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Published on: Friday, 15 April 2011 We wish to inform you that as of Friday, 15 April 2011, the APNIC pool reached the Final /8 IPv4 address block, bringing us to Stage Three of IPv4 exhaustion in the Asia Pacific. Last /8 address policy IPv4 requests will now be assessed under section 9.10 in "Policies for IPv4 address space management in the Asia Pacific region". APNIC's objective during Stage T
Published on: Friday, 4 February 2011 Today the Number Resource Organization (NRO), the body which represents the five Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) announced the final five remaining address blocks (one /8 block containing approximately 16.5 million IP addresses) were shared equally among the world’s five regions. This event indicates a key milestone in IPv4 exhaustion; the Internet Assigne
Published on: Tuesday, 1 February 2011 Dear Colleagues The information in this announcement is to enable the Internet community to update network configurations, such as routing filters, where required. APNIC received the following IPv4 address blocks from IANA in February 2011 and will be making allocations from these ranges in the near future: 39/8 106/8 Reachability and routability testing of t
The above bar graph shows APNIC pool of Available IPv4 addresses. It shows the daily total of IPv4 addresses, expressed in terms of /8s. The total decreased and increased according to APNIC allocations to networks, delegations of /8s received from IANA, and resource returns. On 15 April 2011, the APNIC pool reached the last /8 of available IPv4 addresses, triggering the Final /8 policy. APNIC IPv4
Table of contents 1. Format 2. Production process 3. File naming and exchange 3.1 File name 3.2 File exchange 3.3 File availability 4. File format 4.1 Comments 4.2 File header 4.3 Record format 5. Validation/assumptions 6. Non-Registry allocated and assigned data 7. Extensions to the format 8. Data retention 1. Format RIRs must comply with this standard in every respect
Information returned by this script is applicable only to the APNIC IP ranges. For information regarding which Regional Internet Registry is authoritative for which IP range, see http://www.apnic.net/db/RIRs.html. Certain organisations within the Asia-Pacific Region may not be using APNIC IP space. Show IPv4 addresses for countries in (2-letter codes only). IPv4 RangeCIDRHome CountryAuthoritive R
A place for the APNIC community to connect, discuss and share information related to Internet addressing and networking. Orbit is an evolution of mailing lists, facilitated by APNIC on behalf of the community. Everyone in the community is encouraged to participate. Please be mindful that the Code of Conduct applies. To unsubscribe at any time, visit the ‘subscribe’ section of the relevant mailing
Thanks to the APNIC's sponsors; The WIDE Project, Cisco Systems, Telstra, Netapp and Nominum for their support of APNIC.
Registration is open now for APNIC 58! Join your peers from around the region and the Pacific to share information about Internet operations and technologies and build your skills with the workshops on offer. Register by 26 July 2024 to take advantage of the early bird discount of 25% on workshop fees.
APNIC resource ranges Resource ranges by RIR Resource ranges and geographical data More information APNIC resource ranges APNIC allocates resources in the following ranges within the Asia Pacific region: IPv4 112.0.0.0/8 113.0.0.0/8 114.0.0.0/8 115.0.0.0/8 116.0.0.0/8 117.0.0.0/8 118.0.0.0/8 119.0.0.0/8 120.0.0.0/8 121.0.0.0/8 122.0.0.0/8 123.0.0.0/8 124.0.0.0/8 125.0.0.0/8 126.0.0.0
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