) of background traffic seen
in this part of IPv6.
We would also be grateful if other operational lists received this notification
- so please forward this as appropriate (but preferably only once!)
Many thanks,
Geoff Huston, George Michaelson
APNIC
My bgp monitor tells me:
* 1.2.3.0/24 203.119.76.3 0 4608 1221 4637
3561 1299 12025 ?
* 5.4.3.0/24 202.12.28.10 4777 2516 1239
1299 12025 ?
These are _not_ authorized announcements, so could
AS3561 Savvis
AS1299 Telia
On 01/02/2011, at 7:02 PM, Randy Bush wrote:
with the iana free pool run-out, i guess we won't be getting those nice
graphs any more. might we have one last one for the turnstiles? :-)/2
and would you mind doing the curves now for each of the five rirs?
gotta give us all something to
On 02/02/2011, at 1:11 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
On Feb 1, 2011, at 3:54 PM, Lee Howard wrote:
People won't be able to access our site
sure helps but being unable to put a date on it still reduces incentive
(especially when Management get involved, and especially if there is a
financial
Are there any expectations of a Gold Rush for the remaining addresses? I
would expect to see at least see some kind of escalation.
This question probably calls for another picture.
Here is a plot of 2009 and 2010 in terms of the average number of IPv4
addresses allocated on a daily basis,
--
Geoff Huston
APNIC
thanks heaps everyone - I'm now well provisioned - now to configure them all!
Geoff
On 02/03/2011, at 1:53 PM, Geoff Huston wrote:
Hi
I am conducting some research relating to BGP behaviour and I need some eBGP
multihop feeds - IPv4 and/or IPv6 eBGP, and full eBGP route table feeds
On 19/03/2011, at 6:08 AM, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:
On Sat, 19 Mar 2011, Routing Analysis Role Account wrote:
Number of 32-bit ASNs allocated by the RIRs: 1207
Prefixes from 32-bit ASNs in the Routing Table: 1
Is the report not getting the
On 21/11/2012, at 3:05 AM, Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
On Nov 20, 2012, at 08:45 , Owen DeLong o...@delong.com wrote:
It is entirely possible that Google's numbers are artificially low for a
number
of reasons.
AMS-IX publishes stats too:
On 24/04/2013, at 8:10 AM, Andrew Latham lath...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tue, Apr 23, 2013 at 5:41 PM, Valdis Kletnieks
valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
I didn't see any mention of this Tony Hain paper:
http://tndh.net/~tony/ietf/ARIN-runout-projection.pdf
ARIN predicted to run out of IP space
On 24/04/2013, at 6:55 PM, Mikael Abrahamsson swm...@swm.pp.se wrote:
I also find it a bit strange that the runout in APNIC and RIPE was very
different. APNIC address allocation rate accelerated at the end, whereas RIPE
exhaustion date kept creeping forward in time instead of closer in
On 26/04/2013, at 4:27 PM, joel jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:
I also find it a bit strange that the runout in APNIC and RIPE was very
different. APNIC address allocation rate accelerated at the end, whereas
RIPE exhaustion date kept creeping forward in time instead of closer in
time,
On 01/08/2009, at 6:44 PM, Paul Rolland (ポール・ロラン) wrote:
Hi Patrick,
On Fri, 31 Jul 2009 18:22:37 -0400
Patrick W. Gilmore patr...@ianai.net wrote:
On Jul 31, 2009, at 6:00 PM, cidr-rep...@potaroo.net wrote:
Recent Table History
Date PrefixesCIDR Agg
24-07-09
On 03/09/2009, at 1:33 AM, Ron Bonica wrote:
Folks,
Please take a look at draft-iana-ipv4-examples. This draft discusses
the
following subnet allocations:
- 192.0.2.0/24 (TEST-NET-1)
- 198.51.100.0/24 (TEST-NET-2)
- 203.0.113.0/24 (TEST-NET-3)
RFC 1166 allocates TEST-NET-1 for use in
From what I learned at the latest NANOG it's very clear that nobody reads this
any more.
Is there any good reason to persist in spamming the nanog list with this report?
thanks,
Geoff
While I am at it, does anyone read this report, or is this weekly report also
just part of the spam load on this list?
regards,
Geoff
Does anyone give a s**t about this any more?
From what I learned at the latest NANOG it's very clear that nobody reads this
any more.
