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RFC1366 - Guidelines for Management of IP Address Space

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group E. Gerich

Request for Comments: 1366 Merit

October 1992

Guidelines for Management of IP Address Space

Status of this Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does

not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is

unlimited.

Abstract

This document has been reviewed by the Federal Engineering Task Force

(FEPG) on behalf of the Federal Networking Council (FNC), the co-

chairs of the International Engineering Planning Group (IEPG), and

the Reseaux IP Europeens (RIPE). There was general consensus by

those groups to support the recommendations proposed in this document

for management of the IP address space.

1.0 IntrodUCtion

With the growth of the Internet and its increasing globalization,

much thought has been given to the evolution of the network number

allocation and assignment process. RFC1174, "Identifier Assignment

and Connected Status", dated August 1990 recommends that the Internet

Registry (IR) continue as the principal registry for network numbers;

however, the IR may allocate blocks of network numbers and the

assignment of those numbers to qualified organizations. The IR will

serve as the default registry in cases where no delegated

registration authority has been identified.

The distribution of the registration function is desirable, and in

keeping with that goal, it is necessary to develop a plan which

manages the distribution of the network number space. The demand for

network numbers has grown significantly within the last two years and

as a result the allocation of network numbers must be approached in a

more systematic fashion.

This document proposes a plan which will forward the implementation

of RFC1174 and which defines the allocation and assignment of the

network number space. There are three major topics to be addressed:

1) Qualifications for Distributed Regional Registries

2) Allocation of the Network Number Space by the Internet Registry

3) Assignment of the Network Numbers

2.0 Qualifications for Distributed Regional Registries

The major reason to distribute the registration function is that the

Internet serves a more diverse global population than it did at its

inception. This means that registries which are located in distinct

geographic areas may be better able to serve the local community in

terms of language and local customs. While there appears to be wide

support for the concept of distribution of the registration function,

it is important to define how the candidate delegated registries will

be chosen and from which geographic areas.

Based on the growth and the maturity of the Internet in Europe,

Central/South America and the Pacific Rim areas, it is desirable to

consider delegating the registration function to an organization in

each of those geographic areas. Until an organization is identified

in those regions, the IR will continue to serve as the default

registry. The IR remains the root registry and continues to provide

the registration function to all those regions not covered by

distributed regional registries. And as other regions of the world

become more and more active in the Internet, the IANA and the IR may

choose to look for candidate registries to serve the populations in

those geographic regions.

It is important that the regional registry is unbiased and and widely

recognized by network providers and subscribers within the geographic

region. It is also important that there is just a single regional

registry per geographical region at this level to provide for

efficient and fair sub-allocation of the address space. To be

selected as a distributed regional registry an organization should

meet the following criteria:

a) networking authorities within the geographic area

legitimize the organization

b) the organization is well-established and has

legitimacy outside of the registry function

c) the organization will commit appropriate resources to

provide stable, timely, and reliable service

to the geographic region

d) the commitment to allocate IP numbers according to

the guidelines established by the IANA and the IR

e) the commitment to coordinate with the IR to establish

qualifications and strategies for sub-allocations of

the regional allocation.

The distributed regional registry is empowered by the IANA and the IR

to provide the network number registration function to a geographic

area. It is possible for network subscribers to contact the IR

directly. Depending on the circumstances the network subscriber may

be referred to the regional registry, but the IR will be prepared to

service any network subscriber if necessary.

3.0 Allocation of the Network Number Space by the Internet Registry

The Class A portion of the number space represents 50% of the total

IP numbers; Class B is 25% of the total; Class C is approximately 12%

of the total. Table 1 shows the current allocation of the IP network

numbers.

Total Allocated Allocated (%)

Class A 126 49 38%

Class B 16383 7354 45%

Class C 2097151 44014 2%

Table 1: Network Number Statistics (June 1992) [1]

Class A and B network numbers are a limited resource and therefore

the entire number space will be retained by the IR. No allocations

from the Class A and B network numbers will be made to distributed

regional registries at this time.

The Class C network number space will be divided into allocatable

blocks which will be reserved by the IANA and IR for allocation to

distributed regional registries. In the absence of designated

regional registries in geographic areas, the IR will assign addresses

to networks within those geographic areas according to the Class C

allocation divisions.

