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Abandoning the Minimum Allocation Size for IPv4

This policy proposal has been accepted

The new RIPE Document is: ripe-621

You're looking at an older version: 1

The current (published) version is 2
2014-01
State:
Accepted
Publication date
Draft document
Draft
Author(s)
Proposal Version
2.0 - 09 Apr 2014
All Versions
Accepted
28 Jul 2014
Working Group
Address Policy Working Group
Proposal type
  • Modify
Policy term
Indefinite
New RIPE Document(s)

Summary of Proposal

Abandonment of the Minimum Allocation Size concept in the "IPv4 Address Allocation and Assignment Policies for the RIPE NCC Service Region" document, currently ripe-606.

Policy Text

[The following text will update sections 5.1 and 5.5 in the RIPE Policy Document “IPv4 Address Allocation and Assignment Policies for the RIPE NCC Service Region”, if the proposal reaches consensus.]

a. Current policy text

"5.1 Allocations made by the RIPE NCC to LIRs

The RIPE NCC's minimum allocation size is /22.

Details of how to join the RIPE NCC [...]"

b. New policy text

"5.1 Allocations made by the RIPE NCC to LIRs

[]

Details of how to join the RIPE NCC [...]"

c. Current policy text

"5.5 Transfers of Allocations

[...] or otherwise through the Regional Internet Registry System.

Address space may only be re-allocated to another LIR that is also a member of the RIPE NCC. The block that is to be re-allocated must not be smaller than the minimum allocation block size at the time of re-allocation.

Re-allocation must be reflected [...]"

d. New policy text

"5.5 Transfers of Allocations

[...] or otherwise through the Regional Internet Registry System.

Address space may only be re-allocated to another LIR that is also a member of the RIPE NCC. []

Re-allocation must be reflected [...]"

Rationale

a. Arguments supporting the proposal

  • The Minimum Allocation Size concept makes no sense any longer, in the light of the strict allocation size of only one (last) /22 per (new) LIR, it has lost its originally intended purpose of enforcing the RIPE NCC to hand out no less than 1024 IPv4 addresses per allocation.
  • The Minimum Allocation Size as a lower boundary appears to be artificial now, keeping it could be understood as the RIPE NCC to patronise LIRs in using their address space – whether it is PI or PA; see next two arguments.
  • The proposal would end incongruencies because it is currently not possible to convert PI assigned address space of LIRs into PA allocated address space for PI assignments smaller than a /22.
  • The proposal would enable the LIR-to-LIR transfer of PA allocated address space smaller than a /22.

b. Arguments opposing the proposal

  • It might be argued that abandoning the Minimum Allocation Size for IPv4 could lead to very small allocations. However, whether such small allocations would be still usable for LIRs should be determined by the concerned LIRs and not by a RIPE policy: e.g. as an LIR, keeping address space as PI assigned for infrastructure purposes would equally make perfect sense as converting it into PA allocated to then transfer it away.