2005-01 - Last Call for Comments (HD-ratio Proposal)
PDP Number: 2005-01 HD-ratio Proposal Dear Colleagues The proposal to change to RIPE Document ripe-324 is now at its final stage. You can find the full proposal at: http://www.ripe.net/ripe/policies/proposals/2005-1.html Please e-mail any final comments about this proposal to address-policy-wg@ripe.net before 7 March 2006. We will publish the new policy after this date if we receive no objections. Regards Adrian Bedford RIPE NCC
Hi, I was wondering if it would help to look at the potential impact of this policy on IPv4 address consumption predictions. I have built a model of projection IPv4 address consumption based on continuity of current address allocation policies http://ipv4.potaroo.net, and it may be useful to look at the impact of using the HD ratio on this model. I'll try and get some results posted by the end of this week on a simulation of the effects of adoption of this policy proposal thanks, Geoff On 2/7/06, RIPE NCC Policy Coordinator <adrian@ripe.net> wrote:
PDP Number: 2005-01 HD-ratio Proposal
Dear Colleagues
The proposal to change to RIPE Document ripe-324 is now at its final stage.
You can find the full proposal at:
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/policies/proposals/2005-1.html
Please e-mail any final comments about this proposal to address-policy-wg@ripe.net before 7 March 2006.
We will publish the new policy after this date if we receive no objections.
Regards
Adrian Bedford RIPE NCC
Hi, At the APNIC 21 Open policy meeting held last week the Policy SIG chairs were requested to facilitate a discussion and the chairs to seek consensus on the future of the proposal of 'Application of HD ratio to IPv4' in APNIC. Here are some comments from the discussion: - It was suggested that if this proposal was adopted in any region, it could have significant negative impacts on IPv4 address consumption. It was noted that the LACNIC community is very concerned about this issue. - It was noted that a recent analysis of the potential impact of this policy, which looked at the past 5 year's allocation patterns, concluded that use of the HD-ratio over that period would have meant a 47 percent increase in address consumption in the RIPE region and a 49 percent increase in the APNIC region. It was noted that if all RIRs were to adopt this policy, it could accelerate total address exhaustion by two years. It was also noted that if some RIRs adopted this policy then it could have significant impacts on the ability of smaller RIRs to get IPv4. - It was noted that current consumption rates indicate a potential IPv4 exhaustion date of mid-2012. - It was noted that when this proposal was first raised, projected IPv4 lifetime was over 15 years, however allocation rates have increased since then. - The Chair suggested moving this discussion to the policy mailing list for a further month, then leaving it up to the SIG chair to decide whether to continue or abandon the proposal. regards, Save -- Savenaca Vocea, Policy Development Manager, <save@apnic.net> Asia Pacific Network Information Centre http://www.apnic.net ph/fx +61 7 3858 3100/99 On 21/02/2006, at 4:34 PM, Geoff Huston wrote:
Hi,
I was wondering if it would help to look at the potential impact of this policy on IPv4 address consumption predictions. I have built a model of projection IPv4 address consumption based on continuity of current address allocation policies http://ipv4.potaroo.net, and it may be useful to look at the impact of using the HD ratio on this model. I'll try and get some results posted by the end of this week on a simulation of the effects of adoption of this policy proposal
thanks,
Geoff
On 2/7/06, RIPE NCC Policy Coordinator <adrian@ripe.net> wrote: PDP Number: 2005-01 HD-ratio Proposal
Dear Colleagues
The proposal to change to RIPE Document ripe-324 is now at its final stage.
You can find the full proposal at:
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/policies/proposals/2005-1.html
Please e-mail any final comments about this proposal to address- policy-wg@ripe.net before 7 March 2006.
We will publish the new policy after this date if we receive no objections.
