From huiy at 263.net Tue Jul 10 22:21:56 2001 From: huiy at 263.net (huiy) Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 10:21:56 +0800 (CST) Subject: About the relation of IP and AS Message-ID: <3B4BB844.25460@mta5> Hi, Is there some relations between IP address and AS numbers? I want to know an IP belong to which AS and the IPs an AS have. Where can I find it? Thanks a lot. Challenge. _____________________________________________ IP?????????????????? http://shopping.263.net/category08.htm ??580????????????????100??IP?? http://shopping.263.net/category21.htm From Ejay.Hire at Broadslate.net Wed Jul 11 08:59:29 2001 From: Ejay.Hire at Broadslate.net (Hire, Ejay) Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 08:59:29 -0400 Subject: About the relation of IP and AS Message-ID: You can go to Arin's web page, click on the whois Link. Whois the Ip, and then whois the Owner. Example Whois for my dns server 216.142.210.x = Broadslate Networks Whois for Broadslate Networks = as 16770 Good Luck, Ejay -----Original Message----- Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 10:21:56 +0800 (CST) From: "huiy" To: policy at arin.net Subject: About the relation of IP and AS Hi, Is there some relations between IP address and AS numbers? I want to kn ow an IP belong to which AS and the IPs an AS have. Where can I find it? Thanks a lot. Challenge. From lhoward at uu.net Wed Jul 11 09:38:09 2001 From: lhoward at uu.net (Lee Howard) Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 09:38:09 -0400 (EDT) Subject: About the relation of IP and AS In-Reply-To: <3B4BB844.25460@mta5> Message-ID: This probably isn't the best forum for this question. Obviously there's some relation between the two, but like all relationships, it changes often. I'll use 63.10.0.0 as an example. If you have an IP and want to know who owns it, use whois -h whois.arin.net 63.10.0.0 You'll find out that UUNET has been allocated that block. You could then do "whois -h whois.arin.net UUNET" to try to find our ASN, but you'll get far more information than you want. If you're on a Unix machine, you can grep: whois -h whois.arin.net UUNET | grep AS Unfortunatley, that doesn't give you the information you want, since the IP block above has a different name (Alternet. it's historical). So if you have an IP and want to know who is routing it, I suggest http://nitrous.digex.net or whois -h whois.ra.net 63.10.0.0 If you have an ASN and want to find out what IPs are being routed by it, it's a little trickier. One way is to buy transit from a large carrier, receive a full routing table, and run the equivalent of Cisco's "show IP BGP regexp 705". A cheaper way is to log into a public route server and use: route-views.oregon-ix.net>sh ip bgp regexp 705 Of course, there isn't a one-to-one relationship between IPs and ASNs (they're not faithful to each other). The same IP block is often routed by multiple ASNs (in multihoming, for example). Certainly most ASNs route multiple IP blocks. And of course, people and networks move around a lot, which is why we use dynamic routing protocols. Hope this helps. Lee On Wed, 11 Jul 2001, huiy wrote: > Date: Wed, 11 Jul 2001 10:21:56 +0800 (CST) > From: huiy > To: policy at arin.net > Subject: About the relation of IP and AS > > Hi, > Is there some relations between IP address and AS numbers? I want to know an IP belong to which AS and the IPs an AS have. Where can I find it? > Thanks a lot. > > Challenge. > > _____________________________________________ > IP?????????????????? http://shopping.263.net/category08.htm > ??580????????????????100??IP?? http://shopping.263.net/category21.htm > From chairman at mii.or.id Mon Jul 23 19:46:00 2001 From: chairman at mii.or.id (PURWADI, Teddy A) Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2001 06:46:00 +0700 Subject: Fwd: [New RIR] Message-ID: <5.1.0.14.0.20010724064542.027ab9e0@pop3.access.net.id> >Date: Tue, 24 Jul 2001 06:37:14 +0700 >To: policy at arin.net >From: "PURWADI, Teddy A" >Subject: [New RIR] >Cc: webmaster at ietf.org, webmaster at isoc.org, webmaster at iana.org, >webmaster at icann.org > >Dear All, >Need comment on this proposal from ISOC-ID. >It will be an open maling list and special website on >this proposal to IETF [ISOC], IANA [ICANN]. > >The Content' draft: >http://www.isoc-id.org/alpha1/04_RIRS.HTM > >REGISTRIES > RIRs >American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) >ARIN is a non-profit membership organization established for the purpose >of the administration and registration of Internet Protocol (IP) addresses >in the geographical areas previously managed by Network Solutions, Inc. >Those areas include North America, South America, the Caribbean and >sub-Saharan Africa. > >Res?aux IP Europ?ens (RIPE) >RIPE is an open and voluntary organization which consists of European >Internet service providers. The RIPE NCC acts as the Regional Internet >Registry (RIR) for Europe and surrounding areas, performs coordination >activities for the organizations participating in RIPE, and allocates >blocks of IP address space to its Local Internet Registries (LIRs), which >then assign the addresses to end-users. > >Asia Pacific Network Information Center (APNIC) >APNIC is a non-profit membership organization responsible for the >administration and registration of Internet Protocol (IP) addresses in the >Asia-Pacific region, including Japan, Korea, China, Australia dan Indonesia. > >New RIR Candidates: >Emerging RIR, >http://www.iana.org/icp/icp-2.htm >ICP-2: Criteria for Establishment of New Regional Internet Registries > >Africa Network Information Center (AFRINIC) > >There has been a proposal to form an African regional Internet registry, >or Network Information Centre (NIC). The purpose would be to co-ordinate >the IP address allocation for organizations in Africa. There has been >ongoing discussion at meetings and on the mailing list to work out a >solution that has consensus in the constituencies affected > >Asia Network Information Center (ASIANIC) >A new proposal to manage, coordinate IP address spaces and Autonomous >System Numbers (ASN) for Asia and Pacific is by dividing APNIC into: >[1] ASIANIC; and >[2] PacificNIC. > >In consideration of RFC 1591 and other related RFCs; the process of adding >new RIRs (and therefore new hostmasters) should be proposed by ASIAN >Internet Societies to IETF (ISOC). Similary with LATINIC for Latin America >countries and AFRINIC for African countries. > >Latin America Network Information Center (LACNIC) > >The Latin American and Caribbean IP address Regional Registry (LACNIC), is >the emerging organization that will administrate the Latin American and >Caribbean Region (LAC) the IP addresses space, Autonomous System Numbers >(ASN), reverse resolution and other resources, on behalf of the Internet >community. > > > [+ INFORMATION SOCIETY +] > LAW NO. 5 Of 1999 >ANTIMONOPOLY: "Ban On Monopolistic Practices & > Unfair Business Competition" [+ INFORMATION SOCIETY +] LAW NO. 5 Of 1999 ANTIMONOPOLY: "Ban On Monopolistic Practices & Unfair Business Competition" -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: