Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Matthias Leisi

Mark Andrews schrieb:

   I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
   It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
   change over bring in new functionality.

OTOH, Verizon is not the only provider of smartphone connectivity in the
world. Most of them try to be good citizens and do not waste a scarce
resource (IPv4 space).

If more providers would act like Verizon, we would have run out of IPv4
addresses a long time ago (whether or not that is a good or bad thing is
left as an exercise to the reader).

-- Matthias




Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore

On Feb 10, 2009, at 5:31 PM, Matthias Leisi wrote:

Mark Andrews schrieb:


I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
change over bring in new functionality.


OTOH, Verizon is not the only provider of smartphone connectivity in  
the
world. Most of them try to be good citizens and do not waste a  
scarce

resource (IPv4 space).


You mean like the 10.x.x.x addresses give to all iPhones in the US?

Wait, I thought NAT was bad?  So who is the good citizen?

--
TTFN,
patrick


If more providers would act like Verizon, we would have run out of  
IPv4
addresses a long time ago (whether or not that is a good or bad  
thing is

left as an exercise to the reader).

-- Matthias







Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Chuck Anderson
On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 11:31:38PM +0100, Matthias Leisi wrote:
 Mark Andrews schrieb:
  I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
  It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
  change over bring in new functionality.
 
 OTOH, Verizon is not the only provider of smartphone connectivity in the
 world. Most of them try to be good citizens and do not waste a scarce
 resource (IPv4 space).

I disagree that using global IPv4 space is a waste.  Every device 
deserves to have real internet connectivity and not this NAT crap.



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Dave Temkin

Chuck Anderson wrote:

On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 11:31:38PM +0100, Matthias Leisi wrote:
  

Mark Andrews schrieb:


I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
change over bring in new functionality.
  

OTOH, Verizon is not the only provider of smartphone connectivity in the
world. Most of them try to be good citizens and do not waste a scarce
resource (IPv4 space).



I disagree that using global IPv4 space is a waste.  Every device 
deserves to have real internet connectivity and not this NAT crap.


  
Why must it be always real versus NAT?  99% of users don't care one 
way or another.  Would it be so hard for the carrier to provide a switch 
between NAT and real IP if the user needs or wants it?





Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Tue, 10 Feb 2009 14:52:52 PST, Dave Temkin said:

 Why must it be always real versus NAT?  99% of users don't care one 
 way or another.  Would it be so hard for the carrier to provide a switch 
 between NAT and real IP if the user needs or wants it?

You're almost always better off not providing a user-accessible switch.
Especially not a shiny one labeled Do not touch unless you know what
you are doing.

(FWIW, this is exactly the same issue as block port 25 unless user requests
opt-out from the block)


pgpi6taC8ZGqT.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Patrick W. Gilmore

On Feb 10, 2009, at 5:52 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:

Chuck Anderson wrote:

On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 11:31:38PM +0100, Matthias Leisi wrote:


Mark Andrews schrieb:


I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
change over bring in new functionality.

OTOH, Verizon is not the only provider of smartphone connectivity  
in the
world. Most of them try to be good citizens and do not waste a  
scarce

resource (IPv4 space).



I disagree that using global IPv4 space is a waste.  Every device  
deserves to have real internet connectivity and not this NAT crap.


Why must it be always real versus NAT?  99% of users don't care  
one way or another.  Would it be so hard for the carrier to provide  
a switch between NAT and real IP if the user needs or wants it?


Lots of providers do.  Sometimes the choice between static  dynamic  
is bundled with the choice between NAT  real on some broadband  
providers.


I've also seen hotels do it, and even charge extra for it.  (Yes, I  
paid. ;)


--
TTFN,
patrick




Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Dave Temkin

Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:

On Feb 10, 2009, at 5:52 PM, Dave Temkin wrote:

Chuck Anderson wrote:

On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 11:31:38PM +0100, Matthias Leisi wrote:


Mark Andrews schrieb:


I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
change over bring in new functionality.

OTOH, Verizon is not the only provider of smartphone connectivity 
in the
world. Most of them try to be good citizens and do not waste a 
scarce

resource (IPv4 space).



I disagree that using global IPv4 space is a waste.  Every device 
deserves to have real internet connectivity and not this NAT crap.


Why must it be always real versus NAT?  99% of users don't care one 
way or another.  Would it be so hard for the carrier to provide a 
switch between NAT and real IP if the user needs or wants it?


Lots of providers do.  Sometimes the choice between static  dynamic 
is bundled with the choice between NAT  real on some broadband 
providers.


I've also seen hotels do it, and even charge extra for it.  (Yes, I 
paid. ;)


Exactly.  I've seen this as well in both instances but haven't seen it 
on mobile phones.  It's something so obscure that you're going to have 
to really want it to turn it on.  I don't think the Port 25 example 
holds much water here.


-Dave



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-10 Thread Scott Howard
On Tue, Feb 10, 2009 at 3:29 PM, Dave Temkin dav...@gmail.com wrote:

 Exactly.  I've seen this as well in both instances but haven't seen it on
 mobile phones.  It's something so obscure that you're going to have to
 really want it to turn it on.  I don't think the Port 25 example holds much
 water here.