Regards
Adrian Bedford RIPE NCC
Here's a report of the report on the analysis of impacts of this policy proposal Geoff ===== An Analysis of the Sensitivity of using the HD Ratio for IPv4 Address Allocations Geoff Huston V1.0 22 February 2005 This document describes the outcomes of an analytical process intended to describe the sensitivity of the use of HD Ratio metrics as the means of assessing address utilization efficiency, and the relation between the use of HD Ratio values and projected lifetimes of the unallocated IPv4 address pool. This document is a commentary on RIPE Policy Proposal 2005-1 1. Methodology -------------- The methodology used here uses only published RIR allocation data. The primary data source for RIPE NCC data is the delegated file: ftp://ftp.ripe.net/pub/stats/ripencc/delegated-ripencc-latest All IPv4 allocation records with an allocation date on or after 1-Jan-2000 are collected. The allocation sizes are rounded up to the next largest power of 2, or 256, which is the greatest. The relative proportion of each allocation size is also calculated. This is shown in the table below (Table 1). ---------------------------------------------------------------- Table 1 - RIPE NCC IPV4 Address Allocations (since 1-Jan-2000) Size Number Relative Cumulative Frequency Relative Frequency /24 2637 23.04 23.04 /23 1383 12.09 35.13 /22 934 8.16 43.29 /21 545 4.76 48.06 /20 2247 19.64 67.69 /19 1713 14.97 82.66 /18 784 6.85 89.51 /17 407 3.56 93.07 /16 499 4.36 97.43 /15 135 1.18 98.61 /14 75 0.66 99.27 /13 44 0.38 99.65 /12 21 0.18 99.83 /11 15 0.13 99.97 /10 4 0.03 100.00 ---------------------------------------------------------------- The assumption made here is that these allocations are made under a policy of a uniform 80% utilization efficiency. From this can be calculated the inferred maximum end use count for each prefix size (Table 2). ---------------------------------------------------------------- Table 2 - Inferred Maximum End Population Count for each Prefix Size under the uniform 80% efficiency policy /24 205 /23 410 /22 819 /21 1638 /20 3277 /19 6554 /18 13107 /17 26214 /16 52429 /15 104858 /14 209715 /13 419430 /12 838861 /11 1677722 /10 3355443 /9 6710886 /8 13421773 ---------------------------------------------------------------- The HD ratio is calculated by the function: HD = log(used)/log(addresses). This implies that the population can be inferred for any given prefix size using the equation: used = 10**(HD x log_base_10(addresses). The inferred maximum end use count for each prefix size using an HD Ratio value of 0.96 is shown below (Table 3). ---------------------------------------------------------------- Table 3 - Inferred Maximum End Population Count for each Prefix Size under an HD = 0.96 allocation policy /24 205 /23 399 /22 776 /21 1510 /20 2937 /19 5713 /18 11113 /17 21619 /16 42055 /15 81811 /14 159147 /13 309590 /12 602249 /11 1171560 /10 2279048 /9 4433455 /8 8624444 ---------------------------------------------------------------- The next step is to determine the relative impact on address consumption by changing from a uniform 80% utilization efficiency metric to one determined by an HD Ratio setting of 0.96. To do this a sequence of 10,000 allocations are simulated. with each allocation being in the range of a /24 to a /10 prefix. with a probability of any particular prefix being selected based on the relatively frequency distribution of Table 1. The inferred population lies between the maximum population of this prefix and that of the population of the next smaller prefix in Table 2. A random value is drawn from this population range (this is a uniform probability selection between the two extreme population values, so that any population value is equally likely to be selected). This population value is used as a lookup key into Table 3, and the next highest population count is used to determine the equivalent HD Ratio allocated prefix. In effect, this approach generates a series of demand populations that would generate the existing RIR allocation prefix distribution, and then uses this population set to generate a HD-Ratio- based set of allocations that would correspond to this population distribution. The total amount of allocated address space is calculated in each case, and the ratio of the two address pool sizes is recorded. This experiment has been repeated 1,000 times in order to determine a stable average value for the relative increase in address consumption corresponding to a change in the address allocation policies from uniform 80% to an HD Ratio of 0.96, assuming constant demand for addresses. This relative change in address demands can then be added into the IPv4 address consumption projection (see http://ipv4.potaroo.net). The change here is in the simulation of the address consumption model, where in the base model all RIR's are assumed to be operating a uniform address efficiency metric of a uniform 80% utilization target. The same exponential growth model in advertised address growth is used, but this model is augmented by the relative increase in address consumption as contributed by the HD Ratio allocation metric. The unadvertised address ratio is then derived from this higher advertised address count, and this, in turn, generates a more rapid overall address consumption model. The measure under investigation in this case is the change in predicted date of the exhaustion of the IANA unallocated address pool 2. Results --------- The relative distribution of allocated prefixes by the RIPE NCC using an HD Ratio of 0.96 as an allocation efficiency metric would be as shown in Table 4. