Transcript Slide 1
AfriNIC Transition Plan Ernest Byaruhanga I-week Johannesburg © - AfriNIC 7/17/2015 September 9th 2004 Why a transition plan? Africa is served by 3 RIRs There is a need for harmonization consistency.. LIRs and stakeholders and community need to be updated with the transition’s: clear milestones action plans 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 2 Transition plan Transition is organized in 4 (Business and Technical) Phases: Phase 0: Preparation (Ended) Phase 1: Co-evaluation & AfriNIC Database/Whois setup (Started) Phase 2: Uniform policy and Evaluation process Phase 3: Provisional Recognition & Independent evaluation with Audit by RIRs. Phase 4: Final approval 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 3 Phase 0 (Done) Training and staffing: AfriNIC has hired staff that have been trained at RIPE NCC in RIR operations Physical Office setup Infrastructure & Technical Transition design 7/17/2015 South Africa Mauritius Network architecture design Internet transit Identification Servers and Network equipments acquisition Tools and software identification © AfriNIC 2004 4 Phase 0 cont (Done) Policies documents Policies Registration Service Agreements Supporting documents Budget and financial plan Start of Phase 1 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 5 Phase 1 (1/2) Joint Request Evaluation: 5 2 1 Mail Robot RIPE, ARIN, APNIC + Ticketing System LIR 3 4 4 AfriNIC Hostmaster AfriNIC Ticketing 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 6 Phase 1 (cont) Application for recognition (ICANN ICP2) AfriNIC database design and setup AfriNIC WHOIS DB Setup Choose to use RIPE WHOIS/DB Procedure then similar to RIPE 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 7 Phase 2 (1/2) 7/17/2015 Will start after Application for formal recognition New members will be officially informed about AfriNIC and be asked to sign two agreements (RIRs and AfriNIC’s one) AfriNIC will serve as secondary DNS for 196.0.0.0/8 (reserved for Africa by all RIRs) Co-evaluation continues Finalising Billing Systems. © AfriNIC 2004 8 Phase 2 7/17/2015 Setup web based tools for members Prepare and document Data transfer from the different RIRs to AfriNIC system Prepare and document transfer of 196/8 reverse DNS to AfriNIC. Test and validation of Data transfer process Review of all supporting documents © AfriNIC 2004 9 Phase 3 7/17/2015 Provisional recognition from ICANN (expected for Dec’04) Data transfer agreement between AfriNIC and ARIN/RIPE NCC/APNIC. Full service to community based on adopted policies © AfriNIC 2004 10 So … Phase-0 ended, Phase-1 has begun Policy documents were adopted Offices are setup, staff are operational We have the community support We have a financial plan We have a clear transition plan We have the International community support Conclusion We know where we are going, we are on the way. We are confident that this progress will bring more people to the wagon … and give a positive message to the world that AfriNIC is going to happen! 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 11 Transition time schedule 2004 Start sending requests to [email protected] Start billing transition 24/05/04 - AfriNIC I -AGM -Documents approval Jan Feb Mar 26/01/04 RIPE Meeting -Policies changes -Project Meeting Apr May Jun -New Members start signing double Agreements Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Start acting as Secondary for 196/8 ICANN meeting (Kuala Lumpur) Application for recognition ARIN regional Meeting Staff relocation in South Africa Prepare and Office setup -General terms and conditions -Policies (V4,v6, ASN, and DB) -Internal procedure -Billing -New LIR -Requests Form -Etc.. -Operational budget 7/17/2015 RIPE NCC regional Meeting Technical preparation for Phase 1 Start using the same procedure for African Members o Request forms o Evaluation procedure AfriNIC evaluate requests with RIRs second approvals. © AfriNIC 2004 12 Questions?? Next: AfriNIC policies compared with those of other RIRs. 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 13 Policy Comparison between AfriNIC and other RIRs (ARIN, APNIC, RIPE NCC, LACNIC) 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 14 AfriNIC Policies? 