the 'Dedicated IPv4 block to facilitate IPv6 Deployment' [1] left, and it 
 will use 'a minimum size allocation of /28 and a maximum size allocation of 
 /24' for that block. The block is meant for things like dual stacked DNS 
 servers, NAT64 and other IPv6 deployments where a bit of IPv4 is still 
 necessary.
 
 I wonder how reachable those systems will be... Will people adjust their 
 filters, or will most usage of this block (and thereby all new entrants in 
 the ISP market in the ARIN region) just be doomed?
 

That's actually may not be the best question. That block will come from within 
a specific prefix and I suspect that ISPs and the like will adjust their 
filters FOR THAT PREFIX.

Consider the possibility of a policy change which allows the transfer of 
smaller blocks (current ARIN policy limits this to /24 minimum, but ARIN policy 
is not immutable, we have a policy development process so that anyone who wants 
to can start the process of changing it.)

Owen




Re: Will a single /27 get fully routed these days?

2014-01-25 Thread Sander Steffann
Hi Owen,

Op 26 jan. 2014, om 05:36 heeft Owen DeLong o...@delong.com het volgende 
geschreven:

 On Jan 25, 2014, at 13:59 , Sander Steffann san...@steffann.nl wrote:
 
 Hi,
 
 […] But, when that happens ARIN will only have the 'Dedicated IPv4 block to 
 facilitate IPv6 Deployment' [1] left, and it will use 'a minimum size 
 allocation of /28 and a maximum size allocation of /24' for that block. The 
 block is meant for things like dual stacked DNS servers, NAT64 and other 
 IPv6 deployments where a bit of IPv4 is still necessary.
 
 I wonder how reachable those systems will be... Will people adjust their 
 filters, or will most usage of this block (and thereby all new entrants in 
 the ISP market in the ARIN region) just be doomed?
 
 That's actually may not be the best question. That block will come from 
 within a specific prefix and I suspect that ISPs and the like will adjust 
 their filters FOR THAT PREFIX.

Same question… Will people adjust their filters, (even if only for that 
prefix)? All over the world? I think 'will adjust their filters for XYZ' is 
highly optimistic, but let's hope it will work, otherwise the ISPs in the ARIN 
region will have a problem. (Or maybe not: existing ISPs (for who a /2[4-8] is 
not a significant amount) might not mind if a new competitors only gets a 
/2[5-8] that they cannot route globally. But I really hope it doesn't come to 
that.)

But more important: which /10 is set aside for this? It is not listed on 
https://www.arin.net/knowledge/ip_blocks.html

 Consider the possibility of a policy change which allows the transfer of 
 smaller blocks (current ARIN policy limits this to /24 minimum, but ARIN 
 policy is not immutable, we have a policy development process so that anyone 
 who wants to can start the process of changing it.)

I’m well aware of that, but I’ll stick to RIPE policies for now :-)

Cheers,
Sander