When will the RIRs run out?

April 21, 2011

IANA allocated the last five remaining /8 blocks of IPv4 addresses to the five Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) early last February. Those blocks will be running out of addresses soon. Let’s take a quick look at Hurricane Electric’s IPv4/IPv stats counter (as of 2011-04-21, at around 10:40AM, Philippine time) to see what’s left:

It looks like APNIC might be running out first, which is understandable as demand in Asia is quite high. That might happen within this year. ARIN already has most IPv4 addresses so perhaps it will make do with IPv4 for a while, but that’s being optimistic. My guess is that, for all practical purposes, the world will probably be out of new IPv4 addresses by 2012.

The bottom line, however, is that those numbers aren’t anywhere close to what will be needed to accommodate the new devices that will be needing IP addresses in the near future. The Second Internet (baxed on IPv6) is needed now.


CentOS 5.6 is out

April 14, 2011

I ran the Yellowdog Update (yum) to upgrade my system the other day and found that I would have to download over 230MB of software. That probably meant one thing: there was a new release of CentOS!

Sure enough, after the system was upgraded, a look at the file, /etc/redhat-release, revealed that CentOS 5.6 was out.

The CentOS support site carried the distro reelease announcement. LinuxDevices also posted this story on the release.

The significant changes include:

  • ext4 is now a fully supported file system
  • libvirt was updated to 0.8.2
  • bind was updated to 9.7 and supports NSEC3 now.
  • ebtables was added
  • php53 is available as a php replacement.
  • System Security Services Daemon (SSSD) has been added.

I can’t wait for the CentOS team to release their version of RHEL 6! It should be in the works now.


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