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What is the most standard subnet length on internet
- Subject: What is the most standard subnet length on internet
- From: lionair at samsung.com (정치영)
- Date: Tue, 23 Dec 2008 00:10:24 +0000 (GMT)
Hi all,
I appreciate many people gave me advices,
Some of persons asked me about my questions, I'm sorry for that I couldn't reply to everyone.
Because of your help, I could get many opinions and standards regarding IP allocation policy.
by the way, in APNIC's IP allocation sizes policy, there is a comments like below.
"Below are the minimum sizes for allocations and assignments, This information is provided at the request of the ISP community
to assist in filtering policy decisions "
Currently, is there any provider filtering routes under LIR's minimum allocation size such as /22 ?
Best regards,
=============================================
Chi-Young Joung
SAMSUNG NETWORKS Inc.
Email: lionair at samsung.com
Tel +82 70 7015 0623, Mobile +82 17 520 9193
Fax +82 70 7016 0031
=============================================
------- Original Message -------
Sender : Danny McPherson<danny at tcb.net>
Date : 2008-12-21 02:42 (GMT+09:00)
Title : Re: What is the most standard subnet length on internet
On Dec 18, 2008, at 9:43 PM, ??? wrote:
> Suresh,
>
> Yes, I guess my concern is close to the second meaning.
>
> It seems so simple. Currently annoucement of /24 seems to be okey,
> most upstream providers accept this.
> However I wonder if there is any ground rule based on any standard
> or official recommandation.
> If there is some standardized rule about prefix length to be
> annouced, I will make my bgp & IP allocation policy of
> each data center of my company, and I will be able to more fairly
> and squarely speak to my customer like this
> "You have to change your server's IP address if you want move your
> server to other place"
Some useful guidance is provided here (and in
subsequent references) as well:
An Architecture for IP Address Allocation with CIDR
<http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1518>
Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and
Aggregation Strategy
<http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1519>
Network Renumbering Overview
<http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2071>
A Framework for Inter-Domain Route Aggregation
<http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2519>
HTH,
-danny