[sig-policy] prop-049: IANA policy for allocation of ASN blocks to RIRs
The proposal "IANA policy for allocation of ASN blocks to RIRs" has been
sent to the Policy SIG for review. It will be presented at the Policy
SIG at APNIC 24 in New Delhi, India, 29 August - 7 September 2007.
I invite you all to review the proposal below and send comments to the
mailing list before APNIC 24.
The proposal's history can be found at:
http://www.apnic.net/policy/proposals/prop-049-v001.html
Regards
---
Toshiyuki Hosaka
Policy SIG Chair
________________________________________________________________________
prop-049-v001: IANA policy for allocation of ASN blocks to RIRs
________________________________________________________________________
Author: AfriNIC
APNIC
ARIN
LACNIC
RIPE NCC
Version: 1
Date: 23 July 2007
1. Introduction
----------------
This proposal is to have a global policy for the Regional Internet
Registries (RIRs) to receive blocks of Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs)
from the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA).
2. Summary of current problem
------------------------------
There are global policies governing the allocation of IPv4 and IPv6
blocks from the IANA to RIRs. At this point there is no specific policy
regarding the allocation of Autonomous System Numbers from the IANA to
the RIRs. This proposal will create a policy to fill this gap.
3. Situation in other RIRs
----------------------------
This proposal was adopted by the LACNIC region and is in its concluding
phase in the RIPE region. It will soon be submitted to the AfriNIC
and ARIN communities for discussion.
4. Details of the proposal
----------------------------
Abstract
This document describes the policy governing the allocation of
Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs) from the IANA to the Regional Internet
Registries (RIRs).
This policy document does not stipulate performance requirements in the
provision of services by the IANA to an RIR. Such requirements will be
specified by appropriate agreements between ICANN and the Number
Resource Organization (NRO).
1. Allocation principles
IANA allocates ASNs to RIRs in blocks of 1024 ASNs. In this document
the term "ASN block" refers to a set of 1024 ASNs. Until 31 December
2009, allocations of 2-byte only and 4-byte only ASN blocks will be
made separately and independent of each other.[1] This means
until 31
December 2009, RIRs can receive two separate ASN blocks, one for
2-byte only ASNs and one for 4-byte only ASNs from the IANA under
this policy. After this date, IANA and the RIRs will cease to make
any distinction between 2-byte only and 4-byte only ASNs, and will
operate ASN allocations from an undifferentiated 4-byte ASN
allocation pool.
2. Initial allocations
Each new RIR will be allocated a new ASN block.
3. Additional allocations
An RIR is eligible to receive (an) additional ASN block(s) from the
IANA if one of the following conditions is met:
1. The RIR has assigned 80% of the previously received ASN block
or
2. The number of free ASNs currently held by the RIR is less than
two
months need. This projection is based on the monthly average
number of ASNs assigned by the RIR over the previous six months.
An RIR will be allocated as many ASN blocks as are needed to support
their registration needs for the next 12 months, based on their
average assignment rate over the previous six months, unless the RIR
specifically requests fewer blocks than that for which it qualifies.
4. Announcement of IANA allocations
The IANA, the NRO and the RIRs will make announcements and update
their respective websites/databases when an allocation is made by
the IANA to an RIR. ICANN and the NRO will establish administrative
procedures to manage this process.
[1] 4-byte AS number policy proposal
http://www.apnic.net/docs/policy/proposals/prop-032-v002.html
5. Advantages and disadvantages of the proposal
-------------------------------------------------
Advantages:
The criteria being proposed has already been the practice between IANA
and RIRs so far and it has been proven to work. It is designed to allow
RIRs to request ASN blocks from the IANA in a timely fashion and
maintain enough ASNs in holding to ensure that their registration
services can be sustained.
It is also proposed that the RIRs be allocated as many ASN blocks as
are needed to support their registration needs for the next 12 months.
This will generally mean that each RIR will only need to make one ASN
request from the IANA each year, thus lowering operational overhead for
the RIRs.
Disadvantages:
None.
6. Effect on APNIC members
----------------------------
None.
7. Effect on NIRs
-------------------
None.
(end of document)