Many/most GSM/GPRS/etc operators will have multiple APN's - one which is
setup for NAT, and the other which gives a public IP address.

By default, most dumb phones will use the former. Data cards will use the
latter, and smartphones seem to be split between the two - although
obviously it will vary between providers.

  Scott.


Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-09 Thread Ben Scott
On Sat, Feb 7, 2009 at 9:24 PM, Jeff S Wheeler j...@inconcepts.biz wrote:
 Sure, smart phones are becoming more popular.

  My ancient and crufty Nextel iDEN i530 phone, manufactured circa
2003, with a monochrome 4-line text display, and about as dumb as
they get, gets assigned an IP address.  Now, that IP address is in
10/8, but the point is that not just smart phones get IP addresses.

  As to whether VZW needs public IP space for every phone -- I'll let
others handle the rampant speculation on that front.

-- Ben



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-09 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 7:07 PM, Mark Andrews mark_andr...@isc.org wrote:


 In message 1234128761.17985.352.ca...@guardian.inconcepts.net, Jeff S
 Wheeler
  writes:
  On Sun, 2009-02-08 at 14:37 -0800, Aaron Glenn wrote:
   NAT? why isn't Verizon 'It's the Network' Wireless using IPv6?
   speaking-from-assthere should be a FOIA-like method to see large
   allocation justifications/ass
  Realistically, I suppose Verizon Wireless is big enough to dictate to
  the manufacturers of handsets and infrastructure, you must support IPv6
  by X date or we will no longer buy / sell your product.  I wonder if
  any wireless carriers are doing this today?
 
  What services require an IP, whether they can be supplied via NAT, how
  soon smart phone adoption will bring IP to every handset ... all these
  are good and valid points.  However, they all distract from the glaring
  and obvious reality that there is no current explanation for Verizon
  Wireless needing 27M IPs.

 Well it's a 8M allocation for current population of 2M with
a 25M more potential handsets that will be upgraded soon.
This looks to be consistent with how ARIN hands out other
blocks of address space.


Plus the rest of their space, at least the easily identifiable portions.
It's extremely difficult to speculate what people are doing with large
amounts of addresses. I trust that ARIN has done the right thing in
accordance with community standards. V6 addresses included.

They may want to not recycle that template containing the comment again. It
showed up on the last two allocations.


Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless WIRELESSDATANETWORK
(NET-66-174-0-0-1
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=%21%20NET-66-174-0-0-1)
66.174.0.0 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=66.174.0.0 -
66.174.255.255 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=66.174.255.255

Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless WIRELESSDATANETWORK
(NET-69-82-0-0-1
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=%21%20NET-69-82-0-0-1)
69.82.0.0 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=69.82.0.0 -
69.83.255.255 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=69.83.255.255

Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless WIRELESSDATANETWORK
(NET-69-96-0-0-1
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=%21%20NET-69-96-0-0-1)
69.96.0.0 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=69.96.0.0 -
69.103.255.255 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=69.103.255.255

Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless WIRELESSDATANETWORK
(NET-70-192-0-0-1
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=%21%20NET-70-192-0-0-1)
70.192.0.0 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=70.192.0.0 -
70.223.255.255 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=70.223.255.255

Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless WIRELESSDATANETWORK
(NET6-2001-4888-1
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=%21%20NET6-2001-4888-1)
2001:4888::::::
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=2001:4888::::::
- 2001:4888::::::
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=2001:4888::::::

Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless WIRELESSDATANETWORK
(NET-97-128-0-0-1
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=%21%20NET-97-128-0-0-1)
97.128.0.0 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=97.128.0.0 -
97.255.255.255 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=97.255.255.255

Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless WIRELESSDATANETWORK
(NET-174-192-0-0-1
http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=%21%20NET-174-192-0-0-1)
174.192.0.0 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=174.192.0.0 -
174.255.255.255 http://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=174.255.255.255



Best,

Martin


-- 
Martin Hannigan   mar...@theicelandguy.com
p: +16178216079


RE: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-09 Thread Holmes,David A
We're not a big verizon wireless customer, (we have been allocated a /25
for remote data access devices). We run multi-homed BGP with vw. vw says
that they must advertise 48 summarized prefixes to us, instead of just
the /25. The 48 prefixes are apparently advertised to all of the
de-aggregated users contained in the summarized 48 prefixes. Is this a
common practice? If so is it a best practice?  

-Original Message-
From: Mike Leber [mailto:mle...@he.net] 
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2009 10:39 PM
To: David Conrad
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless


David Conrad wrote:
 On Feb 8, 2009, at 7:37 PM, Aaron Glenn wrote:
 so if they don't deploy IPv6 then ('extremely high growth period'),
 when will they?
 