Is there any good reason to persist in spamming the nanog list with this report?
thanks,
Geoff
On 19/10/2011, at 9:02 PM, Philip Smith wrote:
Hi Leo,
Leo Vegoda said the following on 18/10/11 00:31 :
128.0.87.0/2430977 JSC Yugra-Telecom
This one seems to be an error. 128.0.80/21 appears to have been allocated on
5 October, nine days before the report was generated.
On 25/02/2012, at 7:54 AM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
On Fri, Feb 24, 2012 at 3:04 PM, Shane Amante sh...@castlepoint.net wrote:
Solving for route leaks is /the/ killer app for BGPSEC. I can't
understand why people keep ignoring this.
I don't think anyone's ignoring the problem... I
On 13/03/2012, at 2:31 AM, Leo Bicknell wrote:
In a message written on Mon, Mar 12, 2012 at 11:07:54AM -0400, Robert E.
Seastrom wrote:
Grass-roots, bottom-up policy process
+
Need for multihoming
+
Got tired of waiting
=
IPv6 PI
I'll also add that Shim6 folks never made a good
On 13/03/2012, at 8:14 AM, Iljitsch van Beijnum wrote:
On 12 Mar 2012, at 21:15 , William Herrin wrote:
Not at all. You just build a second tier to the routing system.
It's so strange how people think a locator/identifier split will solve the
scalability problem. We already have two
On 14/03/2012, at 9:16 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
Yes, the economics of routing are strange, and the lack of any real
strictures in the routing tables are testament to the observation that
despite more than two decades of tossing the idea around we've yet to
find the equivalent of a route
Hi,
In 2010, and again in 2011, I ran an experiment to examine the dark traffic
in IPv6. I did this by announcing the superblock 2400::/12 which has been
allocated to APNIC for its IPv6 allocations. The superblock announcement is an
aggregate and will not disrupt any IPv6 traffic - the packets
On 21/07/2012, at 6:40 AM, Jared Mauch wrote:
On Jul 20, 2012, at 4:30 PM, Ron Broersma wrote:
On Jul 20, 2012, at 1:04 PM, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
On Sat, 21 Jul 2012 05:10:41 +1000, Routing Analysis Role Account said:
BGP routing table entries examined:
On 19/11/2008, at 4:26 AM, Christopher Morrow wrote:
On Mon, Nov 17, 2008 at 9:02 PM, Nathan Ward [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I wish them good luck in reaching the DNS root servers.
They are in critical infrastructure space, which is a single /32
with
traceroute6 to the ISC's v6
On 18/03/2009, at 6:18 PM, Henk Uijterwaal wrote:
When I look at this more recently, the conclusion still seems to be
valid: we'll run out of 16 bit ASN's somewhere in 2011 to 2013. There
are a lot of unused ASN's out there.
I make it 25 June 2011 given current use patterns
Mike Leber wrote:
Since nobody mentioned it yet, there are now less than 1000 days projected
until IPv4 exhaustion:
http://www.potaroo.net/tools/ipv4/
ps. 1000 days assumes no rush, speculation, or hoarding. Do people do
that?
pps. Of course these are provocative comments for
On 15/09/2008, at 10:36 PM, Joe Abley wrote:
On 14 Sep 2008, at 23:38, Matthew Moyle-Croft wrote:
Other cable systems predated FLAG (at least for voice).
The qualifier might be important.
As should have been obvious from all the IIRCs and related
qualifiers in my note, I wasn't in
65105) 3356 7018 237 i
Is this supposed to be?
I thought 1.0.0.0/8 is allocated to APNIC.
Yes, this is supposed to be. This is one of a number of planned experiments in
advertising all and selected parts of 1/8 in the coming weeks.
Geoff Huston
APNIC
are very
grateful for their help!
Geoff Huston
APNIC
On 02/03/2010, at 6:59 PM, Tomoya Yoshida wrote:
Are these from youtube also?
1.1.1.0/24 *[BGP/170] 07:04:22, MED 0, localpref 100
AS path: 2914 3356 36561 I
1.2.3.0/24 *[BGP/170] 07:01:21
advertisement.
thanks,
Geoff Huston
APNIC
On 23/04/2010, at 6:26 PM, Steve Bertrand wrote:
This is a personal research project, in which I want to learn about the
health of connectivity, and about other situations that causes breakage
that I haven't considered before.
A very fine objective in my opinion. There are a few similar
On 14/04/2011, at 10:47 PM, Iljitsch van Beijnum wrote:
On 14 apr 2011, at 13:50, Tore Anderson wrote:
This is address space that's now marked as delegated and removed from
the pile of unused address space for no obvious reason.
I believe they are using those prefixes for research.
