Issue Date:
Revision:
Internet Number Resources: What’s new? George Kuo
VNNIC Open Member Meeting, Hanoi
24 July 2014
[21 July 2014]
[4]
Overview
APNIC’s Vision: “A global, open, stable, and secure Internet that serves the entire Asia Pacific community”
2
Internet Resources Delegations
IPv6 Measurement
APNIC Policy Implementation
Supporting Internet Development
Regional Delegations IPv6, IPv4 & ASN
More than 43,700 of /32 IPv6 are delegated in this region
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
35000
40000
45000
50000
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Year
Num
ber o
f /32
s
4
Cumulative delegations as of 17 July 2014
Steady demand for IPv4 from the “last /8”
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
Apr
-11
May
-11
Jun-
11
Jul-1
1 A
ug-1
1 S
ep-1
1 O
ct-1
1 N
ov-1
1 D
ec-1
1 Ja
n-12
Fe
b-12
M
ar-1
2 A
pr-1
2 M
ay-1
2 Ju
n-12
Ju
l-12
Aug
-12
Sep
-12
Oct
-12
Nov
-12
Dec
-12
Jan-
13
Feb-
13
Mar
-13
Apr
-13
May
-13
Jun-
13
Jul-1
3 A
ug-1
3 S
ep-1
3 O
ct-1
3 N
ov-1
3 D
ec-1
3 Ja
n-14
Fe
b-14
M
ar-1
4 A
pr-1
4 M
ay-1
4 Ju
n-14
Date
Del
egat
ions
5
Number of delegations as of 30 June 2014
More than 580 IPv4 delegations out of “IANA returned” address pool
6
As of 17 July 2014 since 28 May 2014
More 4-byte ASNs are delegated
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
4 Byte
2 Byte
Year
Del
egat
ions
7
As of 17 July 2014
Vietnam IPv6, IPv4 & ASN
9
As of 17 July 2014
10
As of 17 July 2014
11
As of 17 July 2014
IPv6 Measurement Global view
labs.apnic.net
13
IPv6 measurement for developed regions
14
http://labs.apnic.net
IPv6 measurement for developing regions
15
http://labs.apnic.net
IPv6 measurement - Global view of end user readiness
16
http://labs.apnic.net/ipv6-measurement/Regions/001%20World/ as of 17/07/2014
Data source from “flash” and “JavaScript” and including viewers from mobile devices
16 Nov 13 IPv6 preferred: 2.45 about 30% increase in 6 months
Global IPv6 deployment leaderboard (commercial operators)
17
ASN Entity Economy IPv6 preferred rate
22394 Cellco Verizon Wireless US 63.39 6848 Telenet N.V BE 45.73 10091 StarHub Cable Vision Ltd SG 43.48 18126 CTCX Chubu Telecommunications Company; Inc. JP 37.72 31334 Kabel Deutschland Vertrieb und Service GmbH DE 34.78 2516 KDDI KDDI CORPORATION JP 30.29 3303 Swisscom Ltd CH 27.00 29562 Kable BW GmbH DE 25.88 55430 STARHUBINTERNET-AS-NGNBN Starhub Internet Pte Ltd SG 24.93 21928 T-Mobile USA US 24.81 41164 GET Norway NO 20.38 7018 AT&T US 20.36 12322 Free SAS FR 19.89 7922 Comcast Cable Communications US 19.83 4739 INTERNODE-AS Internode Pty Ltd AU 19.37
http://labs.apnic.net/ipv6-measurement/AS/ 24/06/2014
IPv6 readiness in the Internet core- Global view of transit AS
18
http://6lab.cisco.com/stats/index.php
Deployment observations
• IPv6 deployment is increasing steadily
• Deployment varies among regions, economies, and individual ASNs
• Some economies and ASNs have been very active in terms of IPv6 deployment – Particularly some mobile network operators and cable TV
operators – Once they enable IPv6 in their network and handsets, their end
user readiness grows VERY rapidly
19
IPv6 in mobile networks
• 3G+ and 4G (LTE, TD-LTE): Services on voice, messaging and data are converging on IP-based services
• Rapidly increasing global 3G+ and 4G deployment – Some mobile network operators have already deployed IPv6 – What is going on in Vietnam?
