Re: Reality (was RE: Stupid NAT tricks and how to stop them.)

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The real issue is that Geoff's linear projections against the
current .75
/8's per month going out from the RIRs to hit a 2012 date don't
match the
historical growth.

I suppose I should respond here, particularly as the quote about using linear
models is not a correct one.

The projection model I use is updated daily at http://ipv4.potaroo.net
using a rolling window of the past 1000 days to generate a predictive
model of address consumption.

Today's projection of IANA pool exhaustion is September 2011 and RIR
pool exhaustion a little over a year later (assuming that the RIR pool
can be cleaned out with 100% efficiency - which is an unrealistic
assumption, of course).

The growth model used is an exponential one, and the report shows the
fit of linear, exponential and O(2) polynomial curves to the data used
for projection (Figure 22). The choise of exponential is based on a decent
least squares linear best fit to the logarithm of the smoothed data.

I use a 1000 day baseline (i.e. the last 1000 days of hourly data) to produce
the projection model. i.e. the model assumes that tomorrow will be
a lot like today, and the changes will be the same changes that were
evident in the past.

The trend predictor I use in the growth in the advertised address range
in the BGP table, and I derive RIR and IANA consumption figures from
a combination of this primary trend plus a related trend in the growth
of the unadvertised address pool relative to the growth in the advertised
address pool

I then model RIR behaviour in order to model IANA pool consumption
in order to derive a date of pool exhaustion, using existing
IANA to RIR address allocation procedures as the basis of the model.

How good is this technique? I guess we'll know in about 6 years or so,
but the nature of this daily update is that it will tend to self-correct
over time. Late 2005 was a large 'bubble' of addresses entering the
routing table - as happened early 2003. Currently the growth
rate is lower than this recent peak. This makes predictor models a
little more challenging in terms of figuring out whether there is
any sense in artificially weighting more recent data over older
data.

The one thing I'll note here is that this model makes no consideration
of any form of 'run' on remaining address resources, nor any consideration
of a change in allocation practices, nor a change in industry
demands over and above what's already visible in trend production.

I notice that this thread is labelled "reality". Projections are not reality,
they are always guesses to one extent or another as to what will happen.
Reality is, of course, what has happened and what is happening.
So, to some extent all of this  predicting stuff is just fun with numbers.
The reasonable high level bits to take away from this exercise and others
that have occurred and will no doubt occur in the future, is that there is
an increasing level of certainty that the current forms of access
and distribution of IPv4 addresses will experience a discontinuity
sometime in the next 4 - 8 years.

regards,

  Geoff




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