On 20/04/2011, at 11:43 AM, Martin Millnert wrote:
Either way, there certainly IS a place in networks for Toredo services,
since SO
MANY devices for the CPE end of the connectivity equation still have
zero support for IPv6.
If you are prepared to tolerate a connection failure rate in the
On 08/09/2011, at 2:41 AM, Leigh Porter wrote:
-Original Message-
From: Daniel Roesen [mailto:d...@cluenet.de]
Sent: 07 September 2011 17:38
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: NAT444 or ?
On Wed, Sep 07, 2011 at 12:16:28PM +0200, Randy Bush wrote:
I'm going to have to deploy
On 04/08/2013, at 2:06 PM, Rob Mosher rmos...@he.net wrote:
Frank,
HE uses the extended files for these stats since the standard ones will soon
be deprecated. As Rene pointed out, the extended and standard delegation
files from ARIN do not match for this prefix. I do not know why
Hi Steve,
There was an interesting paper at Usenix Security on the effects of deploying
DNSSEC; see
https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity13/measuring-practical-impact-dnssec-deployment
. The difference in geographical impact was quite striking.
George Michaelson and I have
On 23/09/2013, at 8:01 PM, Nick Hilliard n...@foobar.org wrote:
On 23/09/2013 00:15, John Curran wrote:
Not being able to use 32-bit ASNs in your network and support systems will
inevitably lead to confusion for those customers who are assigned them.
I look forward to the day when we
On 24/09/2013, at 12:02 AM, Job Snijders job.snijd...@atrato.com wrote:
On Mon, Sep 23, 2013 at 11:28:58PM +1000, Geoff Huston wrote:
On 23/09/2013, at 8:01 PM, Nick Hilliard n...@foobar.org wrote:
I look forward to the day when we have proper 32 bit BGP community
support and ASN32s
On 27 Apr 2014, at 5:19 am, Deepak Jain dee...@ai.net wrote:
Historic event - 500K prefixes on the Internet.
And now we wait for everything to fall over at 512k ;)
Based on a quick plot graph on the CIDR report, it looks like we are adding
6,000 prefixes a month, or thereabouts. So
On 29 Apr 2014, at 12:39 pm, valdis.kletni...@vt.edu wrote:
On Mon, 28 Apr 2014 21:59:43 -0400, Patrick W. Gilmore said:
On Apr 28, 2014, at 19:41, Chris Boyd cb...@gizmopartners.com wrote:
I'm in the middle of a physical move. I promise I'll take the 3 deagg'd
/24s out as soon as I can.
On 23 May 2014, at 3:29 pm, Christopher Morrow morrowc.li...@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, May 23, 2014 at 1:24 AM, Julien Goodwin na...@studio442.com.au
wrote:
On 23/05/14 11:21, Jared Mauch wrote:
You can't cater to everyones broken network. I can't reach 1.1.1.1 from
here either, but
On 14 Aug 2014, at 4:14 am, Paul Ferguson fergdawgs...@mykolab.com wrote:
On 8/13/14 8:55 AM, Paul Ferguson wrote:
Apologies for replying to my own post, but... below:
On 8/13/2014 7:05 AM, Paul Ferguson wrote:
p.s. I recall some IPv6 prefix growth routing projections by
Vince
On 8 Mar 2015, at 6:35 pm, Hank Nussbacher h...@efes.iucc.ac.il wrote:
At 14:37 08/03/2015 +1100, Geoff Huston wrote:
On 8 Mar 2015, at 1:39 pm, Randy Bush ra...@psg.com wrote:
If you want to know the registry assignments / allocations made to a
single entity and be able group
Is there a tool or method to determine IP blocks assigned to an
organization by ASN? I.e. if I have an organization's ASN number I want to
know all blocks assigned to that ASN.
If you want to know the registry assignments / allocations made to a single
entity and be able group together
On 8 Mar 2015, at 1:39 pm, Randy Bush ra...@psg.com wrote:
If you want to know the registry assignments / allocations made to a
single entity and be able group together these assignments of address
prefixes and ASNs you should retrieve the combined extended stats file
from the RIRs
> On 19 Jun 2016, at 6:05 AM, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:
>
> On Fri, 17 Jun 2016, cidr-rep...@potaroo.net wrote:
>
>>
>> TOP 20 Unstable Prefixes
>> Rank Prefix Upds % Origin AS -- AS Name
>> 1 - 202.65.32.0/2128086 0.8% AS10131 -- CKTELECOM-CK-AP
[with apologies to those who see this on multiple lists]
Call For Presentations
The DNS-OARC 26th Workshop will take place in Madrid, Spain on May
14th and 15th 2017, the Sunday and Monday following the ICANN GDD
Industry Summit 2017. The Workshop's Program Committee is now
requesting proposals
> On 3 Oct 2017, at 6:57 am, Jacques Latour wrote:
>
> Hi all!
