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Welcome to the Local Internet Registry Course. RIPE Network Co-ordination Centre <training@ripe.net> NEW version for RPSL launch to be ready for 3rd April!!!. Logistics. Mobile phones, toilets, fire exits, parking, smoking places ... Time line breaks lunch ( vegetarians? )
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Welcome to theLocal Internet Registry Course RIPE Network Co-ordination Centre <training@ripe.net> NEW version for RPSL launch to be ready for 3rd April!!!
Logistics • Mobile phones, toilets, fire exits, parking, smoking places ... • Time line • breaks • lunch (vegetarians?) • early departures? • Material • slides • handouts • reference booklet • URLs included • trainers
Method and Notations • Flow of the content • material divided into sections • life-cycle of the registry • from general to more specific issues • from simple to more complex examples • Notation in slides: details follow in the rest of the current section * advanced issue; to be clarified later on find enclosed in handouts • Questions • exchange of experience • useful feedback for improvement
Schedule • Evaluation of specific cases • Large request • PI request • Renumbering • 15:00 tea break • New allocation • Advanced reverse delegation • Routing Registry • Administrivia • audit activity, billing, closing LIR • IPv6 • 17:00-18:00 closing discussion 9:00 Introduction • RIPE & RIPE NCC • Initial Administrivia • First Request 11:00 coffee break • Customer’s Request • evaluation • RIPE Database • Reverse Delegation • AS Numbers 13:00 lunch • Advanced database issues • Assignment Window
Course Background ? • Course objective - to make LIR’s life easier by • explaining how RIPE NCC does it’s job • teaching how LIRs can interact with RIPE NCC • bringing the latest details about policies • listening to comments and input form LIRs • Discovering faces behind e-mail addresses • History and background • given since 1995 • in whole RIPE NCC service region • but in English • paid as a part of startup fee
What is RIPE? • Réseaux IP Européens (1989) • RIPE is a collaborative organisation open to all parties interested in Internet administration, development and network operations • RIPE is • open forum • voluntary participation • works by consensus • NO legal power • does NOT develop Internet Standards
Global Context • World-wide Internet • Technical Development & Standards Body • World-wide Operators Forum IETF IEPG NANOG RIPE APRICOT
How RIPE Works • RIPE chair <chair@ripe.net> • Chair is: Rob Blokzijl (Nikhef) • How does it work? • working groups mailing lists • <majordomo@ripe.net> • web archived • meetings • You make it possible!
RIPE Meetings • 3 times a year • RIPE 39, Bologna, Italy, 30 April - 4May 2001 • RIPE 40, Prague, Czech Republic, 1-5 Oct. 2001 • ~4.5 day long • 300+ participants • Working group meetings • Plenary • Presentations • Long breaks • Social events • Terminal room • IPv4, IPv6, wireless connectivity • <meeting@ripe.net>
What is the RIPE NCC? • Network Co-ordination Centre • The RIPE NCC is a “co-ordination” and support service for its members and RIPE community • One of 3 Regional Internet Registries (RIR) • Why a NCC ? Actions agreed in RIPE community needed • continuity and professionalism • neutrality and impartiality
RIPE NCC History • Birth - April 1992 • TERENA legal umbrella • BecameRIR in September 1992 • Contributing LIRs in 1995 • In 1998 independent • A new structure (ripe-161) • not-for-profit association • General Assembly of all members • Executive Committee of elected nominees
Formal Decision Making “Consensus” Model RIPE proposes activity plan RIPE NCC proposes budget to accompany activity plan (ripe-213) General Assembly votes on both activities and budget at yearly meeting
Vital Statistics • Statistics 1992 • 3 staff members • No Local IR’s • 182,528 hosts in European Internet • 7,955 objects in RIPE database (June ‘92) • Statistics Now • 67 staff (22 nationalities) • 2,595+ participating Local IR’s • 12,088,135+ countable hosts in the RIPE NCC region • 3,792,085+ objects in the database
