nanog mailing list archives

RE: Address Space & ASN Allocation Process


From: "Jim McBurnett" <jim () tgasolutions com>
Date: Tue, 27 Sep 2005 07:04:28 -0400



I think this is operational...


I beg to differ:

http://www.arin.net/policy/nrpm.html#four3


I have done this for a customer, and they got a /22.
There is also a policy proposal right now that would allow an end user
to get a BGP ASN, get RIR IP space and do it all at once...
http://www.arin.net/policy/proposals/2005_7.htmlh Robert Seastrom is the
author of this...
Robert, you out there ??

4.3.2. Minimum assignment
4.3.2.1 Single Connection
The minimum block of IP address space assigned by ARIN to end-users is a
/20. If assignments smaller than /20 are needed, end-users should
contact their upstream provider.

4.3.2.2 Multihomed Connection
For multihomed end-users, the minimum block of IP address space assigned
is a /22. If assignments smaller than a /22 are needed, multihomed
end-users should contact their upstream providers. When prefixes are
assigned which are longer than /20, they will be from a block reserved
for that purpose. 

I hope this helps...

Jim

-----Original Message-----
From: sjk [mailto:sjk () dredel com] 
Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 6:47 PM
To: Vicky Rode
Cc: nanog () merit edu
Subject: Re: Address Space & ASN Allocation Process


On Mon, 26 Sep 2005, Vicky Rode wrote:

Hi,

Just trying to get some clarity and direction regarding obtaining 
address space/ASN for my client.

Is there a minimum address space (?) an entity would need to justify 
to go directly to RIR (ARIN in this case) as opposed to the upstream 
provider? Is /20 the minimum allocation? Can my client approach RIR 
and request for a /23?

If my client do procure a /23 how do they make make sure that this 
address space will be globally routable?

Multihome will also be part of their network implementation, can they 
apply for an ASN number?

Yes, minimum assignment is /20 (and this is considered temporary, as the
official minimum is /19) -- there used to be some experimental /24s, but
I believe these are now gone. ARIN will only assign /20 or more --
larger prefixes must come from your upstream provider. Being multihomed
means you will be required to get an AS number. Once you have your
address block, you can fill out the request from ARIN.

--sjk


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