A preliminary inspection of the Class C IP network numbers shows that

the number space with prefixes 192 and 193 are assigned. The

remaining space from prefix 194 through 223 is mostly unassigned.

The IANA and the IR will reserve the upper half of this space which

corresponds to the IP address range of 208.0.0.0 through

223.255.255.255. Network numbers from this portion of the Class C

space will remain unallocated and unassigned until further notice.

The remaining Class C network number space will be allocated in a

fashion which is compatible with potential address aggregation

techniques. It is intended to divide this address range into eight

equally sized address blocks.

192.0.0.0 - 193.255.255.255

194.0.0.0 - 195.255.255.255

196.0.0.0 - 197.255.255.255

198.0.0.0 - 199.255.255.255

200.0.0.0 - 201.255.255.255

202.0.0.0 - 203.255.255.255

204.0.0.0 - 205.255.255.255

206.0.0.0 - 207.255.255.255

Each block represents 131,072 addresses or approximately 6% of the

total Class C address space.

It is proposed that a broad geographic allocation be used for these

blocks. At present there are four major areas of address allocation:

Europe, North America, Pacific Rim, and South & Central America.

In particular, the top level block allocation be designated as

follows:

Multi-regional 192.0.0.0 - 193.255.255.255

Europe 194.0.0.0 - 195.255.255.255

Others 196.0.0.0 - 197.255.255.255

North America 198.0.0.0 - 199.255.255.255

Central/South

America 200.0.0.0 - 201.255.255.255

Pacific Rim 202.0.0.0 - 203.255.255.255

Others 204.0.0.0 - 205.255.255.255

Others 206.0.0.0 - 207.255.255.255

It is proposed that the IR, and any designated regional registries,

allocate addresses in conformance with this overall scheme. Where

there are qualifying regional registries established, primary

responsibility for allocation from within that block will be

delegated to that registry.

The ranges designated as "Others" permit flexibility in network

number assignments which are outside of the geographical regions

already allocated. The range listed as multi-regional represents

network numbers which have been assigned prior to the implementation

of this plan. It is proposed that the IANA and the IR will adopt

these divisions of the Class C network number space and will begin

assigning network numbers accordingly.

4.0 Assignment of the Network Number Space

The exhaustion of the IP address space is a topic of concern for the

entire Internet community. This plan for the assignment of Class A,

B, or C IP numbers to network subscribers has two major goals:

1) to reserve a portion of the IP number space so that it may be

available to transition to a new numbering plan

2) to assign the Class C network number space in a fashion which

is compatible with proposed address aggregation techniques

4.1 Class A

The Class A number space can support the largest number of unique

host identifier addresses and is also the class of network numbers

most sparsely populated. There are only approximately 77 Class A

network numbers which are unassigned, and these 77 network numbers

represent about 30% of the total network number space.

The IANA will retain sole responsibility for the assignment of Class

A network numbers. The upper half of the Class A number space will be

reserved indefinitely (IP network addresses 64.0.0.0 through

127.0.0.0). While it is eXPected that no new assignments of Class A

numbers will take place in the near future, any organization

petitioning the IANA for a Class A network number will be expected to

provide a detailed technical justification documenting network size

and structure. Class A assignments are at the IANA's discretion.

4.2 Class B

Previously organizations were recommended to use a subnetted Class B

network number rather than multiple Class C network numbers. Due to

the scarcity of Class B network numbers and the under utilization of

the Class B number space by most organizations, the recommendation is

now to use multiple Class Cs where practical.

The IANA and the IR will maintain sole responsibility for the Class B

number space. Where there are designated regional registries, those

registries will act in an auxiliary capacity in evaluating requests

for Class B numbers. Organizations applying for a Class B network

number should fulfill the following criteria:

1) the organization presents a subnetting plan which

documents more than 32 subnets within its organizational

network

AND

2) the organization has more than 4096 hosts.

These criteria assume that an organization which meets this profile

will continue to grow and that assigning a Class B network number to

them will permit network growth and reasonable utilization of the

assigned number space. There may be circumstances where it will be

impossible to utilize a block of Class C network numbers in place of

a Class B. These situations will be considered on a case-by-case

basis.

