Policy Proposal 2004-2: Use of HD-Ratio for IPv4 Allocations [Archived]

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Author: Michael Dillon

Author’s Organization: Radianz, Inc.

Policy term: permanent

Policy statement:

  1. Anyone who has already been allocated 4096 IPv4 addresses or more may choose to have additional requests for IPv4 addresses evaluated using an HD (Host Density) Ratio calculation to determine sufficient utilization instead of a fixed percentage threshold.

  2. All requests for additional IPv4 address space subject to the HD Ratio shall require the efficient utilization of the sum total of all existing allocations. The HD Ratio on the sum total of all existing allocations must be greater than or equal to .966.

  3. In addition, the HD ratio of the most recent allocation must be greater than or equal to .930.

  4. The HD ratio is calculated as log(utilized IPv4 addresses) divided by log(total addresses in all previous allocations). In this formula, log refers to the natural logarithm.

Rationale:

The HD ratio was proposed as a way to determine allocation usage thresholds for IPv6 address allocations. For more details on this, please refer to RFC 3194 <http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3194.html>. There is some detailed background discussion about applying the HD ratio to IPv4 allocations in a proposal by Paul Wilson posted to the APNIC mailing list on Aug 7, 2003 http://www.apnic.net/mailing-lists/sig-policy/archive/2003/08/msg00000.html and he presented the it to the annual APNIC policy meeting using these slides

http://www.apnic.net/meetings/16/programme/sigs/docs/policy/addpol-pres-wilson-hd-ratio.pdf

I am not suggesting that ARIN should adopt the APNIC proposal and although Paul invents a new name for the HD ratio, I prefer to keep the original term.

The basic thrust of this proposal is to replace the rigid 80% usage criterion by the more flexible HD ratio and to shift the emphasis away from the last allocated block to include the total allocated address space. To that end, the .930 criterion for the last block is a lot looser than the existing requirements for the last block. This is because the utilization threshold establishes a time buffer between the beginning of an ARIN application for additional addresses and the final deployment of new addresses in the operational network. By using a looser criterion as network size grows, we are also expanding this time buffer. This recognizes that the economy is more dependent than ever on the smooth running of our networks and we should not artificially force larger members to operate with virtually no safety buffers for implementing new addresses. This safety buffer size is important because larger networks have more involved processes for changes to their network and these processes take time.

Paul Wilson’s paper contains ample discussions of the technical justification for using the HD ratio. I have proposed that we use the .966 number that he suggests, I believe there may be valid arguments for reducing this slightly, perhaps to .960.

It would be good for ARIN to have more detailed discussion of the HD ratio on file however I don’t believe that needs to be in the policy itself. However, I would suggest that the ARIN website should contain a copy of RFC 3194, a copy of Paul Wilson’s paper, and a summary of any ARIN member discussions regarding application of the HD ratio to IPv4 addresses. I will also be preparing some slides with graphs and tables that can be displayed on the ARIN website prior to the policy meeting.

Please note the following points.

a) This policy only applies to organizations that already have IP space equivalent to a /20 block or larger.

b) The policy does not specify the source of the 4096 or more addresses therefore it could apply to an ISP who comes to ARIN for the very first time and exchanges an upstream allocation for their own PI space.

c) The policy does not use the term “ISP” therefore it can also apply to any other organization with a large network which is growing larger and therefore needs another allocation.

d) The policy only applies to organizations who opt-in. This means that if your IP address management tools can’t handle the HD ratio you can ignore it. If you find the HD ratio confusing or complex then you can ignore it. If you are crafty and fund a study which finds that your organization would benefit in some way from the old rules about an 80% threshhold then you can ignore this new policy. The new policy provides a benefit to those organizations which need it without penalizing those which do not.

e) This policy proposal cannot be understood in isolation. You do need to read the RFC and Paul Wilson’s discussion paper.

f) The .966 calculation in point 2 covers the entire aggregate of address space including the block covered by the .930 calculation in point 3. You have to meet both targets to pass this policy’s test.

Timetable for implementation: 30 days after ratification

OUT OF DATE?

Here in the Vault, information is published in its final form and then not changed or updated. As a result, some content, specifically links to other pages and other references, may be out-of-date or no longer available.