On 15 June 2023, the ARIN Advisory Council (AC) accepted “ARIN-prop-320: /26 
initial IPv4 allocation for IXPs” as a Draft Policy.
 
Draft Policy ARIN-2023-2 is below and can be found at:
 
https://www.arin.net/participate/policy/drafts/2023_2
 
You are encouraged to discuss all Draft Policies on PPML. The AC will evaluate 
the discussion to assess the conformance of this draft policy with ARIN's 
Principles of Internet number resource policy as stated in the Policy 
Development Process (PDP). Specifically, these principles are:
 
* Enabling Fair and Impartial Number Resource Administration
* Technically Sound
* Supported by the Community
 
The PDP can be found at:
 
https://www.arin.net/participate/policy/pdp/
 
Draft Policies and Proposals under discussion can be found at: 
https://www.arin.net/participate/policy/drafts/
 
Regards,
 
Eddie Diego
Policy Analyst
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)


Draft Policy ARIN-2023-2: /26 initial IPv4 allocation for IXPs

Problem Statement: 

Per NRPM Section 4.4, ARIN has reserved a /15 for micro-allocations for 
critical internet infrastructure, such as internet exchange points (IXPs) and 
core DNS service providers. The majority of these allocation requests are made 
by IXPs. As of the last ARIN report, roughly half of this reservation is 
allocated (see Statistics & Reporting  Projections from ARIN staff suggest that 
at current allocation rates, the remaining reserved space may be exhausted in 
the next few years.

In parallel, an analysis of PeeringDB data conducted by the RIPE Address Policy 
Working Group shows that approximately 70% of global IXPs have fewer than 32 
members registered with that site. An IXP this size could readily operate with 
a /26 allocation, which would provide 100% overprovisioning beyond their 
existing peer count. (Source: https://github.com/mwichtlh/address-policy-wg )

Unlike other types of allocations, IXP peering networks are not required by 
member networks to be globally reachable; only members of the IXP must be able 
to reach the prefix. As such, there is no technical requirement that an IXP 
allocation must be no smaller than a /24.

Policy statement:

Existing text:

4.4. Micro-allocation

ARIN will make IPv4 micro-allocations to critical infrastructure providers of 
the Internet, including public exchange points, core DNS service providers 
(e.g. ICANN-sanctioned root and ccTLD operators) as well as the RIRs and IANA. 
These allocations will be no smaller than a /24. Multiple allocations may be 
granted in certain situations.

Replace with:

4.4 Micro-allocation

ARIN will make IPv4 micro-allocations to critical infrastructure providers of 
the Internet, including public internet exchange points (IXPs), core DNS 
service providers (e.g. ICANN-sanctioned root and ccTLD operators) as well as 
the RIRs and IANA. These allocations will be no smaller than a /26 for IXPs, or 
a /24 for other allocations that require global reachability of the assigned 
allocation. Multiple allocations may be granted in certain situations.

4.4.1 Micro-allocations for Internet Exchange Points (IXPs)

An IXP requesting an initial IPv4 allocation from this reserved space will be 
assigned a /26 by default. An IXP requesting an allocation larger than a /26 
must show an immediate need to utilize more than 25% of the requested 
allocation size upon initial commissioning.

An IXP requesting an allocation under this section must have also requested, or 
already received, an IPv6 allocation for the same purpose under Section 6.10.1.

An allocation made to an IXP under this section may only be used for the 
operation of its public peering LAN. No other uses are allowed.

An IXP that has received an IPv4 allocation under this section may request a 
larger allocation once they have utilized more than 50% of their existing one. 
Upon receiving the larger allocation, the IXP must migrate to the new 
allocation and return their previous one to ARIN within 6 months.

Comments:

This proposal mirrors RIPE policy proposal 2023-01 (see 
https://www.ripe.net/participate/policies/proposals/2023-01) which is currently 
under consideration in that region and appears to have sufficient community 
support for adoption at the time of this writing.

Timetable for implementation: Immediate


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