4.3 Class C

Section 3 of this document recommends a division of the Class C

number space. That division is primarily an administrative division

which lays the groundwork for distributed network number registries.

This section deals with how network numbers are assigned from within

those blocks. Sub-allocations of the block to sub-registries is

beyond the scope of this paper.

By default, if an organization requires more than a single Class C,

it will be assigned a bit-wise contiguous block from the Class C

space allocated for its geographic region.

For instance, an European organization which requires fewer than 2048

unique IP addresses and more than 1024 would be assigned 8 contiguous

class C network numbers from the number space reserved for European

networks, 194.0.0.0 - 195.255.255.255. If an organization from

Central America required fewer than 512 unique IP addresses and more

than 256, it would receive 2 contiguous class C network numbers from

the number space reserved for Central/South American networks,

200.0.0.0 - 201.255.255.255.

The IR or the registry to whom the IR has delegated the registration

function will determine the number of Class C network numbers to

assign to a network subscriber based on the following criteria:

Organization Assignment

1) requires fewer than 256 addresses 1 class C network

2) requires fewer than 512 addresses 2 contiguous class C networks

3) requires fewer than 1024 addresses 4 contiguous class C networks

4) requires fewer than 2048 addresses 8 contiguous class C networks

5) requires fewer than 4096 addresses 16 contiguous class C networks

The number of addresses that a network subscriber indicates that it

needs should be based on a 24 month projection.

The maximal block of class C nets that should be assigned to a

subscriber consists of sixteen contiguous class C networks which

corresponds to a single IP prefix the length of which is twelve bits.

If a subscriber has a requirement for more than 4096 unique IP

addresses it should most likely receive a Class B net number.

5.0 Conclusion

This proliferation of class C network numbers may aid in preserving

the scarcity of class A and B numbers, but it is sure to accelerate

the explosion of routing information carried by Internet routers.

Inherent in these recommendations is the assumption that there will

be modifications in the technology to support the larger number of

network address assignments due to the decrease in assignments of

Class A and B numbers and the proliferation of Class C assignments.

Many proposals have been made to address the rapid growth of network

assignments and a discussion of those proposals is beyond the scope

and intent of this paper.

These recommendations for management of the current IP network number

space only profess to delay depletion of the IP address space, not to

postpone it indefinitely.

6.0 Acknowledgements

The author would like to acknowledge the substantial contributions

made by the members of the following two groups, the Federal

Engineering Planning Group (FEPG) and the International Engineering

Planning Group (IEPG). This document also reflects many concepts

expressed at the IETF Addressing BOF which took place in Cambridge,

MA in July 1992. In addition, Jon Postel (ISI) and Yakov Rekhter

(T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp.) reviewed this document and

contributed to its content. The author thanks those groups and

individuals who have been sighted for their comments.

7.0 References

[1] Wang, Z., and J. Crowcroft, "A Two-Tier Address Structure for the

Internet: A Solution to the Problem of Address Space Exhaustion",

RFC1335, University College London, May 1992.

[2] "Internet Domain Survey", Network Information Systems Center, SRI

International, July 1992.

[3] Ford, P., "Working Draft - dated 6 May 1992", Work in Progress.

[4] Solensky F., and F. Kastenholz, "A Revision to IP Address

Classifications", Work in Progress, March 1992.

[5] Fuller, V., Li, T., Yu, J., and K. Varadha, "Supernetting: an

Address Assignments and Aggregation Strategy", RFC1338, BARRNet,

cisco, Merit, OARnet, June 1992.

[6] Rekhter, Y., and T. Li, "Guidelines for IP Address Allocation",

Work in Progress, August 1992.

[7] Cerf, V., "IAB Recommended Policy on Distributing Internet

Identifier Assignment and IAB Recommended Policy Change to

Internet 'Connected' Status", RFC1174, CNRI, August 1990.

Security Considerations

Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Author's Address

Elise Gerich

Merit Computer Network

1075 Beal Avenue

Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2112

Phone: (313) 936-3000

EMail: epg@MERIT.EDU

 
 
 
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