 Hint: how many of the (say) Alexa top 1000 websites are IPv6 enabled?

haha, I went insane for a moment and though you said Freenix top 1000, 
and so I just checked that.  Here is the answer to the question you 
didn't ask:

Top 1000 Usenet Servers in the World
list here: http://news.anthologeek.net/top1000.current.txt
details here: http://news.anthologeek.net

1000 usenet server names
913 are potentially valid hostnames (in usenet news a server name does 
necessarily correspond directly to a hostname)
722 have ipv4 address records (A)
67 have ipv6 address records ()
9.2% of the top 1000 usenet servers have added support for ipv6

I'm sure there are more this took exactly 183 seconds of work. ;)

Here they are:

feeder.erje.net 2001:470:992a::3e19:561
feeder4.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::4:1
news.dal.ca 2001:410:a010:1:214:5eff:fe0a:4a4e
news.nonexiste.net 2002:6009:93d5::1
nrc-news.nrc.ca 2001:410:9000:2::2
news.z74.net 2001:610:637:4::211
news.kjsl.com 2001:1868:204::104
npeer.de.kpn-eurorings.net 2001:680:0:26::2
feeder6.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::6:1
feeder3.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::3:1
news.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::38
feeder2.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::2:1
feeder5.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::5:1
syros.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::17
vlad-tepes.bofh.it 2001:1418:13:1::5
news.stack.nl 2001:610:1108:5011:230:48ff:fe12:2794
ikarus.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::38
news.space.net 2001:608::1000:7
feed.news.tnib.de 2001:1b18:f:4::4
newsfeed.velia.net 2a01:7a0:3::254
news.isoc.lu 2001:a18:0:405:0:a0:456:1
ikaria.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::39
newsfeed.teleport-iabg.de 2001:1b10:100::119:1
news.tnib.de 2001:1b18:f:4::2
kanaga.switch.ch 2001:620:0:8::119:2
erode.bofh.it 2001:1418:13:1::3
irazu.switch.ch 2001:620:0:8::119:3
bofh.it 2001:1418:13::42
newsfeed.atman.pl 2001:1a68:0:4::2
news.mb-net.net 2a01:198:292:0:210:dcff:fe67:6b03
news.gnuher.de 2a01:198:293::2
switch.ch 2001:620:0:1b::b
news.k-dsl.de 2a02:7a0:1::5
news.task.gda.pl 2001:4070:1::fafe
news1.tnib.de 2001:1b18:f:4::2
aspen.stu.neva.ru 2001:b08:2:100::96
novso.com 2001:1668:2102:4::4
citadel.nobulus.com 2001:6f8:892:6ff::11:133
feeder.news.heanet.ie 2001:770:18:2::c101:db29
news-zh.switch.ch 2001:620:0:3::119:1
news.szn.dk 2001:1448:89::10:d85d
news.litech.org 2001:440:fff9:100:202:b3ff:fea4:a44e
news.weisnix.org 2001:6f8:892:6ff:213:8fff:febb:bec3
news.panservice.it 2001:40d0:0:4000::e
nntp.eutelia.it 2001:750:2:3::20
bolzen.all.de 2001:bf0::60
newsfeed.esat.net 2001:7c8:3:1::3
news.snarked.org 2607:f350:1::1:4
feed1.news.be.easynet.net 2001:6f8:200:2::5:46
aotearoa.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::58
news.babsi.de 2a01:198:292:0:230:48ff:fe51:a68c
news.muc.de 2001:608:1000::2
newsfeed.carnet.hr 2001:b68:e160::3
news.nask.pl 2001:a10:1:::3:c9a2
news.linuxfan.it 2001:4c90:2::6
texta.sil.at 2001:858:2:1::2
news.stupi.se 2001:440:1880:5::10
news.supermedia.pl 2001:4c30:0:3::12
news.trigofacile.com 2001:41d0:1:6d44::1
nuzba.szn.dk 2001:6f8:1232::263:8546
geiz-ist-geil.priv.at 2001:858:666:f001::57
newsfeed.sunet.se 2001:6b0:7:88::101
news.pimp.lart.info 2001:6f8:9ed::1
glou.fr.eu.org 2001:838:30b::1
news.germany.com 2001:4068:101:119:1::77
feeder.z74.net 2001:610:637:4::211
news.nask.org.pl 2001:a10:1:::3:c9a2

Mike.

-- 
+ H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C +
| Mike LeberWholesale IPv4 and IPv6 Transit  510 580 4100 |
| Hurricane Electric   AS6939 |
| mle...@he.net Internet Backbone  Colocation  http://he.net |
+-+




Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread James Hess
 I have trouble understanding why an ARIN record for a network regularly
 receiving new, out-sized IPv4 allocations on the order of millions of
 OrgName:Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless
 CIDR:   97.128.0.0/9
 Comment:Verizon Wireless currently has 44.3 Million
 Comment:subscribers with 2.097 Million IP addresses allocated.
 RegDate:2008-04-14

If they have immediately allocated  2.097 million out of 8.388
million,  then they
have satisfied the 25% immediate utilization requirement.

In fact, 2.097 million is exactly how many they would need immediate
use for in order to justify an allocation of 8 million IPs according
to ARIN policy.


I expect the 2.097 million figure applies only to this particular
range, this comment in whois does
not indicate that Verizon has _only_  assigned that many across all
its various ranges;  I would fully expect they have massively more
IPs in use.

I would expect ARIN would have followed policy, and so Verizon had to
show to ARIN their well-founded
projection  that within one year, at least 50% of the new assignment
would be allocated.

And also that they met the additional requirements for ISPs;  80%
utilization over all previous
allocations, and also 80% of their most recent allocation.


--
-Jimmy



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Eliot Lear

On 2/8/09 3:24 AM, Jeff S Wheeler wrote:

Sure, smart phones are becoming more popular.  It's reasonable to assume
that virtually all cell phones will eventually have an IP address almost
all the time.


