Developments at the RIPE NCC
Daniel Karrenberg Daniel.Karrenberg at ripe.net
Mon Jan 15 17:25:58 CET 1996
Dear customers and colleagues, once again it is time for one of my (ir)regular messages about the latest developments at the RIPE NCC. I hope it is one of the last ones serving as an informal report as we plan to start the formal quarterly reports again soon. See below for more details. European Internet ----------------- During 1995 the European Internet has roughly doubled in terms of DNS registered hosts as you can see from the excerpt of the RIPE NCC hostcount below. The number of hosts at the end of December 1995 is 2.14 times larger than the number at the end of December 1994. These are exciting times! For details see ftp://ftp.ripe.net/ripe/hostcount/. Count Delta Delta % Q Delta Q Delta % ------------------------------------------------------------------- Dec 1994 1029270 + 56170 + 5.8% +140872 +15.9% Jan 1995 1106077 + 76780 + 7.5% Feb 1995 1197911 + 91807 + 8.3% Mar 1995 1326078 +128116 + 10.7% +296703 +28.8% Apr 1995 1375921 + 49805 + 3.7% May 1995 1463816 + 87896 + 6.4% Jun 1995 1550520 + 87287 + 5.9% +224988 +16.9% Jul 1995 1694978 +144472 + 9.3% Aug 1995 1773680 + 79205 + 4.7% Sep 1995 1830389 + 56709 + 3.2% +280386 +18.1% Oct 1995 1928380 + 97991 + 5.4% Nov 1995 1999997 + 71617 + 3.7% Dec 1995 2206360 +199419 + 10.0% +369027 +20.2% Local Registries ---------------- The number of local registries has also roughly doubled in 1995; there are 2.18 times more registries than last year: Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Projected 1994 1995 1995 1995 1995 1995 Large ISP 17 17 19 25 28 22 Medium ISP 28 31 35 36 40 42 Small ISP 51 84 119 159 196 188 Enterprise 14 15 17 15 16 20 Last Resort 31 32 32 30 28 32 TOTAL 141 179 222 265 308 304 It is remarkable that the growth of the number of registries so closely follows the growth of the net as measured by the hostcount. From these measures one cannot deduce concentration tendencies in Internet service provision. We are also quite satisfied that the actual numbers are quite close to the predictions we made in Q2 of the year. This gives us some confidence in our planning. For the NCC staff, as for anyone else in the Internet business, this growth has meant a tremendous amount of work, not least in training and integrating new colleagues and working with all those new customers. Luckily the financial position of the NCC has also become much more stable than at this time last year; this provides sufficient material resources to cope with the growth. While final figures for 1995 are not available yet, we expect to close the year with financial reserves which provide a good basis for NCC operations in the foreseeable future. In December last year we have issued invoices for 1996 fees to all established registries. We have been pleasantly surprised by the considerable amounts we have already received. Thank you to those of you paying in time. Will the others please follow that example. ;-) Registration Services --------------------- The junior hostmasters who started in the second half of 1995 are now fully up-to-speed in handling requests. Ticketing and the first manual implementation of work flow management are paying off. In the beginning of December we succeeded to eliminate the permanent queue of requests not yet assigned to a hostmaster which had been in operation since early in the year. Customers started to make pleasant remarks about the turn-around time of requests again. This was a major milestone for registration services. We are using this breathing space to further train the registration services staff, to convert some manually kept internal databases to machine processable format and to introduce the automated work flow management system. The latter changes should be fully transparent to the customers while the former should enable each hostmaster to take more personal responsibilities for allocation and assignment decisions. Because the number of people and resources used by registration services are substantial we have decided to make a start at changing the flat organisational structure of the NCC in this area. From January 1st this year Mirjam Kuehne has been appointed "Manager Registration Services". Mirjam is responsible for day to day operations in this area with all registration services staff reporting to her. Other Activities ---------------- A beta release of the database software has been produced. It includes code for running secondary (shadow) databases in almost real time as well as other improvements. Several local IR training courses have been presented and were received well. The RIPE NCC information servers are getting a total overhaul in a project executed by the school for communications systems of Utrecht university. Very little of that is visible at this point but much work is being done behind the scenes. If you would like to influence the work, consider completing the survey at http://www.ripe.net/ripe/usurv.html. In conjunction with this project address space assignment and allocation procedures are being re-written at this point in order to provide up to date documentation to local registries in a single document. An editing committee recruited from the local-IR working group is helping with this task. A draft is expected to appear shortly and will be discussed at the RIPE meeting. Behind the Scenes ----------------- The RIPE NCC computing infrastructure has seen a lot of necessary replacements as the original hardware is nearing the end of its useful life. We are in the process of re-implementing large parts of the workstation and server environments in order to keep up with changes at the NCC and in the Internet. The computer room servers have been moved to four large 19 inch racks which provides more room and improves reliability. New server hardware based on industrial PCs has been purchased and partially deployed. RAID systems are being tested. New Staff --------- After a long search the NCC finally has a business manager! The search has been longer and more difficult as expected even considering the current circumstances in the Internet world. Not so surprisingly two very promising candidates who had been offered the position decided to join Internet service providers at the last minute, one of them even at the last second. But all is well than ends well! Dr. Carol Orange has been appointed RIPE NCC business manager as of today and will be responsible for financial planning and control, general customer relations and the quarterly reports. Carol joins us from Utrecht university where she has led the abovementioned project to redesign the NCC's information servers. She will work part-time until the end of March when she will have completed long term commitments at Utrecht university. Carol who is originally from Portland Oregon has been living in Amsterdam since 1986. The list of her former employers includes Lucasfilm and CWI. She has been getting her fingers dirty with technical work in those positions and hopes to find an excuse to do that from time to time in the future. She has been teaching juggling to people working at the NCC campus since 1987. Also today Naomi de Bruyn joins the NCC as a full time secretary. Naomi will be our "receptionist" answering the phone and dealing with general messages to <ncc at ripe.net>. She will also be responsible for a number of internal administrative tasks and help with the organisation of meetings and courses. Naomi has previously worked for the TERENA secretariat on a temporary basis. Next Period ----------- During the first quarter of this year we plan to further consolidate registration services and finally begin starting other activities which have been dormant. We will also put effort into the development of alternative charging models and start to investigate areas where technical work by the NCC is needed. Finally we plan to present a real quarterly report for the first quarter sometime in April. All of us here at the RIPE NCC wish you a good and successful year. If you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to contact us. Regards Daniel Karrenberg RIPE NCC Manager
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