[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/ skip to main content
article

IPv4 address allocation and the BGP routing table evolution

Published: 01 January 2005 Publication History

Abstract

The IP address consumption and the global routing table size are two of the vital parameters of the Internet growth. In this paper we quantitatively characterize the IPv4 address allocations made over the past six years and the global BGP routing table size changes during the same period of time. About 63,000 address blocks have been allocated since the beginning of the Internet, of which about 18,000 address blocks were allocated during our study period, from November 1997 to August 2004. Among these 18,000 allocations, 90% of them started being announced into the BGP routing table within 75 days after the allocation, while 8% of them has not been used up to now. Among all the address blocks that have ever been used, 45% of them were split into fragments smaller than the original allocated blocks; without these fragementations, the current BGP table would have been about half of its current size. Furthermore, we found that the evolution of BGP routing table consists of both the appearance of new prefixes and the disappearance of old prefixes. While the change of the BGP routing table size only reflects the combined results of the two processes, the dynamics of either process is much higher than that of the BGP table size. Finally, we classify routing prefixes into covering and covered ones, and examine their evolution separately. For the covered prefixes, which account for almost half of the BGP table size, we infer their practical motives such as multihoming, load balancing, and traffic engineering, etc., via a classification method.

References

[1]
IPv4 address allocation records. ftp://ftp.arin.net/pub/stats/{arin, ripencc, apnic, lacnic}.]]
[2]
Route views project. http://www.antc.uoregon.edu/route-views.]]
[3]
G.Huston. BGP routing table statistics. http://www.telstra.net/ops/bgp/.]]
[4]
G.Huston. Analyzing the Internet's BGP routing table. The Internet Protocol Journal, 4(1), March 2001.]]
[5]
H. Narayan, R. Govindan, and G. Varghese. The impact of address allocation and routing on the structure and implementation of routing tables. In Proceedings of SIGCOMM'03, 2003.]]
[6]
L. Gao. On inferring autonomous system relationships in the Internet. IEEE Global Internet, November 2000.]]
[7]
O.Maennel and A. Feldmann. Realistic BGP traffic for test labs. In Proceedings of SIGCOMM'02. Pittsburgh, PA, 2002.]]
[8]
T.Bu, L. Gao, and D. Towsley. On characterizing BGP routing table growth. Computer Networks, 45(1):45--54, 2004.]]
[9]
X.Meng, Z. Xu, S. Lu, and L. Zhang. An analysis of BGP routing table evolution. Technical Report 030046, CS Department, UCLA, 2002.]]
[10]
Y. Rekhter and T. Li. A border gateway protocol 4 (BGP-4). Internet RFC 1771.]]
[11]
Z. Xu, X. Meng, C. J. Wittbrodt, L. Zhang, and S. Lu. IPv4 address allocation and the evolution of the BGP routing table. In Proceedings of IEEE Computer Communications Workshop (CCW), 2003.]]

Cited By

View all

Index Terms

  1. IPv4 address allocation and the BGP routing table evolution

        Recommendations

        Comments

        Please enable JavaScript to view thecomments powered by Disqus.

        Information & Contributors

        Information

        Published In

        cover image ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
        ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review  Volume 35, Issue 1
        January 2005
        108 pages
        ISSN:0146-4833
        DOI:10.1145/1052812
        Issue’s Table of Contents

        Publisher

        Association for Computing Machinery

        New York, NY, United States

        Publication History

        Published: 01 January 2005
        Published in SIGCOMM-CCR Volume 35, Issue 1

        Check for updates

        Author Tags

        1. BGP
        2. IPv4 address allocation

        Qualifiers

        • Article

        Contributors

        Other Metrics

        Bibliometrics & Citations

        Bibliometrics

        Article Metrics

        • Downloads (Last 12 months)30
        • Downloads (Last 6 weeks)1
        Reflects downloads up to 15 Jan 2025

        Other Metrics

        Citations

        Cited By

        View all
        • (2024)HoDiNTComputer Networks: The International Journal of Computer and Telecommunications Networking10.1016/j.comnet.2024.110570250:COnline publication date: 1-Aug-2024
        • (2022)Hyper-specific prefixesACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review10.1145/3544912.354491652:2(20-34)Online publication date: 20-Jun-2022
        • (2022)Weighted NSFIB Aggregation With Generalized Next Hop of Strict Partial OrderIEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management10.1109/TNSM.2022.315038919:2(890-904)Online publication date: 10-Feb-2022
        • (2022)Grafnet: Using Graph Neural Networks to Create Table-Less RoutersIEEE Transactions on Network Science and Engineering10.1109/TNSE.2021.31320709:2(740-754)Online publication date: 1-Mar-2022
        • (2021)The parallel lives of autonomous systemsProceedings of the 21st ACM Internet Measurement Conference10.1145/3487552.3487838(593-611)Online publication date: 2-Nov-2021
        • (2021)FIUD: A Framework to Identify Users of DevicesWireless Algorithms, Systems, and Applications10.1007/978-3-030-86130-8_4(45-57)Online publication date: 25-Jun-2021
        • (2020)Boosting FIB Caching Performance with AggregationProceedings of the 29th International Symposium on High-Performance Parallel and Distributed Computing10.1145/3369583.3392682(221-232)Online publication date: 23-Jun-2020
        • (2019)Demystifying Parallel and Distributed Deep LearningACM Computing Surveys10.1145/332006052:4(1-43)Online publication date: 30-Aug-2019
        • (2019)IPv4 and IPv6 Protocols: A Comparative Performance Study2019 IEEE 10th Control and System Graduate Research Colloquium (ICSGRC)10.1109/ICSGRC.2019.8837050(1-4)Online publication date: Aug-2019
        • (2019)Aviation Safety Service IPV6 Based Air-To-Ground Communication: Multi-Homing Challenges2019 Integrated Communications, Navigation and Surveillance Conference (ICNS)10.1109/ICNSURV.2019.8735276(1-5)Online publication date: Apr-2019
        • Show More Cited By

        View Options

        Login options

        View options

        PDF

        View or Download as a PDF file.

        PDF

        eReader

        View online with eReader.

        eReader

        Media

        Figures

        Other

        Tables

        Share

        Share

        Share this Publication link

        Share on social media