The numbers I keep seeing for so-called smartphones in the press for 
U.S. and Europe are 49% and 50% within two years, respectively.  Here's 
an article you might find interesting about the U.S. domestic market, 
and it may help you calculate what sort of growth rate we can expect in 
the future, when combined with both of the above numbers.  Put another 
way, the news is bad, but there is a cap on growth.


http://albuquerque.bizjournals.com/dallas/stories/2008/09/29/story10.html

Eliot



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Joel Esler
Exactly.

On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 10:04 AM, Joel Jaeggli joe...@bogus.com wrote:

 Eliot Lear wrote:
  On 2/8/09 3:24 AM, Jeff S Wheeler wrote:
  Sure, smart phones are becoming more popular.  It's reasonable to assume
  that virtually all cell phones will eventually have an IP address almost
  all the time.
 
  The numbers I keep seeing for so-called smartphones in the press for
  U.S. and Europe are 49% and 50% within two years, respectively.  Here's
  an article you might find interesting about the U.S. domestic market,
  and it may help you calculate what sort of growth rate we can expect in
  the future, when combined with both of the above numbers.  Put another
  way, the news is bad, but there is a cap on growth.

 We live in rather sad times if, subscriber, arpu and internet usage
 growth is considered bad news.

 
 http://albuquerque.bizjournals.com/dallas/stories/2008/09/29/story10.html
 
  Eliot
 





Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Leo Bicknell

I have no personal knowledge of this situation, so this is wild
speculation.

http://news.cnet.com/verizon-completes-alltel-purchase/

Verizon Wireless is going to be soon selling operations in 105
markets.  It may well be that the IP addresses for those markets
will be transfered to the new company as well, and you'll see some
of these blocks leave their name soon.  It could also be that AllTel
had a much lower percentage of subscribers using data, and Verizon
is fixing to change that soon.

With the merger complete Verizon Wireless will have 83.7 million
subscribers (per the article).  I see 27,371,520 IP's in all their
advertised blocks now, add in the 8,388,608 they just got, for a
total of 35,760,128.  If we assume across all blocks they can get
80% USAGE efficiency (which would surprise me) that's enough IP's to
feed data to 28,608,102 subs.  That would mean they can serve about
34% of their customers with data.

Lastly, you've assumed that only a smart phone (not that the term
is well defined) needs an IP address.  I believe this is wrong.
There are plenty of simpler phones (e.g. not a PDA, touch screen,
read your e-mail thing) that can use cellular data to WEP browse,
or to fetch things like ring tones.  They use an IP on the network.

By the same math they have 55.1 million (83.7 million subs - 28.6
they can serve now) they can't serve data to yet, and using the
same 80% effiency that will take another 68.9 million addresses to
do that.  A /6 has 67.1 million addresses, so I suspect you'll see
over time another /6, or two /7's, or four /8's, or eight /9's...

Which leaves us with two take aways:

1) The comment is weird.

2) If one company is likely to need four more /8's, and there are now
   32 in the free pool man is IPv4 in trouble.  At this point it
   would only take eight companies the size of verizon wireless to
   exhaust the free pool WORLDWIDE.  No matter how much effort we put
   into reclaiming IPv4 space there's just no way to keep up with new
   demand.

Is your network IPv6 enabled yet?

-- 
   Leo Bicknell - bickn...@ufp.org - CCIE 3440
PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/


pgpWqMD1lgDsF.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Alexander Harrowell
Leo Bicknell:

Lastly, you've assumed that only a smart phone (not that the term
 is well defined) needs an IP address.  I believe this is wrong.
 There are plenty of simpler phones (e.g. not a PDA, touch screen,
 read your e-mail thing) that can use cellular data to WEP browse,
 or to fetch things like ring tones.  They use an IP on the network.


Alternatively, Verizon is planning to build an all-IP NGN architecture in
the near future, or is at least providing for the possibility of building
one. Mobilkom Austria, for example, has done a deal with Fring to put their
SIP VoIP client on handsets and serve their voice traffic over IP. In that
case, you'd need IP addresses for all the people who use VOICE.

You can do ringtones and the like through USSD...but there's no escape from
voice.


Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Brandon Butterworth
 2) If one company is likely to need four more /8's, and there are now
32 in the free pool man is IPv4 in trouble.

It's going to happen soon enough anyway.

At this point it
would only take eight companies the size of verizon wireless to
exhaust the free pool WORLDWIDE.  No matter how much effort we put
into reclaiming IPv4 space there's just no way to keep up with new
demand.

If they were allowed to. At some point I hope (I've heard the RIRs are
making plans) they'll be told no, you can't roll out something that big
as v4, that's enough infrastructure you can afford to build it as v6,
the rest of the v4 is now only for smaller necessary v4 use.

What is necessary v4 and the v6 only threshold can now be argued over
while everyone else gets on with building v6 or big v4 NATs

brandon



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Steven M. Bellovin
On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 22:45:51 +0100
Eliot Lear l...@cisco.com wrote:

 On 2/8/09 5:32 PM, Leo Bicknell wrote:
  Lastly, you've assumed that only a smart phone (not that the term
  is well defined) needs an IP address.  I believe this is wrong.
  There are plenty of simpler phones (e.g. not a PDA, touch screen,
  read your e-mail thing) that can use cellular data to WEP browse,
  or to fetch things like ring tones.  They use an IP on the network.
 
