[arin-ppml] Recommended Draft Policy ARIN-2017-5: Improved IPv6 Registration Requirements

Jason Schiller jschiller at google.com
Tue Sep 26 15:03:31 EDT 2017


current policy:

6.5.5.1. Reassignment information
Each static IPv6 assignment containing a /64 or more addresses shall be
registered in
the WHOIS directory via SWIP or a distributed service which meets the
standards set forth in
section 3.2. Reassignment registrations shall include each client's
organizational information,
except where specifically exempted by this policy.

6.5.5.2. Assignments visible within 7 days
All assignments shall be made visible as required in section 4.2.3.7.1
within seven calendar
days of assignment.

6.5.5.3. Residential Subscribers
  6.5.5.3.1. Residential Customer Privacy
  To maintain the privacy of their residential customers, an organization
with downstream
  residential customers holding /64 and larger blocks may substitute that
organization's
  name for the customer's name, e.g. 'Private Customer - XYZ Network', and
the customer's
  street address may read 'Private Residence'. Each private downstream
residential
  reassignment must have accurate upstream Abuse and Technical POCs visible
on the
  WHOIS record for that block.


New proposed policy:

6.5.5.1. Reassignment information
Each static IPv6
+ re-allocation, reassignment containing a /47 or more addresses, or
subdelegation of any
+ size that will be individually announced,

shall be registered in
the WHOIS directory via SWIP or a distributed service which meets the
standards set forth in
section 3.2. Reassignment registrations shall include each client's
organizational information,
except where specifically exempted by this policy.

6.5.5.2. Assignments visible within 7 days
All assignments shall be made visible as required in section
+ 6.5.5.1
within seven calendar
days of assignment.

6.5.5.3. Residential Subscribers
  6.5.5.3.1. Residential Customer Privacy
  To maintain the privacy of their residential customers, an organization
with downstream
  residential customers
  may substitute that organization's
  name for the customer's name, e.g. 'Private Customer - XYZ Network', and
the customer's
  street address may read 'Private Residence'. Each private downstream
residential
  reassignment must have accurate upstream Abuse and Technical POCs visible
on the
  WHOIS record for that block.

6.5.5.4 Registration Requested by Recipient
If the downstream recipient of a static assignment of /64 or more addresses
requests
publishing of that assignment in ARIN's registration database, the ISP
should register
that assignment as described in section 6.5.5.1.

On Tue, Sep 26, 2017 at 1:31 PM, ARIN <info at arin.net> wrote:

> On 21 September 2017, the ARIN Advisory Council (AC) advanced the
> following Draft Policy to Recommended Draft Policy status:
>
> ARIN-2017-5: Improved IPv6 Registration Requirements
>
> The text of the Recommended Draft Policy is below, and may also be found
> at:
>
> https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2017_5.html
>
> You are encouraged to discuss all Recommended Draft Policies on PPML
> prior to their presentation at the next ARIN Public Policy and Members
> Meeting. PPML and PPC discussions are invaluable to the AC when
> determining community consensus.
>
> The PDP can be found at:
> https://www.arin.net/policy/pdp.html
>
> Draft Policies and Proposals under discussion can be found at:
> https://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/index.html
>
> Regards,
>
> Sean Hopkins
> Policy Analyst
> American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
>
>
>
> AC's Statement of Conformance with ARIN's Principles of Internet Number
> Resource Policy:
>
> This proposal is technically sound and enables fair and impartial number
> policy for easier IPv6 Registrations. The staff and legal review noted a
> single clarification issue which has been addressed. There is ample support
> for the proposal on PPML and no concerns have been raised by the community
> regarding the proposal.
>
> Problem Statement:
>
> Current ARIN policy has different WHOIS directory registration
> requirements for IPv4 vs IPv6 address assignments. IPv4 registration is
> triggered for an assignment of any address block equal to or greater than a
> /29 (i.e., eight IPv4 addresses). In the case of IPv6, registration occurs
> for an assignment of any block equal to or greater than a /64, which
> constitutes one entire IPv6 subnet and is the minimum block size for an
> allocation. Accordingly, there is a significant disparity between IPv4 and
> IPv6 WHOIS registration thresholds in the case of assignments, resulting in
> more work in the case of IPv6 than is the case for IPv4. There is no
> technical or policy rationale for the disparity, which could serve as a
> deterrent to more rapid IPv6 adoption. The purpose of this proposal is to
> eliminate the disparity and corresponding adverse consequences.
>
> Policy statement:
>
> 1) Alter section 6.5.5.1 "Reassignment information" of the NRPM to strike
> "assignment containing a /64 or more addresses" and change to
> "re-allocation, reassignment containing a /47 or more addresses, or
> subdelegation of any size that will be individually announced,"
>
> and
>
> 2) Alter section 6.5.5.2. "Assignments visible within 7 days" of the NRPM
> to strike the text "4.2.3.7.1" and change to "6.5.5.1"
>
> and
>
> 3) Alter section 6.5.5.3.1. "Residential Customer Privacy" of the NRPM by
> deleting the phrase "holding /64 and larger blocks"
>
> and
>
> 4) Add new section 6.5.5.4 "Registration Requested by Recipient" of the
> NRPM, to read: "If the downstream recipient of a static assignment of /64
> or more addresses requests publishing of that assignment in ARIN's
> registration database, the ISP should register that assignment as described
> in section 6.5.5.1."
>
> Comments:
>
> a. Timetable for implementation:
>
> Policy should be adopted as soon as possible.
>
> b. Anything else:
>
> Author Comments:
>
> IPv6 should not be more burdensome than the equivalent IPv4 network size.
> Currently, assignments of /29 or more of IPv4 space (8 addresses) require
> registration. The greatest majority of ISP customers who have assignments
> of IPv4 space are of a single IPv4 address which do not trigger any ARIN
> registration requirement when using IPv4. This is NOT true when these same
> exact customers use IPv6, as assignments of /64 or more of IPv6 space
> require registration. Beginning with RFC 3177, it has been standard
> practice to assign a minimum assignment of /64 to every customer end user
> site, and less is never used. This means that ALL IPv6 assignments,
> including those customers that only use a single IPv4 address must be
> registered with ARIN if they are given the minimum assignment of /64 of
> IPv6 space. This additional effort may prevent ISP's from giving IPv6
> addresses because of the additional expense of registering those addresses
> with ARIN, which is not required for IPv4. The administrative burden of
> 100% customer registration of IPv6 customers is unreasonable, when such is
> not required for those customers receiving only IPv4 connections.
> _______________________________________________
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-- 
_______________________________________________________
Jason Schiller|NetOps|jschiller at google.com|571-266-0006
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