7/17/2015 AfriNIC policies were developed by the AfriNIC Policy WG Were presented to the community in the AFNOG-V /AfriNIC-1 meeting in Dakar (May 2004) Were passed by the community and ratified by the AfriNIC Board of Directors! © AfriNIC 2004 15 Policy Comparison RIPE NCC ARIN APNIC LACNIC AfriNIC Service Region: Europe, North Equatorial Afria USA, Canada, South Equatorial Africa Asia, Indian Ocean Islands South America, Carribean Africa, Indian Ocean Islands Official Language(s): English English English English, Spanish, Portuguese English, French 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 16 IPv4 and IPv6: RIPE NCC ARIN APNIC LACNIC AfriNIC /20, /22 (Africa) Same Variable, /22 (Africa) /20 /22 /24 /20 N/A Variable /19 /23 /20 /24 /22 /30 Variable /24 /20 /30 /19 /24 /21 /30 Variable /32 /32 /32 /32 /32 IPv4: Min. Alocation: SubAllocations: Min: Max: Assignments: Min: Max: IPv6 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 17 Eligibility Criteria RIPE NCC ARIN APNIC LACNIC IPv4: show current usage of IP addresses from upstream. plan to renumber into new allocation within 3 months demonstrate existing efficient utilisation of a /22 must renumber previous assignments in 3 months - be an LIR - plan to assign 200 /48s in 2 yrs (same) IPv6: AfriNIC demonstrate existing efficient utilisation of a /20 show how the /20 will be used within 3 months show current use of /23 from upstream, plan to use a /22 in one year must renumber into new allocation in 1 year Demonstrate efficient use of a /22 (multihomed) and /21 (not multihomed) (same) -be an LIR -offer IPv6 services to orgs in service region for 2 yrs -be an LIR -plan to make /48 assignments to end-users in 1 year. 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 18 AS Numbers and Reverse Delegation: RIPE NCC ARIN APNIC LACNIC AfriNIC Reverse Delegation: IPv4: -in-addr.arpa -LIRs only Same Same Same Same IPv6: Ip6.arpa (was ip6.int) Same Same Same Same (same) (same) (same) AS Numbers - network must be multihomed -network must mention ASNs of 2 (same) peers. 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 19 RIRs Policy Comparison Table. Service Region: Official Languages: IPv4 policies: Minimum Allocation: Requirements : Sub-Allocations : - minimum size: - maximum size: Assignments: - minimum size: - maximum size: Assignment Window Policy: Additional Allocation: IPv6 Policies: Initial min. allocation: Eligibility Criteria: Min Assignment LIR AS Numbers: Eligibility Criteria: Reverse Delegation: IPv4: IPv6: RIPE NCC ARIN LACNIC APNIC AfriNIC Europe, North-Equatorial Africa USA, Canada, South-Equatorial Africa South/Latin-America and Caribbean. Asia and Indian Ocean Islands. Africa and Indian Ocean Islands. English English English, Spanish, Portuguese English English, French /20, /22 (Africa) demonstrate existing efficient utilisation of a /22 need to renumber previous assignments in 3 months /20, /22 (Africa) demonstrate existing efficient utilisation of a /20 show how the /20 will be used within 3 months /20 demonstrate efficient use of a/22 (multihomed) and /21 (not multihomed) Variable, /22 (Africa) - show current use of /23 from upstream, - plan to use a /22 in one year - must renumber in one year. /22 -show current usage of IP addresses from upstream. -plan to renumber into new allocation within 3 months /24 /20 N/A /23 /20 Variable – Depends on Need /19 /24 /22 /30 Depends on LIRs assignment window (see below) /24 /20 /24 /21 /30 /19 /30 Depends on LIR’s sub-allocation window. N/A N/A -Only given after 80% of existing allocation is reached -Same as RIPE NCC - Same /32 - be an LIR - plan to assign 200 /48s in 2 yrs - /48 (unless network is v. large) /32 - IPs assigned by LIR without approval from RIPE NCC. - LIR cannot assign IPs > AW to any end-user in a calendar year. - same as RIPE NCC /32 -be an LIR -offer IPv6 services to orgs in region for 24 months. - Same as RIPE NCC -Variable. N/A -Same as RIPE NCC/ARIN/LACNIC /32 -same as RIPE NCC /32 -be an LIR -plan to make /48 assignments to end-users in 1 year. - network must be multihomed - network must supply ASN’s of At least 2 peers. - same- - same -same -same - In-addr.arpa - Only requests from LIR are accepted - same- -same -same -same - ip6.arpa (was ip6.int) - same - -same -same -same End Questions or Comments 7/17/2015 © AfriNIC 2004 21