 
 The term is ill defined, but the general connotation is that they
 will be supplanting dumb phones.  So say what you will,phones with IP 
 addresses is likely to increase as a percentage of the installed
 base. The only thing offsetting that is the indication that the U.S.
 is saturating on total # of cell phones, which is what that article
 says.
 
Of course, my iPhone is currently showing an IP address in 10/8, and
though my EVDO card shows a global address in 70.198/16, I can't ssh to
it -- a TCP traceroute appears to be blocked at the border of Verizon
Wireless' network.  But hey, at least I can ping it.  (Confirmed by
tcpdump on my laptop: the pings are not being spoofed by a border
router.)


--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Aaron Glenn
On Sat, Feb 7, 2009 at 8:06 PM, Jeffrey Lyon
jeffrey.l...@blacklotus.net wrote:
 Whatever happened to NAT?

 Jeff

NAT? why isn't Verizon 'It's the Network' Wireless using IPv6?
speaking-from-assthere should be a FOIA-like method to see large
allocation justifications/ass



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Jeff S Wheeler
On Sun, 2009-02-08 at 14:37 -0800, Aaron Glenn wrote:
 NAT? why isn't Verizon 'It's the Network' Wireless using IPv6?
 speaking-from-assthere should be a FOIA-like method to see large
 allocation justifications/ass
Realistically, I suppose Verizon Wireless is big enough to dictate to
the manufacturers of handsets and infrastructure, you must support IPv6
by X date or we will no longer buy / sell your product.  I wonder if
any wireless carriers are doing this today?

What services require an IP, whether they can be supplied via NAT, how
soon smart phone adoption will bring IP to every handset ... all these
are good and valid points.  However, they all distract from the glaring
and obvious reality that there is no current explanation for Verizon
Wireless needing 27M IPs.

Does ARIN lack sufficient resources to vet jumbo requests?

Did Verizon Wireless benefit from favoritism?

Is Barack Obama concerned that his blackberry will not function if
Verizon one day runs out of v4 addresses for its customers?

- j





RE: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Buhrmaster, Gary

 Does ARIN lack sufficient resources to vet jumbo requests?

I am fairly confident ARIN followed their policies.
The existing policies allow anyone (including Verizon)
to make a request for (and receive) a /9 with appropriate
justification.

If you do not like the policies, please participate
in the ARIN policy process and work to change them.

  Mailing lists:

  arin-p...@arin.net

  Open to the general public. Provides a forum to
  raise and discuss policy-related ideas and issues
  surrounding existing and proposed ARIN policies.
  The PPML list is an intrinsic part of ARIN's Policy
  Development Process (PDP), which details how
  proposed policies are handled.

http://www.arin.net/mailing_lists/index.html



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Mark Andrews

In message 1234128761.17985.352.ca...@guardian.inconcepts.net, Jeff S Wheeler
 writes:
 On Sun, 2009-02-08 at 14:37 -0800, Aaron Glenn wrote:
  NAT? why isn't Verizon 'It's the Network' Wireless using IPv6?
  speaking-from-assthere should be a FOIA-like method to see large
  allocation justifications/ass
 Realistically, I suppose Verizon Wireless is big enough to dictate to
 the manufacturers of handsets and infrastructure, you must support IPv6
 by X date or we will no longer buy / sell your product.  I wonder if
 any wireless carriers are doing this today?
 
 What services require an IP, whether they can be supplied via NAT, how
 soon smart phone adoption will bring IP to every handset ... all these
 are good and valid points.  However, they all distract from the glaring
 and obvious reality that there is no current explanation for Verizon
 Wireless needing 27M IPs.

Well it's a 8M allocation for current population of 2M with
a 25M more potential handsets that will be upgraded soon.
This looks to be consistent with how ARIN hands out other
blocks of address space.

Say on average that you replace a cell phone every three
years.  In 6 months there will be ~4M more addresses needed.

I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
change over bring in new functionality.

Mark
 
 Does ARIN lack sufficient resources to vet jumbo requests?
 
 Did Verizon Wireless benefit from favoritism?
 
 Is Barack Obama concerned that his blackberry will not function if
 Verizon one day runs out of v4 addresses for its customers?
 
 - j
 
 
 
-- 
Mark Andrews, ISC
1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: mark_andr...@isc.org



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Aaron Glenn
On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 4:07 PM, Mark Andrews mark_andr...@isc.org wrote:

I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
change over bring in new functionality.

so if they don't deploy IPv6 then ('extremely high growth period'),
when will they? I don't presume to speak for everyone who immediately
felt that tinge of surprise at reading of a /9 being allocated, but
the blame is being laid on vzw not doing something other than 'can we
have a /9 please?' --not ARIN and/or it's policies (another mailing
list, duly noted)



RE: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Frank Bulk
This discussion about smartphones and the like was presuming that those
devices all received public IPs -- my experience has been more often than
not that they get RFC 1918 addresses.

