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Re: ARIN question


From: Owen DeLong <owen () delong com>
Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2013 17:04:03 -0430


On Jul 19, 2013, at 8:49 PM, Jimmy Hess <mysidia () gmail com> wrote:

On 7/19/13, Warren Bailey <wbailey () satelliteintelligencegroup com> wrote:
All,
Does anyone have a baseline on the "maximum" allocation a small to mid-sized
ISP can receive from ARIN? I realize resources are scarce in IPv4 land, and
I am a bit nervous to initiate the process myself without an understanding
of what can/cannot be allocated. I'm not looking for anything insane, maybe

https://www.arin.net/policy/nrpm.html
^

There's not a predefined "maximum" allocation,  there are maximums
that apply in certain circumstances;  the maximum is a 3 month supply
of IP addresses that you have documented justification for,  subject
to the slow-start rule   (I'm assuming you can't show justified need
for a /8  or other allocation size which the free pool exhaustion
would make impossible);   if you don't already have a /22,  you can't
apply for a /16, for example,   under the normal allocation policy.

There is a minimum allocation size, and you need to meet the
requirements shown in the policy.


To clarify, the time horizons in policy depend on the nature of the request.

ISPs are currently limited to 3 months for IPv4.
End users can get 12 months IPv4.

ISPs or end users can get up to 24 months IPv4 through the transfer process.

IPv6 does not have a clearly defined time horizon and long-term (~5 years) planning is recommended when preparing an 
IPv6 request.

Owen



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