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Table 4 - RIPE NCC IPV4 Address Allocations Size 2000-2006 HD Ratio Relative Relative Frequency Frequency /24 23.04 23.23 /23 12.09 11.37 /22 8.16 7.87 /21 4.76 4.85 /20 19.64 16.33 /19 14.97 15.21 /18 6.85 8.58 /17 3.56 4.39 /16 4.36 3.88 /15 1.18 2.39 /14 0.66 0.86 /13 0.38 0.50 /12 0.18 0.28 /11 0.13 0.15 /10 0.03 0.09 /9 0.00 0.02 /8 0.00 0.00 ---------------------------------------------------------------- From the simulations of registry allocations, the use of an HD Ratio of 0.96 for IPv4 address allocations made by the RIPE NCC is predicted to increase total address consumption by 46% over the existing flat 80% utilization allocation policy framework. The current prediction for the data of exhaustion of the IANA unallocated address pool is 12 January 2012, assuming, among other factors, a continued application of the constant 80% address utilization metric. If the RIPE NCC were to adopt an allocation policy of using an HD Ratio of 0.96 to access IPv4 address allocations, and no other changes were made to the mode, and no other RIRs were to adopt such a policy to use the HS Ratio as a utilization metric, then the impact on the predicted exhaustion date is an overall change in address consumption rates by approximately 17% (as the RIPE NCC is responsible for some 38% of all allocated IPv4 addresses), and a predicted unallocated IANA pool exhaustion date of 9 December 2010 under these conditions (or approximately 1 year earlier than the predictions using the current address allocation policy framework A related consideration is that of the adoption of such a policy proposal by all 5 RIRs. If this were the case, and the adoption of this policy was to be effective immediately, then the relative increase in overall address consumption for each RIR would be: Afrinic 39%, APNIC 47%, ARIN 46%, LACNIC 47%. The simulation of IPv4 address consumption under these conditions predicts that the IANA pool of unallocated addresses would be exhausted by 22 March 2010 (or approximately 2 years earlier than the predictions using the current address allocation policy framework). ======================== At 03:31 PM 7/03/2006, Save Vocea wrote:
Hi,
At the APNIC 21 Open policy meeting held last week the Policy SIG chairs were requested to facilitate a discussion and the chairs to seek consensus on the future of the proposal of 'Application of HD ratio to IPv4' in APNIC.
Here are some comments from the discussion:
- It was suggested that if this proposal was adopted in any region, it could have significant negative impacts on IPv4 address consumption. It was noted that the LACNIC community is very concerned about this issue.
- It was noted that a recent analysis of the potential impact of this policy, which looked at the past 5 year's allocation patterns, concluded that use of the HD-ratio over that period would have meant a 47 percent increase in address consumption in the RIPE region and a 49 percent increase in the APNIC region. It was noted that if all RIRs were to adopt this policy, it could accelerate total address exhaustion by two years. It was also noted that if some RIRs adopted this policy then it could have significant impacts on the ability of smaller RIRs to get IPv4.
- It was noted that current consumption rates indicate a potential IPv4 exhaustion date of mid-2012.
- It was noted that when this proposal was first raised, projected IPv4 lifetime was over 15 years, however allocation rates have increased since then.
- The Chair suggested moving this discussion to the policy mailing list for a further month, then leaving it up to the SIG chair to decide whether to continue or abandon the proposal.
regards, Save -- Savenaca Vocea, Policy Development Manager, <save@apnic.net> Asia Pacific Network Information Centre http://www.apnic.net ph/fx +61 7 3858 3100/99
On 21/02/2006, at 4:34 PM, Geoff Huston wrote:
Hi,
I was wondering if it would help to look at the potential impact of this policy on IPv4 address consumption predictions. I have built a model of projection IPv4 address consumption based on continuity of current address allocation policies http://ipv4.potaroo.net, and it may be useful to look at the impact of using the HD ratio on this model. I'll try and get some results posted by the end of this week on a simulation of the effects of adoption of this policy proposal
thanks,
Geoff
On 2/7/06, RIPE NCC Policy Coordinator <adrian@ripe.net> wrote: PDP Number: 2005-01 HD-ratio Proposal
Dear Colleagues
The proposal to change to RIPE Document ripe-324 is now at its final stage.
You can find the full proposal at:
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/policies/proposals/2005-1.html
Please e-mail any final comments about this proposal to address- policy-wg@ripe.net before 7 March 2006.
We will publish the new policy after this date if we receive no objections.
Regards
Adrian Bedford RIPE NCC
participants (3)
-
Geoff Huston
-
RIPE NCC Policy Coordinator
-
Save Vocea