Frank 

-Original Message-
From: Steven M. Bellovin [mailto:s...@cs.columbia.edu] 
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2009 3:58 PM
To: Eliot Lear
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 22:45:51 +0100
Eliot Lear l...@cisco.com wrote:

 On 2/8/09 5:32 PM, Leo Bicknell wrote:
  Lastly, you've assumed that only a smart phone (not that the term
  is well defined) needs an IP address.  I believe this is wrong.
  There are plenty of simpler phones (e.g. not a PDA, touch screen,
  read your e-mail thing) that can use cellular data to WEP browse,
  or to fetch things like ring tones.  They use an IP on the network.
 

 The term is ill defined, but the general connotation is that they
 will be supplanting dumb phones.  So say what you will,phones with IP
 addresses is likely to increase as a percentage of the installed
 base. The only thing offsetting that is the indication that the U.S.
 is saturating on total # of cell phones, which is what that article
 says.

Of course, my iPhone is currently showing an IP address in 10/8, and
though my EVDO card shows a global address in 70.198/16, I can't ssh to
it -- a TCP traceroute appears to be blocked at the border of Verizon
Wireless' network.  But hey, at least I can ping it.  (Confirmed by
tcpdump on my laptop: the pings are not being spoofed by a border
router.)


--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb





Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread David Conrad

On Feb 8, 2009, at 7:37 PM, Aaron Glenn wrote:

so if they don't deploy IPv6 then ('extremely high growth period'),
when will they?


Hint: how many of the (say) Alexa top 1000 websites are IPv6 enabled?

Regards,
-drc




RE: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Skywing
For better or worse, Verizon hands out globally routable addresses for 
smartphones.  (Certainly, the one I've got has one.)  They seem to come from 
the same pool as data card links.

Note that I suspect that there's a nontrivial number of folk that are used to 
using some not quite really NAT friendly protocols like IPsec on their 
(targeted-for-business primarily not iPhone smartphones).  (Yeah, there's 
IPsec NAT-T, which I've seen fall flat on its face countless times.)

Breaking that sort of connectivity is likely to be hard to swallow for some 
nontrivial portion of some of their customers.

- S


-Original Message-
From: Frank Bulk [mailto:frnk...@iname.com] 
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2009 10:48 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: RE: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

This discussion about smartphones and the like was presuming that those
devices all received public IPs -- my experience has been more often than
not that they get RFC 1918 addresses.

Frank 

-Original Message-
From: Steven M. Bellovin [mailto:s...@cs.columbia.edu] 
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2009 3:58 PM
To: Eliot Lear
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

On Sun, 08 Feb 2009 22:45:51 +0100
Eliot Lear l...@cisco.com wrote:

 On 2/8/09 5:32 PM, Leo Bicknell wrote:
  Lastly, you've assumed that only a smart phone (not that the term
  is well defined) needs an IP address.  I believe this is wrong.
  There are plenty of simpler phones (e.g. not a PDA, touch screen,
  read your e-mail thing) that can use cellular data to WEP browse,
  or to fetch things like ring tones.  They use an IP on the network.
 

 The term is ill defined, but the general connotation is that they
 will be supplanting dumb phones.  So say what you will,phones with IP
 addresses is likely to increase as a percentage of the installed
 base. The only thing offsetting that is the indication that the U.S.
 is saturating on total # of cell phones, which is what that article
 says.

Of course, my iPhone is currently showing an IP address in 10/8, and
though my EVDO card shows a global address in 70.198/16, I can't ssh to
it -- a TCP traceroute appears to be blocked at the border of Verizon
Wireless' network.  But hey, at least I can ping it.  (Confirmed by
tcpdump on my laptop: the pings are not being spoofed by a border
router.)


--Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb






RE: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Skywing
I think that you've got a bit of a logic fault here.  You seem to be assuming 
that because you can't find any external any sign of Verizon preparing for 
IPv6, that they're definitely not doing so.

Maybe they are, maybe they aren't (your -guess- is as good as mine), but that 
process is not necessarily going to be broadcast to the entire world.  
Especially after the earlier thread via customer IPv6 rollouts by ISPs, I think 
it should be fairly evident that there can be nontrivial backend plumbing 
work needed to get things IPv6 ready, not all of which is necessarily going to 
be inherently customer-visible for all stages of progress.

- S


-Original Message-
From: Aaron Glenn [mailto:aaron.gl...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Sunday, February 08, 2009 10:37 PM
To: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 4:07 PM, Mark Andrews mark_andr...@isc.org wrote:

I don't see any reason to complain based on those numbers.
It's just a extremely high growth period due to technology
change over bring in new functionality.

so if they don't deploy IPv6 then ('extremely high growth period'),
when will they? I don't presume to speak for everyone who immediately
felt that tinge of surprise at reading of a /9 being allocated, but
the blame is being laid on vzw not doing something other than 'can we
have a /9 please?' --not ARIN and/or it's policies (another mailing
list, duly noted)




Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Paul Wall
On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 5:37 PM, Aaron Glenn aaron.gl...@gmail.com wrote:
 NAT? why isn't Verizon 'It's the Network' Wireless using IPv6?
 speaking-from-assthere should be a FOIA-like method to see large
 allocation justifications/ass

Probably because Verizon Business isn't using it, unless you count a
couple of lab GRE tunnels.

