______________________________________________________________________ DRAFT TRANSCRIPT SIG: IPv6 technical Date: Wednesday 1 March 2006 Time: 11.00am Presentation: IPv6 update by Arth Paulite ______________________________________________________________________ KAZU YAMAMOTO: Good morning, everybody. It's 11 o'clock. This session is IPv6 Technical SIG. Thank you for coming. Well, let's get started. Firs of all, we should review action items. We have no action items, OK? So let's go down to presentations. Today, we have seven informational presentations, like this (refers to slide), and each presenter will come here and make a presentation. Before that, we should take notes. Please use microphone if you ask questions, because this session is broadcasted to the Internet. So you should use microphone please. OK? Let me call first speaker. First speaker is Arth Paulite, APNIC. He's going to make a presentation on IPv6 update. ARTH PAULITE: Good morning, everybody. My name is Arth from APNIC and I'll present about IPv6 allocation status update. The contents of this presentation are purely statistics about RIRs' allocations from IANA, RIRs' allocations to LIRs or ISPs, APNIC allocations and assignments details, member assignments registrations in the database and a snapshot of global IPv6 routing table. These are the current RIR allocations, the number of /23s. RIPE NCC has 198. APNIC has 65, ARIN has 12, LACNIC has two and AfriNIC has one allocation. And these are the RIR allocations to LIRs and ISPs. So far, APNIC has 237, RIPE NCC has 532, AfriNIC has 13, LACNIC has 54. And allocations of APNIC by economies - Japan has 90 allocations, followed by Korea, 35, Taiwan, 24, China 17, Australia 13 and the rest of the countries are catching up. And this is the annual allocations. For 2006, we have about six allocations as of January and, as you know, from 2002, we have a big jump. This is because of the minimum allocations of /32 has been introduced and then the /35-holders were allowed to get an upgrade of /32 without further documentations. And allocations by sizes so, since APNIC is a /32, you'll notice the big allocations are a /32. We have 217 and so far we still have four out of six /35s. They haven't upgraded it yet and two of them has been returned. And we have three /20s and we have /21, /22 and up to a /30. IX assignments - previously we are assigning /64s so, four of these are /4s and the rest are /48. We have six from Australia, three from Japan, Korea two, Indonesia two and the rest have one assignment. And these are the critical assignments, mostly for top-level domain-operators for country, NIRs, and I think it looks at the root server as well. So Japan has four assignments, Australia has two, Korea has two and the others have one assignment. And these are the assignments registered in the database. So mostly /48s and it's interesting to see that there are 3,000 /40s registered and it's actually from one organisation. They're registering mostly their infrastructure by /40s. This is the snapshot of IPv6 routing table as of January 2006 so it's mostly /32 and the /16 here is the 6to4 and there's one organisation that has a /19 and there's also one organisation announcing /64. OK. If you are interested with which IP block or IPv6 has been assigned to which RIRs, you can check the IANA website and also APNIC has statistics about the AS number assignments, IPv4 and IPv6 assignments allocation as well. So you can check the link. Are there any questions? KAZU YAMAMOTO: Arth, I have one. You know, APNIC repeatedly ask to the people to register, you know, assignments to whois database, so does it - is it increasing or - you showed just number but I don't know if this number is increasing or not. ARTH PAULITE: Yeah, it's actually increasing because, last year, the /40s is around 1,000. KAZU YAMAMOTO: Oh, really? ARTH PAULITE: Yeah, yeah, it's increasing. KAZU YAMAMOTO: Any questions? OK. Thank you very much. ARTH PAULITE: Thank you.