>
> I'm working on our IPv6 and DNSSEC adoption report for Canada and the data I
> use comes largely from APNIC (https://stats.labs.apnic.net/dnssec/CA) and
> (https://stats.labs.apnic.net/ipv6/CA).
>
>
> On 3 Oct 2017, at 7:17 am, Eric Dugas wrote:
>
> For some reason my previous email was empty.
>
> What I wrote:
>
> "Some of these numbers are largely inflated...
>
> e.g. Teksavvy at 937,855 estimated users. How can they have 937,855 users
> if they "only" have
> On 11 Oct 2021, at 7:18 am, Mark Tinka wrote:
>
>
>
> On 10/10/21 22:10, Geoff Huston wrote:
>
>> I have to agree with Doug Barton's earlier observation is that the base
>> problem is that the ISPs are using a flawed business model and they don't
>>
> On 11 Oct 2021, at 6:33 am, Matthew Petach wrote:
>
> […] Facebook, Microsoft, and Amazon all caved to SK's demands:
>
> I will note that my $previous_employer was a top-10 web content provider
> that did *not* pay SK Broadband. Not all the content providers caved
> to SKB.
>
The
> On 25 Nov 2021, at 7:57 am, Christopher Morrow
> wrote:
>
> Are you proposing SCTP? There is sadly not much more hope for widespread
> adoption of that as of IPv6.
>
> or perhaps MP-TCP? :) or shim6?
Shim6 died a comprehensive death many yers ago. I recall NANOG played a role in
it's
> On 6 Oct 2023, at 6:13 am, Owen DeLong wrote:
>
> Ratio of FIB to RIB is only part of the equation.
>
> IPv6 is NOT under the disaggregation pressure that IPv4 is under because
> there is no pressure (other than perhaps scarcity mentality from those that
> don’t properly understand IPv6) to
> On 10 Oct 2023, at 5:35 am, Delong.com wrote:
>
>> Now I’m trying to understand what your grimmer story for IPv4 might be here
>> Owen. Since 2005 the number of IPv4 FIB entries per origin AS has increased
>> fropm 8 to 12 in the past 20 years - or a 50% increase. Over ther same
>>
> On 25 May 2022, at 5:45 am, Jakob Heitz (jheitz) via NANOG
> wrote:
>
> This attack will work very well until the victim starts advertising
> its prefix. The victim may not notice the fake advertisement because the fake
> advertisement will not reach the victim AS due to AS-path loop
> On 1 Aug 2022, at 11:10 am, Tom Paseka via NANOG wrote:
>
> Paying for "peering", doesn't stop you being a tier-1.
>
> Being a Tier-1 means you are "transit free" (technical term, not commercial).
> No one is transiting your routes to other Tier-1 providers.
>
There are a lot of
> On 9 Sep 2022, at 4:36 pm, Vincent Bernat wrote:
>
> On 2022-09-09 04:56, Matt Corallo wrote:
>> Has anyone done an analysis of the rsync CVE-2022-29154 (which "allows
>> malicious remote servers to write arbitrary files inside the directories of
>> connecting peers") and its potential
> On 11 Oct 2022, at 4:23 am, Tobias Fiebig
> wrote:
>
> Heho,
> Let alone $all the /24 assigned under the RIPE waiting list policy.
>
> In the Geoff Huston spirit, I quickly took a look how less specifics for /24s
> looks in my table:
>
[…]
> So it seems
> On 10 Dec 2022, at 11:24 am, Matthew Petach wrote:
>
>
>
> As I said--I'm probably being overly paranoid, but I can't help but
> wonder what packets such a collector might see, if left to run for a
> week or two... ^_^;
>
A decade ago it looked like this…
> On 12 Feb 2024, at 6:01 pm, Richard Laager wrote:
>
> On 2024-02-12 15:18, Job Snijders via NANOG wrote:
>> On Mon, Feb 12, 2024 at 04:07:52PM -0500, Geoff Huston wrote:
>>> I was making an observation that the presentation material was
>>>
> On 12 Feb 2024, at 3:14 pm, Job Snijders via NANOG wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> At NANOG 90, Merit presented on their IRRd v4 deployment. At the
> microphone Geoff Huston raised a comment which I interpreted as:
>
>"Can an exception be made for my res
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