20
Verizon T-Mobile USA
A recipe for successful IPv6 deployment
21
Plan and act Test IPv6 default for new customers in new networks
New APNIC policy implementations
Recently implemented policies
• Changes to the APNIC Policy Development Process
www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-108
• What are the changes? – “Comment period” changed from “8 weeks” to “not be shorter than
four weeks but no longer than eight weeks” – It is the Policy SIG Chair’s sole discretion to extend the comment
period to be more than four weeks, including the duration of the extension
23
Policy cycle
24
Comment Period
Recently implemented policies
• AS Number transfer policy proposal
www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-107
• Adding AS number transfers to the current APNIC policy
• What does this mean? – The ASNs to be transferred outside of a merger and acquisition – Still need to justify use based on the ASN policy
25
Recently implemented policies
• Distribution of returned IPv4 address
www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-105
• Implemented on 28 May 2014
• What does this mean? – A maximum of a /22 can be delegated to a qualified APNIC Member
or NIR member – This is in addition to the maximum of a /22 that a qualified APNIC
Member or NIR member can receive under 103/8 ("last /8”)
26
Recently implemented policies
• Allocate 1.0.0.0/24 and 1.1.1.0/24 to APNIC Labs as Research Prefixes
www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-109
• What does this mean? – The objective of this proposal is to allocate 1.0.0.0/24 and 1.1.1.0/24
to APNIC Labs, to be used as research prefixes
27
Supporting Internet Development
Supporting NOGs
• Network Operators Groups – Where network engineers and operators meet their colleagues
• NOGs keep the Internet working – Technology discussions – Operational best practices – Compare experiences – Peering & business relationships…etc
• APNIC encourages and supports NOGs in this region – NOG contacts and information sharing – APNIC training/workshop – Any NOGs in Vietnam?
29
Supporting NOGs
• Many new NOGs established
• Recent NOGs events – HKNOG 0.2 (14 Apr) – BDNOG 1 (19-24 May) – IDNOG 01 ( 24 Jun) – SGNOG 03 (24-17 Jun) – PACNOG 17 (15-18 Jul) – JANOG 34 (17-18 Jul) – MyNOG 4 (18-21 Aug) – SANOG 24 (1-9 Aug) – AusNOG 2014 (4-5 Sep)
30
Upcoming IPv6 events
• APNG 38 (Taiwan, 12 Aug 2014) – IPv6 readiness measurement workshop
• ITU APNIC IPv6 workshop (Lao, 5 - 8 Aug 2014) – For Telecom operators
• APNIC 38 (Brisbane, 16 Sep 2014) – IPv6 plenary
• "Duel on Dual Stacking:Performance comparison between IPv6 and IPv4” conference.apnic.net/38/program
– APIPv6TF • IPv6 Readiness Measurement BoF
31
APNIC Training
• Continuing focus on IPv6 deployment IPv6
• Extensive exercises in virtual and physical training labs
Hands-on
• Every Wednesday is IPv6 day eLearning
32
APNIC Engineering Assistance
• Assisting in the development and deployment of sustainable and resilient Internet infrastructure
• Who can benefit? – APNIC and NIR members – Internet Service Providers – Telecom Service Providers
• How can APNIC help? – Assessment of technical network issues and challenges – Advice on Best Current Practice (BCP) knowledge and ideas for potential
solutions – Support for local network engineers to become self-reliant – Provision of capacity-building training – Provision of follow-up support
33
Engineering Assistance in the Region
34
Provided training and equipment to help establish
the Vanuatu IXP
Helped establish an I-Root server instance in Port Vila,
Vanuatu
IXP Workshop held in Bangkok, Thailand -
working towards establishing the country’s
first IXP
APNIC supported the establishment of bdNOG
and BTNOG, new network operators
groups in Bangladesh and Bhutan
You’re Invited! • APNIC 38: Brisbane, Australia, 9-19 Sep 2014
• APRICOT 2015: Fukuoka, Japan, 24 Feb-6 Mar 2015
35
Thank you. Cảm ơn www.facebook.com/APNIC
www.twitter.com/apnic
www.youtube.com/apnicmultimedia
www.flickr.com/apnic
www.weibo.com/APNICrir
36