RIPE NCC Services • Member Services • Registration Services • IPv4 addresses • IPv6 addresses • AS numbers • LIR Training Courses • <hostmaster@ripe.net> • Reverse domain delegation • NOT registering domain names • Test Traffic Measurements • Public Services • RIPE whois database maintenance • Routing Registry Maintenance • Co-ordination • RIPE support • liaison with: • LIRs / RIRs / ICANN - ASO/etc • Information dissemination • Maintenance of tools
Summary: RIPE & RIPE NCC Two separate organisations, closely interdependent • RIPE • open forum for discussing policies • RIPE NCC • legitimate, not-for-profit association • formal membership • neutral and impartial
RIPE Database Description How to query the Database How to create contact information objects
RIPE Database (1) • Public Network Management Database • Information about objects IP address space inetnum, inet6num reverse domains domain routing policies route, aut-num contact details person, role, mntner • Server whois.ripe.net • UNIX command line queries • http://www.ripe.net/ripencc/pub-services/db/
RIPE Database (2) • Software Management • RIPE NCC • Database Working Group (RIPE community) • Data Management • LIRs • other users • RIPE NCC • Information content not responsibility of RIPE NCC • Protection mechanisms not default, but strongly encouraged
Migration to DB Version 3 • Re-implementation of DB software • re-written server and client • Routing Policy Specification Language • RPSL compliant • some attributes and objects changed • e.g. mandatory protection of inetnum-s • most changes in the RR • user query scripts need re-writing • Everybody will be affected! • http://www.ripe.net/rpsl/
Database Migration Time Line • 23-Apr-2001: switching to the RPSL database • queries return RPSL only • RIPE-181 updates possible; automatically converted to RPSL Date | 23 April | 14 May | 15 October ---------------------------------------------------------------------- RPSL |auto-rpsl@ripe.net | auto-dbm@ripe.net RIPE-181|auto-dbm@ripe.net | auto-181@ripe.net| N / A • 15-Oct-2001: RIPE-181 updates no longer possible
Basic Queries • Whois (command line, web interface) • searches only look-up keys • returns exact match • some inverse look-ups possible using “-i” flag • Glimpse - full text search • Look-up keys - usually the object name • person, role: name, email, nic-hdl • inetnum: address (or range), netname • Inverse keys • notify, mnt-by, mnt-lower, admin-/tech-/zone-c, Example
Transition to RPSL Creating person Object • Check if person object exists in RIPE DB • whois {person’s name; email address} • only one object per person • Obtain and complete a template • whois -t person • -v (verbose) • Send to <auto-dbm@ripe.net> • see “The DB Transition Handout” (23.4.01-15.10.01) • Each person object has unique nic-hdl
whois -t person person: [mandatory] [single] [lookup key] address: [mandatory] [multiple] [ ] phone: [mandatory] [multiple] [ ] fax-no: [optional] [multiple] [ ] e-mail: [optional] [multiple] [lookup key] nic-hdl: [mandatory] [single] [primary/look-up key] remarks: [optional] [multiple] [ ] notify: [optional] [multiple] [inverse key] mnt-by: [optional] [multiple] [inverse key] changed: [mandatory] [multiple] [ ] source: [mandatory] [single] [ ]
nic-hdl • Mandatory attribute • Only way to clear ambiguity in person objects • Format: <initials><number>-<regional registry> • e.g. AB123-APNIC, CD567-RIPE • Combination of person nameandnic-hdl is the primary key for person object • Use “AUTO-#” placeholders person: Piet Bakker ... nic-hdl: AUTO-1 person: Jan van der Bruk ... nic-hdl: AUTO-#initials PB1234-RIPE AUTO-2JVDB JVDB1-RIPE
Database Robot Responses • Successful update • acknowledgement • Warnings • object accepted but might be ambiguous • object corrected and accepted • Errors • object NOT corrected and NOT accepted • diagnostics in acknowledgement • If not clear send questions to <ripe-dbm@ripe.net> • include error report
‘role’ Object % whois -h whois.ripe.net -t role role: [mandatory] [single] [primary/look-up key] address: [mandatory] [multiple] [ ] phone: [optional] [multiple] [ ] fax-no: [optional] [multiple] [ ] e-mail: [mandatory] [multiple] [look-up key] trouble: [optional] [multiple] [ ] admin-c: [mandatory] [multiple] [inverse key] tech-c: [mandatory] [multiple] [inverse key] nic-hdl: [mandatory] [single] [primary/look-up key] remarks: [optional] [multiple] [ ] notify: [optional] [multiple] [inverse key] mnt-by: [optional] [multiple] [inverse key] changed: [mandatory] [multiple] [ ] source: [mandatory] [single] [ ]