Drive Slow,
Paul Wall



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Paul Wall
On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Jeff S Wheeler j...@inconcepts.biz wrote:
 What services require an IP, whether they can be supplied via NAT, how
 soon smart phone adoption will bring IP to every handset ... all these
 are good and valid points.  However, they all distract from the glaring
 and obvious reality that there is no current explanation for Verizon
 Wireless needing 27M IPs.

27 million IP addresses for 45 million customers with addressable
devices sounds well within ARIN's justification guidelines.

Just because most of your customers are trying to pull the wool over
ARIN's eyes doesn't mean Verizon is too. :)

Drive Slow,
Paul Wall



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Christopher Morrow
On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 1:08 AM, Paul Wall pauldotw...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Sun, Feb 8, 2009 at 5:37 PM, Aaron Glenn aaron.gl...@gmail.com wrote:
 NAT? why isn't Verizon 'It's the Network' Wireless using IPv6?
 speaking-from-assthere should be a FOIA-like method to see large
 allocation justifications/ass

 Probably because Verizon Business isn't using it, unless you count a
 couple of lab GRE tunnels.

so... actually... if you ask for v6 apparently vzb's deployment is
still moving along and is accessible for customers.

FiOS/DSL though is not :(

-Chris



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-08 Thread Mike Leber


David Conrad wrote:

On Feb 8, 2009, at 7:37 PM, Aaron Glenn wrote:

so if they don't deploy IPv6 then ('extremely high growth period'),
when will they?


Hint: how many of the (say) Alexa top 1000 websites are IPv6 enabled?


haha, I went insane for a moment and though you said Freenix top 1000, 
and so I just checked that.  Here is the answer to the question you 
didn't ask:


Top 1000 Usenet Servers in the World
list here: http://news.anthologeek.net/top1000.current.txt
details here: http://news.anthologeek.net

1000 usenet server names
913 are potentially valid hostnames (in usenet news a server name does 
necessarily correspond directly to a hostname)

722 have ipv4 address records (A)
67 have ipv6 address records ()
9.2% of the top 1000 usenet servers have added support for ipv6

I'm sure there are more this took exactly 183 seconds of work. ;)

Here they are:

feeder.erje.net 2001:470:992a::3e19:561
feeder4.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::4:1
news.dal.ca 2001:410:a010:1:214:5eff:fe0a:4a4e
news.nonexiste.net 2002:6009:93d5::1
nrc-news.nrc.ca 2001:410:9000:2::2
news.z74.net 2001:610:637:4::211
news.kjsl.com 2001:1868:204::104
npeer.de.kpn-eurorings.net 2001:680:0:26::2
feeder6.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::6:1
feeder3.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::3:1
news.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::38
feeder2.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::2:1
feeder5.cambrium.nl 2a02:58:3:119::5:1
syros.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::17
vlad-tepes.bofh.it 2001:1418:13:1::5
news.stack.nl 2001:610:1108:5011:230:48ff:fe12:2794
ikarus.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::38
news.space.net 2001:608::1000:7
feed.news.tnib.de 2001:1b18:f:4::4
newsfeed.velia.net 2a01:7a0:3::254
news.isoc.lu 2001:a18:0:405:0:a0:456:1
ikaria.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::39
newsfeed.teleport-iabg.de 2001:1b10:100::119:1
news.tnib.de 2001:1b18:f:4::2
kanaga.switch.ch 2001:620:0:8::119:2
erode.bofh.it 2001:1418:13:1::3
irazu.switch.ch 2001:620:0:8::119:3
bofh.it 2001:1418:13::42
newsfeed.atman.pl 2001:1a68:0:4::2
news.mb-net.net 2a01:198:292:0:210:dcff:fe67:6b03
news.gnuher.de 2a01:198:293::2
switch.ch 2001:620:0:1b::b
news.k-dsl.de 2a02:7a0:1::5
news.task.gda.pl 2001:4070:1::fafe
news1.tnib.de 2001:1b18:f:4::2
aspen.stu.neva.ru 2001:b08:2:100::96
novso.com 2001:1668:2102:4::4
citadel.nobulus.com 2001:6f8:892:6ff::11:133
feeder.news.heanet.ie 2001:770:18:2::c101:db29
news-zh.switch.ch 2001:620:0:3::119:1
news.szn.dk 2001:1448:89::10:d85d
news.litech.org 2001:440:fff9:100:202:b3ff:fea4:a44e
news.weisnix.org 2001:6f8:892:6ff:213:8fff:febb:bec3
news.panservice.it 2001:40d0:0:4000::e
nntp.eutelia.it 2001:750:2:3::20
bolzen.all.de 2001:bf0::60
newsfeed.esat.net 2001:7c8:3:1::3
news.snarked.org 2607:f350:1::1:4
feed1.news.be.easynet.net 2001:6f8:200:2::5:46
aotearoa.belnet.be 2001:6a8:3c80::58
news.babsi.de 2a01:198:292:0:230:48ff:fe51:a68c
news.muc.de 2001:608:1000::2
newsfeed.carnet.hr 2001:b68:e160::3
news.nask.pl 2001:a10:1:::3:c9a2
news.linuxfan.it 2001:4c90:2::6
texta.sil.at 2001:858:2:1::2
news.stupi.se 2001:440:1880:5::10
news.supermedia.pl 2001:4c30:0:3::12
news.trigofacile.com 2001:41d0:1:6d44::1
nuzba.szn.dk 2001:6f8:1232::263:8546
geiz-ist-geil.priv.at 2001:858:666:f001::57
newsfeed.sunet.se 2001:6b0:7:88::101
news.pimp.lart.info 2001:6f8:9ed::1
glou.fr.eu.org 2001:838:30b::1
news.germany.com 2001:4068:101:119:1::77
feeder.z74.net 2001:610:637:4::211
news.nask.org.pl 2001:a10:1:::3:c9a2

Mike.

