[58698] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: IANA reserved Address Space
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (bmanning@karoshi.com)
Fri May 30 08:08:34 2003
From: bmanning@karoshi.com
To: Brennan_Murphy@NAI.com
Date: Fri, 30 May 2003 05:07:56 -0700 (PDT)
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
In-Reply-To: <FF6F5696A661404E8E2C0DF39A1D72B614CE72@sncexmb1.corp.nai.org> from "Brennan_Murphy@NAI.com" at May 30, 2003 04:56:26 AM
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
networks 1 and 100 are reserved for future delegation.
network 10 is delegated for private networks, such as your
lab.
if you use networks 1 and 100, you are hijacking these
numbers.
that said, as long as your lab is never going to connect
to the Internet, you may want to consider using the following
prefixes:
4.0.0.0/8
38.0.0.0/8
127.0.0.0/8
192.0.0.0/8
>
>
> I'm tasked with coming up with an IP plan for an very large lab
> network. I want to maximize route table manageability and
> router/firewall log readability. I was thinking of building this
> lab with the following address space:
>
> 1.0.0.0 /8
> 10.0.0.0 /8
> 100.0.0.0 /8
>
> I need 3 distinct zones which is why I wanted to separate
> them out. In any case, I was wondering about the
> status of the 1 /8 and the 100 /8 networks. What does
> it mean that they are IANA reserved? Reserved for what?
> http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipv4-address-space
>
> Anyone else ever use IANA reserved address spacing for
> lab networks? Is there anything special I need to know?
> I'm under the impression that as long as I stay away
> from special use address space, I've got no worries.
> http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3330.txt
>
> Thanks,
> BM
>