Role Object for Contact Persons role: BlueLight Contact Role description: Hostmaster for Blue Light BV admin-c: JAJA1-RIPE tech-c: AB321-RIPE tech-c: WF2121-RIPE email: hostmaster@bluelight.nl trouble: 24/7 phone number: +31-60-123-4567 nic-hdl: BL112-RIPE notify: hm-dbm-msgs@ripe.net notify: auto-hm@bluelight.nl mntner: BLUELIGHT-MNT changed: hostmaster@bluelight.nl 20000202 source: RIPE
Setting up a Local Internet Registry • Becoming LIR • Terminology • First Request
Becoming LIR • Completed application form (ripe-212) • Provided Reg-ID & contact persons • <new-lir@ripe.net> • Read relevant RIPE documents • Signed contract (ripe-191) • agreed to follow policies and procedures • Paid the sign-up & yearly fee • <billing@ripe.net>
Terminology • Allocation • address space given to registries which is held by them to assign to customers • Assignment • address space given to end-users for use in operational networks /20 allocation = 4096 addresses assignment assignment
Goals of the Internet Registry System • Aggregation • routability • …. • Conservation • … • …. • Registration • uniqueness • troubleshooting
Local IR Regional Registry Structure IANA / ICANN ARIN RIPE NCC APNIC Local IR Enterprise Local IR ISP End User End User
24 110 256 192.0.0.0 - 223.255.255.255 Classful Notation network host 8 0 16,777,216 Class A 0.0.0.0 - 127.255.255.255 16 10 65,536 Class B 128.0.0.0 - 191.255.255.255 Class C • Obsolete because of • depletion of B space • too many routes from C space • Solution • Classless Inter Domain Routing • hierarchical address space allocation
History of IP Addressing • Classfull • Subnetting • using subnet mask in Class B and Class C networks • Supernetting • using multiple Class C networks • Variable Length Subnet Mask • CIDR (Classless Inter Domain Routing) • flexible boundary between network and host part • source and destination address in the prefix format • route aggregation • Hierarchical address space allocation
Classless Notation Addresses Prefix Classful Net Mask ... ... ... ... /29 8 255.255.255.248 16 /28 255.255.255.240 32 /27 255.255.255.224 64 /26 255.255.255.192 128 /25 255.255.255.128 256 /24 1 C 255.255.255.0 ... ... ... ... 4096 /20 16 C’s 255.255.240.0 8192 /19 32 C’s 255.255.224 16384 /18 64 C’s 255.255.192 32768 /17 128 C’s 255.255.128 65536 /16 1 B 255.255.0.0 ... ... ... ...
First Request • LIR wants a block of IP addresses • e.g. for own network / infrastructure • do not include needs of customers yet • no need to justify usage of the whole allocation • Steps: • Complete request form ripe-141 • Send request to <hostmaster@ripe.net> • RIPE NCC evaluate and approve request • With the first ASSIGNMENT approved, RIPE NCC also makes an ALLOCATION • default minimum size /20 (4096 addresses)
New in RPSL! First Request Approved • RIPE NCC hostmaster enters allocation and assignment objects into the RIPE database only at the first request • /24 & /25 & /26 (448) instead of /23 (512) • at the beginning of the block (can be modified later) • with RIPE-NCC-NONE-MNT (or LIR mntner) • Whole allocated range can be announced immediately • AW=0 • Every request has to be sent for approval to RIPE NCC
Requesting the Address Space • Assignment Process • Completing the request form • Communication with the hostmaster • Answers from the HM robot • Creating DB objects
When to send a request • For your own infrastructure • leased lines • dial-up • p2p links • For each customer • 8 or more addresses • For ISP client’s infrastructure • For ISP client’s customers
Request Formripe-141 I. General Information Overview of Organisation Contact Information Current Address Space Usage II. The Request Request Overview Addressing Plan III. Database Information IV. Optional Information
Before Submitting the Request • Web form • filling in the requests • syntax check • http://www.ripe.net/cgi-bin/web141/web141.pl.cgi • ftp://ftp.ripe.net/tools/web141.pl.cgi • Complete documentation reduces need for iteration • All the data communicated with RIPE NCC is kept strictly confidential • Documentation for RIPE NCC has to be in English • Link to: