______________________________________________________________________ DRAFT TRANSCRIPT SIG: IPv6 technical Date: Wednesday 1 March 2006 Time: 11.00am Presentation: JPNIC IPv6 registry service update report Presenter: Toshiyuki Hosaka ______________________________________________________________________ KAZU YAMAMOTO: OK, I should explain this earlier but this is, you know, APNIC meeting page (refers to screen). If you need access to this page, you can also watch, you know, transcript, you know, you can also see transcript over there but, if you want to have such text online, please access this page. OK? And click here - it takes a little time, but you will have text here. OK. It just takes time, but anyway. OK. That is all about ip6.int. Any questions with regard to ip6.int? OK. Let me call next speaker. Next speaker is Hosaka-san, JPNIC. He is going to make a presentation on JPNIC's IPv6 registry service update report. TOSHIYUKI HOSAKA: This is the overview of my presentation. First, I would like to talk about JPNIC IPv6 statistics. And after that, I will explain our Registry System Update. So, statistics - this slide shows our statistics. This is made by JPNIC, our allocation, to our members. The blue bar shows the number of JPNIC members. As of January 2006, JPNIC has 379 members. At the same time, at January 2006, 66 members have received IPv6 allocations. So that means 17.4% of our members have received IPv6 allocation. And this is the statistics of assignment made by LIRs. The blue bar means /40 assignment to their users and the red bar shows /48 assignment to their users. This is incremental statistics. So, January 2006 - 904 assignments - /40 assignments - were made to their end-users. And 58 /48 assignments were made to the end-users. So, I would like to talk about our JPNIC Registry System Update. We have implemented a bulk data exchange system into the JPNIC Registry System. If you use that, LIR can register their assignment to our registry system at the time. IPv6 assignment - LIR will assign a lot of /48 or /- or something, at the same time. So we have implemented this bulk data exchange system. LIRs and assignment data are using SSL to our registry system and we also have certificate of authority. So using that, we can authenticate the LIRs. This system, if I compare this system with normal email system, web transaction, bulk data exchange has less overhead than email and more secure than email because this system uses SSL. And this system is already ready to provide. And one of our members is very interested in use. So we will soon begin testing. And we have a future plan. IPv6 registry service has not been IPv6 reachable yet, but within, until the end of fiscal year 2006, we will be ready. And the whole registry system will be ready until the end of fiscal year 2007. So at last, you can search our WHOIS server by 2006. So any questions? TOMOHIRO FUJISAKI: I want to go on one thing - if APNIC include this number (inaudible) TOSHIYUKI HOSAKA: I don't think so. SHIN YAMASAKI: JPNIC send this daily, so it should be in APNIC's whois. But there is an issue - our data doesn't include allocated - what is it called? Our data doesn't have that. So that's why it may not be included in APNIC's statistics? GEORGE MICHAELSON: I believe all v6 activity is done as direct assignment. So if you perform a transaction to hand something to a JPNIC member, it is automatically reflected in our registry. Whois is slightly different. Registry is our database system that we use to manage resources. So when we publish statistics, they don't come from whois, they come from registry, and I believe the assignment report that we produce does reflect these figures and our other measure, which is the total footprint of v6 does reflect this. That is what I believe. TOMOHIRO FUJISAKI: Do assignment, in the allocation, is it available? SHIN YAMASAKI: It doesn't have downstream allocation.