Hi
are there any 4-byte ASN ranges reserved for private use?
regards andre
are there any 4-byte ASN ranges reserved for private use?
http://www.iana.org/assignments/as-numbers/as-numbers.xhtml
Thomas
As Thomas already mentioned there's a list on the IANA website, but there isn't anything special. The question is just what the reservation of 65536-131071 is to be used for?! Anyone knows?
-----Original Message----- From: swinog-bounces@lists.swinog.ch [mailto:swinog-bounces@lists.swinog.ch] On Behalf Of tuxli@tuxli.net Sent: Monday, May 10, 2010 2:01 PM To: swinog@swinog.ch Subject: [swinog] 4-Byte Private ASN
Hi
are there any 4-byte ASN ranges reserved for private use?
regards andre
_______________________________________________ swinog mailing list swinog@lists.swinog.ch http://lists.swinog.ch/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/swinog
Hi,
65536 is 0x1000 131071 is 0x1FFFF
My guess, this is the remainder of the first "block" as all the allocations are aligned on hex boundaries.
Regards,
Thomas Mangin Technical Director -- Exa Networks Limited - http://www.exa-networks.co.uk/ Company No. 04922037 - VAT no. 829 1565 09 27-29 Mill Field Road, BD16 1PY, UK Phone: +44 (0) 845 145 1234 - Fax: +44 (0) 1274 567646
On 10 May 2010, at 13:13, Mario Iseli wrote:
As Thomas already mentioned there's a list on the IANA website, but there isn't anything special. The question is just what the reservation of 65536-131071 is to be used for?! Anyone knows?
-----Original Message----- From: swinog-bounces@lists.swinog.ch [mailto:swinog-bounces@lists.swinog.ch] On Behalf Of tuxli@tuxli.net Sent: Monday, May 10, 2010 2:01 PM To: swinog@swinog.ch Subject: [swinog] 4-Byte Private ASN
Hi
are there any 4-byte ASN ranges reserved for private use?
regards andre
swinog mailing list swinog@lists.swinog.ch http://lists.swinog.ch/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/swinog
swinog mailing list swinog@lists.swinog.ch http://lists.swinog.ch/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/swinog
On 10 May 2010, at 13:00, tuxli@tuxli.net wrote:
are there any 4-byte ASN ranges reserved for private use?
No - in the 'after world', when everyone is running router code that can support as4, there intention of the assignment policy is that there will be no distinction between 0-65535 and 65536-4b - they will just be 'AS Numbers', so no need to augment the private range of 64512-65534.
If you want to do some internal testing, 65536-65551 looks pretty juicy...
Andy