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| ::: Policy - AfriNIC IPv6 Address Allocation and Assignment Policy | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Abstract This document defines registry policies for the assignment and allocation of globally unique IPv6 addresses to Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and other organisations in the AfriNIC region.
1.1. Overview For consistency, many of the following definitions have been
replaced by definitions from other RIR documents.
Regional Internet Registries are established and authorised by
respective regional communities and recognised by the IANA to serve
and represent large geographical regions. The primary role of RIRs
is to manage and distribute public Internet address space within
their respective regions. The HD-Ratio is a way of measuring the efficiency of address
assignment [RFC 3194]. It is an adaptation of the H-Ratio
originally defined in [RFC1715] and is expressed as follows: Log (number of allocated objects) HD = ------------------------------------------ Log (maximum number of allocatable objects) where (in the case of this document) the objects are IPv6 site
addresses (/48s) assigned from an IPv6 prefix of a given size. Goals of IPv6 address space management. 3.1. Goals. Internet address space must be registered in a registry database
accessible to appropriate members of the Internet community. This
is necessary to ensure the uniqueness of each Internet address and
to provide reference information for Internet troubleshooting at
all levels, ranging from all RIRs and IRs to End Users. All policies and practices relating to the use of public address
space should apply fairly and equitably to all existing and
potential members of the Internet community, regardless of their
location, nationality, size, or any other factor. To address the goals described in the previous section, the
policies in this document discuss and follow the basic principles
described below. However, RIRs must apply procedures that reduce the possibility of
fragmented address space which may lead to a loss of routability. The minimum allocation size for IPv6 address space is /32. Policies for allocations and assignments 5.1. Initial allocation 5.1.1. Initial allocation criteria To qualify for an initial allocation of IPv6 address space, an organization must: a) be an LIR; b) not be an end site; c) show a detailed plan to provide IPv6 connectivity to organizations in the AfriNIC region. d) show a reasonable plan for making /48 IPv6 assignments to end sites in the AfriNIC region within twelve months. The LIR should also plan to announce the allocation as a single aggregated block in the inter-domain routing system within twelve months. 5.1.2. Initial allocation size Organizations that meet the initial allocation criteria are eligible to receive a minimum allocation of /32. Organizations may qualify for an initial allocation greater than /32 by submitting documentation that reasonably justifies the request. If so, the allocation size will be based on the number of existing users and the extent of the organization's infrastructure. 5.2. Subsequent allocation Organizations that hold an existing IPv6 allocation may receive a subsequent allocation in accordance with the following policies. 5.2.1. Subsequent allocation criteria Subsequent allocation will be provided when an organization
(LIR) satisfies the evaluation threshold of past address 5.2.2. Applied HD-Ratio The HD-Ratio value of 0.94 is adopted as indicating an acceptable address utilization for justifying the allocation of additional address space. Section 7 provides a table showing the number of assignments that are necessary to achieve an acceptable utilization value for a given address block size. 5.2.3. Subsequent Allocation Size When an organization has achieved an acceptable utilization for its allocated address space, it is immediately eligible to obtain an additional allocation that results in a doubling of the address space allocated to it. Where possible, the allocation will be made from an adjacent address block, meaning that its existing allocation is extended by one bit to the left. If an organization needs more address space, it must provide documentation justifying its requirements for a two-year period. The allocation made will be based on this requirement. 5.3. LIR-to-ISP allocation There is no specific policy for an organization (LIR) to allocate address space to subordinate ISPs. Each LIR organization may develop its own policy for subordinate ISPs to encourage optimum utilization of the total address block allocated to the LIR. However, all /48 assignments to end sites are required to be registered either by the LIR or its subordinate ISPs in such a way that the RIR can properly evaluate the HD-Ratio when a subsequent allocation becomes necessary. 5.4. Assignment LIRs must make IPv6 assignments in accordance with the following provisions. 5.4.1. Assignment address space size Assignments are to be made using the following guidelines: AfriNIC is not concerned about which address size an LIR
actually assigns. Accordingly, AfriNIC will not request the 5.4.2. Assignment of multiple /48s to a single end site When a single end site requires an additional /48 address block, it must request the assignment with documentation or materials that justify the request. Requests for multiple or additional /48s will be processed and reviewed (i.e., evaluation of justification) at the RIR level. Note: There is no experience at the present time with the
assignment of multiple /48s to the same end site. Having AfriNIC
review all such assignments is intended to be a temporary measure
until some experience has been gained and some common policies can
be developed. In addition, additional work at defining policies in 5.4.3. Assignment to operator's infrastructure An organization (LIR) may assign a /48 per PoP as the service infrastructure of an IPv6 service operator. Each assignment to a PoP is regarded as one assignment regardless of the number of users using the PoP. A separate assignment can be obtained for the in-house operations of the operator.