--
+ H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C +
| Mike LeberWholesale IPv4 and IPv6 Transit  510 580 4100 |
| Hurricane Electric   AS6939 |
| mle...@he.net Internet Backbone  Colocation  http://he.net |
+-+



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-07 Thread Jeffrey Lyon
Whatever happened to NAT?

Jeff

On Sat, Feb 7, 2009 at 9:24 PM, Jeff S Wheeler j...@inconcepts.biz wrote:
 Dear list,

 Since IPv4 exhaustion is an increasingly serious and timely topic
 lately, I would like to point out something that interests me, and maybe
 everyone else who will be spending a lot on Tylenol and booze when we
 really do run out of v4 IPs.

 I have trouble understanding why an ARIN record for a network regularly
 receiving new, out-sized IPv4 allocations on the order of millions of
 addresses at once would publish a remark like the one below, indicating
 that Verizon Wireless has about 2 million IPs allocated.

 OrgName:Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless
 CIDR:   97.128.0.0/9
 Comment:Verizon Wireless currently has 44.3 Million
 Comment:subscribers with 2.097 Million IP addresses allocated.
 RegDate:2008-04-14

 This may be unscientific and full of error, but if you add up all the
 IPs behind AS6167, you get a pretty big number, about 27 million.  If I
 make more dangerous assumptions, I might argue that a network with a
 need for 2 million IPs, at the time this /9 was handed out, already had
 about 19 million.  Then it received 8 million more.

 Sure, smart phones are becoming more popular.  It's reasonable to assume
 that virtually all cell phones will eventually have an IP address almost
 all the time.  But that isn't the case right now, and the ARIN is in the
 business of supplying its members with six months worth of addresses.
 If everyone is expected to run out and buy a new phone and start using
 the Google right away, and stay on it all the time, maybe cellular
 operators really need a lot more IP addresses.  If not, why does Verizon
 Wireless have 27 million IPs when the above comment indicates they need
 only a tenth of that?

 - j






-- 
Jeffrey Lyon, Leadership Team
jeffrey.l...@blacklotus.net | http://www.blacklotus.net
Black Lotus Communications of The IRC Company, Inc.

Look for us at HostingCon 2009 in Washington, DC on August 10th - 12th
at Booth #401.



Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-07 Thread Tim Eberhard
Any cell phone that uses data service to download a ringtone, wallpaper,
picature, use their TV/radio webcast service, or their walkie talkie feature
will use an IP address.

In addition to that Verizon wireless sells their EVDO aircards for laptops.

Given the size of their customer base it is not shocking that they have 27
million IP addresses in their pool. ARIN doesn't just give them away it
would be up to Verizon to prove that they are utilizing 90+% before they
could be alloted any additional IP's.

 Hope this helps explain things a little bit.

-Tim Eberhard


Sure, smart phones are becoming more popular.  It's reasonable to assume
 that virtually all cell phones will eventually have an IP address almost
 all the time.  But that isn't the case right now, and the ARIN is in the
 business of supplying its members with six months worth of addresses.
 If everyone is expected to run out and buy a new phone and start using
 the Google right away, and stay on it all the time, maybe cellular
 operators really need a lot more IP addresses.  If not, why does Verizon
 Wireless have 27 million IPs when the above comment indicates they need
 only a tenth of that?

 - j





Re: 97.128.0.0/9 allocation to verizon wireless

2009-02-07 Thread Martin Hannigan
On Sat, Feb 7, 2009 at 9:24 PM, Jeff S Wheeler j...@inconcepts.biz wrote:

 Dear list,

 Since IPv4 exhaustion is an increasingly serious and timely topic
 lately, I would like to point out something that interests me, and maybe
 everyone else who will be spending a lot on Tylenol and booze when we
 really do run out of v4 IPs.

 I have trouble understanding why an ARIN record for a network regularly
 receiving new, out-sized IPv4 allocations on the order of millions of
 addresses at once would publish a remark like the one below, indicating
 that Verizon Wireless has about 2 million IPs allocated.

 OrgName:Cellco Partnership DBA Verizon Wireless
 CIDR:   97.128.0.0/9
 Comment:Verizon Wireless currently has 44.3 Million
 Comment:subscribers with 2.097 Million IP addresses allocated.
 RegDate:2008-04-14


Why don't you try asking them?

OrgTechHandle: 
MGE16-ARINhttp://ws.arin.net/whois/?queryinput=P%20%21%20MGE16-ARIN
OrgTechName: George, Matt
OrgTechPhone: +1-908-306-7000
OrgTechEmail: ab...@verizonwireless.com