3. Delegaciones IPv6
3
Delegaciones
(Acumulado)
Allocation
Assignment
3,500
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
Por tipo de delegación
/30-/31
/32
/43-/47
/48
Por tamaño
One-click
Normal
Por tipo de petición
En 2014
0
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Al 31 de
agosto
4. Delegaciones IPv4
900
800
700
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
Jan-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Apr-14
May-14
Jun-14
Jul-14
Aug-14
Recovered Pool
103/8
4
From 103
pool
From
recovered
pool
/24
/23
/22
NIR
New
Existing
By pool By size By Member
Statistics as at
31 August
5. Transferencias IPv4
20
18
16
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
Jan-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Apr-14
May-14
Jun-14
Jul-14
Aug-14
Inter-RIR
Intra-RIR
5
Used
Did not use
Using listing service
Used
Remaining
Pre-approval usage
Statistics as
at 31
August
6. Asignaciones ASN
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Jan-14
Feb-14
Mar-14
Apr-14
May-14
Jun-14
Jul-14
Aug-14
4-byte
2-byte
2 byte
4 byte
6
2-byte
4-byte
By type
Rejected
Accepted
4-byte return rate
Statistics as at
31 August
Global ASN use
7. Membresía de APNIC
7
Statistics as
at 30 Sept
5000
4500
4000
3500
3000
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
XL
VL
L
M
S
VS
AS
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
8. Desarrollos Whois
Proyecto de colaboración con RIPE
NCC y AFRINIC para adaptar el
Whois de RIPE-NCC
Disminuye costos de desarrollo y
mantenimiento del Whois
Mejora el control de calidad = una
mejor experience del usuario de
Whois
Edward Shryane, RIPE NCC
9. CONFER: medición de consenso
9
Captura la
opinión de los
participantes en
tiempo real
10. Implementación de Políticas
10
16 Abril prop-107: transferencia de números AS
7 Mayo
27 Mayo
prop-109: asignación de 1.0.0.0/24 y
1.1.1.0/24 a APNIC Labs como prefijos para
investigación
prop-105: distribución del espacio de IPv4
devuelto (Modificación de la prop-088)
11. Colaboración con la comunidad
11
Talleres
NOGS
Eventos
APNIC
IPv6
Seguridad
Cooperació
n
As at 31 August
- Hola
- Meh dis kulpo, keh, mi espayol, no es bue no.
- Voi Ar abler en In glesh
Good afternoon everyone. I am Zen from APNIC. I am the internet resource analyst from APNIC member services team.
Today I am going to give you an update on what has been happening in the APNIC region.
I apologize that i am not able to deliver this presentation in Spanish.
However, my colleague has helped me to translate the slides in Spanish. Hopefully, it will help you the understand my presentation better.
- Recently, APNIC has reviewed and revised its vision statement, and our new vision statement is to create a global, open, stable, and secure internet that serves the entire Asia Pacific community.
To achieve this vision, we are focusing on these three areas, which is to
Serve our members,
Supporting internet development in the Asia Pacific region, and
Collaborating more broadly with the community.
- Since Jan 2014, the delegation rate for IPv6 has been quite stable
and we can see that the majority of delegations have been a /32 which is the default allocation size for providers, followed by /48s which is the default assignment size for end-sites.
Most of the delegation came from normal allocations, instead of one-click.
Since the advent of the recovered pool, there has been a marked increase in IPv4 requests.
42% of requests have come from the recovered pool and 58% from the last /8 pool.
Moving towards August 2014, we have a surge in the IPv4 delegation from the Recovered pool from IANA.
IPv4 Transfers in the APNIC region has remained steady as well,
However, we are starting to see some transfers from ARIN to NIR members.
51% of Members are utilising the listing service.
70% of pre-approvals are still remaining in the list, this indicates we still have many Members that needs more IPv4 address are looking for sources to transfer from
- It is good to note that the return rate for 4-byte is very low (4%), which illustrates acceptance of 4-byte ASN in the region.
Overall, 69% of ASNs are 4-byte.
4-byte uptake has been quite good in the region with 70% of Members using 4-byte now.
- In the early 90’s, we only have a handful of members, and now we have around 4500 members served directly by APNIC.
- The total membership figure for 2013 is 4,051.
- As at 30 September 2014, we now have a total of 4,501 Members, an increase of 9.9% from the year 2013.
APNIC Software team has done several collaborative works this year with RIPE and AFRINIC.
In July this year, we hosted engineers from both AFRINIC and RIPE at the APNIC offices for two weeks, where we worked together on adapting the RIPE WHOIS database software, in particular, providing bug fixes and enhancements to the core code base, which we aim to give a better experience for Whois users.
At the policy chair’s request, we prototyped an online system to gauge consensus for the policy proposal, and it was trialled at the Policy SIG in our recent APNIC conference.
The trial outcome will be reported by the Policy SIG chair.
16 April 2014
prop-107: AS number transfer policy proposal
Permits the intra- and inter-regional transfer of ASNs
7 May 2014
prop-109: Allocate 1.0.0.0/24 and 1.1.1.0/24 to APNIC Labs as Research Prefixes
Delegates 1.0.0.0/24 and 1.1.1.0/24 to APNIC for use by APNIC Labs
27 May 2014
prop-105: Distribution of returned IPv4 address blocks (Modification of prop-088)
Proposal to allow the distribution of IPv4 address blocks delegated to APNIC as a result of the “Global policy for post exhaustion IPv4 allocation mechanisms by the IANA”.
This is great for Members who have been able to get another small delegation of IPv4 space.
In summary, in 2014 we continue to serve and meet our Members in their various economies, engage with the wider AP communities, and collaborate with the globel Internet stakeholders.
- Training: 20 Classroom, 24 Online, 1826 professionals trained, 63 videos, 135,516 views
- NOGS: APNIC acts as the supporting partner for many Network Operator’s Group such as NOGS like, SANOG, SGNOG, HKNOG, MYNOG, by providing financial and logistical support in addition to participating in various regional conferences.
- APNIC events and Support: Engineering assistance is offered to network operators that require specific technical assistance, such as how to deploy IPv6 more effectively. It is provided on a cost
- We provided our first youth fellowship in APNIC 38.
ISIF: Three projects received additional mentoring on evaluation and communications (India, Cook Islands and Cambodia)
This will be a big event, another one we run in conjunction with APRICOT 2015 and APAN 39.
With that, I conclude my presentation today.
Thank you very much.
Muchas gracias