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Proposal
1) Summary of the Problem Being Addressed by this Policy Proposal
The soft landing policy ratified by the board on 11/11/2011 describes how AFRINIC should manage allocations/assignments from the last /8. It defines 2 phases for IPv4 exhaustion. During phase 1, it sets the maximum allocation/assignment to be /13 instead of /10 and in phase 2, the maximum to /22 and the minimum to /24. It makes no difference between existing LIRs or End-Users and new ones. The policy also does not impose IPv6 deployment.
IPv4 exhaustion in other regions combined with other factors has imposed huge pressure on the AFRINIC IPv4 pool with requests for large IPv4 blocks, with very little IPv6 deployment. The pressure on the AFRINIC IPv4 pool has led to some policy proposals to reserve some blocks for certain sub-communities.
2) Summary of How this Proposal Addresses the Problem
This policy proposal solves the problem described above by:
- Changing the value of the maximum allocation/assignment size during the exhaustion phase 1.
- Imposing IPv6 resources as a pre-condition to IPv4 resource requests during the exhaustion.
- Reserving address spaces for Critical Internet Infrastructure and new LIRs or End-Users.
- Removing the minimum allocation size as this may evolve over time during the exhaustion period.
3) Proposal
3.1 The policy proposal changes clause/article 3.5.1 of the current IPv4 Soft Landing Policy to:
Allocations and assignments will be made from the Final /8 or from any other IPv4 address space available to AFRINIC until no more than a /11 of non-reserved space is available in the Final /8. At this point, exhaustion phase 2 will begin.
For the avoidance of doubt, all applications that will be in process at this point will be evaluated as per the new policy.
3.2 This policy proposal changes Clauses/Articles 3.6, 3.8 and 3.9 of the current IPv4 Soft Landing Policy to:
End User must meet IPv4 allocation or assignment policy requirements and must have used at
least 90% of all previous allocations or assignments (including those made during both the Current Phase and the Exhaustion Phase).
In the case of new LIRs or End Users with no previous allocations or assignments, this
requirement does not apply to their first allocation or assignment request.
LIRs and End users requesting IPv4 space must have IPv6 resources from AFRINIC (or request IPv6 concurrently with their IPv4 request), or from their upstream providers.
AFRINIC resources are for the AFRINIC service region and any use outside the region should be solely in support of connectivity back to the AFRINIC region
During exhaustion phase 2, allocations/assignments to IXPs, Critical Internet infrastructure and new LIRs and End-Users will be as follows:
3.9.1 Assignments to critical infrastructure
A /16 from the final /11 will be held in reserve for exclusive use by critical Internet infrastructure. On application for IPv4 resources, a critical Internet Infrastructure operator may receive one number resource (maximum /22).
Critical infrastructure is ICANN-sanctioned DNS root server operators, IXPs, TLD (Top Level Domain) operators, IANA and RIRs.
- On application for IPv4 resources, an Internet Exchange Point (IXP) will receive one number resource (maximum /23) according to the following:
- This space will be used to run an Internet Exchange Point peering LAN; other uses are forbidden.
- New Internet Exchange points will be assigned a maximum of /24. Internet exchange points may return this assignment (or existing PI used as in the IXP peering LAN) should they run out of space and receive a larger (a maximum of /23 if utilization requires) assignment.
- IP space returned by Internet Exchange Points will be added to the reserved pool maintained for use by Internet Exchange Points.
3.9.2 Allocations/Assignments to new LIRs or End-Users
A /14 from the final /11 will be held in reserve for exclusive use by new LIRs or End-Users with no prior IPv4 address space from AFRINIC. On application for IPv4 resources, a new LIR or End-User may receive one number resource (maximum /22).
3.9.3 Reserve for unforeseen situations
A /13 IPv4 address block will be in reserve out of the Final /8. This /13 IPv4 address block shall be preserved by AFRINIC for some future uses, as yet unforeseen. The Internet is innovative and we cannot predict with certainty what might happen. Therefore, it is prudent to keep this block in reserve, just in case some future requirement creates a demand for IPv4 addresses.
When AFRINIC, can no longer meet any more requests for address space (from the Final /8 or from any other available address space), AFRINIC in consultation with the community via the Policy Discussion Mailing list and considering the demand and other factors at the time will replenish the exhaustion pool with whatever address space (or part thereof) that may be available to AFRINIC at the time, in a manner that is in the best interests of the community.
4.0) Revision History
9th February 2016 AFPUB-2016-V4-001-DRAFT01 (Version 1.0) Posted to the rpd mailing list
5.0) References
Global Policy for the Allocation of the remaining IPv4 address pool: http://www.afrinic.net/en/library/policies/135-afpub-2009-v4-001
6.0) Frequently Asked Questions
Please click here to read through some important frequently asked questions that guide understanding the proposal