When an organization (LIR) holding an IPv6 address allocation makes IPv6
address assignments, it must register assignment information in the
AfriNIC database. Information is registered in units of assigned AfriNIC will use registered data to calculate the HD-Ratio at the time of application for subsequent allocation and to check for changes in assignments over time. AfriNIC shall maintain systems and practices that protect the security of personal and commercial information that is used in request evaluation, but which is not required for public registration. 5.6. Reverse lookup When an AfriNIC delegates IPv6 address space to an organization, it also delegates the responsibility to manage the reverse lookup zone that corresponds to the allocated IPv6 address space. Each organization should properly manage its reverse lookup zone. When making an address assignment, the organization must delegate to an assignee organization, upon request, the responsibility to manage the reverse lookup zone that corresponds to the assigned address.
Organizations that received /35 IPv6 allocations under the previous
IPv6 address policy [RIRv6-Policies] are immediately entitled to
have their allocation expanded to a /32 address block, without
providing justification, so long as they satisfy the criteria in
Section 5.1.1. The /32 address block will contain the already
allocated smaller address block (one or multiple /35 address blocks
in many cases) that was already reserved by the RIR for a
subsequent allocation to the organization. Requests for additional
space beyond the minimum /32 size will be evaluated as discussed
elsewhere in the document. Assignments for Internet Experiments Organisations often require deployment tests for new Internet services and technologies. These require numbering resources for the duration of the test. The policy goal of resource conservation is of reduced importance
when resources are issued on a temporary basis. 6.4 Period of the Temporary Resource Registration. The resources will be issued on a temporary basis for a period of
one year. Renewal of the resource's registration is possible on
receipt of a new request that details any continuation of the
experiment during the extended period. 6.5 Registration HD-Ratio (HD) and Utilisation Threshold (T). The HD-Ratio is not intended to replace the traditional utilisation measurement that ISPs perform with IPv4 today. Indeed, the HD-Ratio still requires counting the number of assigned objects. The primary value of the HD-Ratio is its usefulness at determining reasonable target utilisation threshold values for an address space of a given size. This document uses the HD-Ratio to determine the thresholds at which a given allocation has achieved an acceptable level of utilisation and the assignment of additional address space becomes justified. The utilisation threshold T, expressed as a number of individual /48 prefixes to be allocated from IPv6 prefix P, can be calculated as: ((48-P)*HD) T = 2 Thus, the utilisation threshold for an organisation requesting subsequent
allocation of IPv6 address block is specified as a function of the prefix
size and target HD ratio. This utilisation refers to the allocation of
/48s to End Sites, and not the utilisation of those /48s within those End
Sites. It is an address allocation utilisation ratio and not an address P 48-P Total /48s Threshold Util%
48 0 1 1 100.0%
47 1 2 2 95.93%
46 2 4 4 92.02%
45 3 8 7 88.27%
44 4 16 14 84.67%
43 5 32 26 81.23%
42 6 64 50 77.92%
41 7 128 96 74.74%
40 8 256 184 71.70%
39 9 512 352 68.78%
38 10 1024 676 65.98%
37 11 2048 1296 63.29%
36 12 4096 2487 60.71%
35 13 8192 4771 58.24%
34 14 16384 9153 55.86%
33 15 32768 17560 53.59%
32 16 65536 33689 51.41%
31 17 131072 64634 49.31%
30 18 262144 124002 47.30%
29 19 524288 237901 45.38%
28 20 1048576 456419 43.53%
27 21 2097152 875653 41.75%
26 22 4194304 1679965 40.05%
25 23 8388608 3223061 38.42%
24 24 16777216 6183533 36.86%
23 25 33554432 11863283 35.36%
22 26 67108864 22760044 33.92%
21 27 134217728 43665787 32.53%
20 28 268435456 83774045 31.21%
19 29 536870912 160722871 29.94%
18 30 1073741824 308351367 28.72%
17 31 2147483648 591580804 27.55%
16 32 4294967296 1134964479 26.43%
15 33 8589934592 2177461403 25.35%
14 34 17179869184 4177521189 24.32%
13 35 34359738368 8014692369 23.33%
12 36 68719476736 15376413635 22.38%
11 37 137438953472 29500083768 21.46%
10 38 274877906944 56596743751 20.59%
9 39 549755813888 108582451102 19.75%
8 40 1099511627776 208318498661 18.95%
7 41 2199023255552 399664922315 18.17%
6 42 4398046511104 766768439460 17.43%
5 43 8796093022208 1471066903609 16.72%
4 44 17592186044416 2822283395519 16.04% |
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