Policy Proposal 2007-27: Abandoned
Member Services
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Mon Apr 14 16:32:38 EDT 2008
Policy Proposal 2007-27
Cooperative distribution of the end of the IPv4 free pool
On 9 April 2008, the ARIN Advisory Council (AC), acting under the
provisions of the ARIN Internet Resource Policy Evaluation Process,
determined that this proposal did not have the support of the community
and decided to abandon it.
At this time the author of the proposal may elect to use the petition
process to attempt to advance the proposal. The deadline for the author
to initiate a petition is 23:59 EDT, 21 April 2008. If the author
chooses not to petition or the petition is unsuccessful, then the
determination of the AC stands and the proposal is abandoned.
The policy proposal text is provided below and is also available at:
http://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2007_27.html
The ARIN Internet Resource Policy Evaluation Process can be found at:
http://www.arin.net/policy/irpep.html
Regards,
Member Services
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
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Policy Proposal 2007-27
Cooperative distribution of the end of the IPv4 free pool
Author: Tony Hain
Date: 20 November 2007
Proposal type: new
Policy term: permanent
Policy summary:
This policy will establish a process for RIR-to-RIR redistribution of
the tail-end of the IPv4 pool, taking effect after the IANA Reserve is
exhausted. Each redistribution Allocation will be triggered by the
recipient RIR depleting its reserve to a 30 day supply, and will result
in up to a 3 month supply being transferred from the RIR with the
longest remaining time before it exhausts its own pool.
Policy statement:
At the point when any given RIR is within 30 days of depleting its
remaining IPv4 pool, a survey will be taken of the other 4 to determine
the remaining time before each of them exhausts their pool (including
both member use and recent redistribution allocations to other RIRs).
The one with the longest window before exhausting its pool will be
designated as the source RIR. The recipient RIR will follow procedures
for an LIR in the source RIR region to request a block that is expected
to be sufficient for up to 3 months, but is no larger than 1/8th of the
source RIR's remaining pool. At the point where no RIR can supply a
block that is less than 1/8th of their remaining pool that will sustain
the recipient RIR for 30 days, the recipient RIR will collect its
requests each week, and forward those individual requests to the source
RIR designated that week.
Rationale:
This policy will establish a mechanism for the Allocation of IPv4
address blocks between RIR's, but will not go into effect until the IANA
pool has been depleted.
It is really bizarre to watch the maneuvering as the global RIR
community grapples with 'fairness' of distributing the last few IANA
Reserve /8 blocks. On one level this just appears to be petty sibling
rivalry, as people are bickering over who gets the last cookie and
whimpering about 'fairness'. At the same time, each RIR is chartered to
look after the interests of its membership so it is to be expected that
they will each want to get as much as possible to meet the needs of
their respective membership.
Existing practice requires RIR's to acquire blocks from IANA, which
leads to the current round of nonsense about optimal distribution of the
remaining pool based on elaborate mathematical models.
This globally submitted policy proposal attempts to resolve the issue by
shifting to an RIR-to-RIR Allocation model after the IANA pool is depleted.
This policy would effectively result in each RIR becoming a virtual LIR
member of all of the other RIR's for the sole purpose of managing the
tail-end of the IPv4 pool.
Timetable for implementation: Before 1/1/2009
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