RIPE NCC Activity Plan 2006

RIPE NCC 

Document ID: ripe-365
Date: January 2006
Updates: ripe-339

Section A: RIPE NCC Vision and Focus
Changes to Activities in 2006

1. Vision and Strategy

The RIPE Network Coordination Centre (RIPE NCC) is an independent,
not-for-profit membership organisation that supports a membership base
of around 4,000 members in more than 65 countries across Europe, the
Middle East and Central Asia. The RIPE NCC operates under its
principles of openness, transparency, neutrality and impartiality. All
member and co-ordination services offered by the RIPE NCC are based on
the input and needs of the RIPE community and the RIPE NCC membership.

For more than twelve years the RIPE NCC has been successful in
providing technical co-ordination to the Internet community. An
important aspect of this technical co-ordination is the reliable and
stable allocation of Internet number resources to RIPE NCC
members. The RIPE NCC will make continued improvements to the quality
of the registration processes and the data related to allocating
Internet number resources to its members.

The RIPE NCC will continue to take a leading role in the technical
co-ordination of IP networking by adapting to meet the changing needs
of its members and other stakeholders. The RIPE NCC will enhance the
quality of the services it provides by improving their resilience,
user-interfaces and value for operators and the global Internet
community.

An important aspect of this work will be the secure provision of
Internet number resources and related services. The RIPE NCC will work
to ensure the reliable allocation of Internet number resources, the
security of the processes associated with co-ordinating these
resources as well as the security of the Internet's routing system
as a whole.

The RIPE NCC will develop relations with a growing community of
stakeholders, industry bodies and government representatives. By
demonstrating the proven success of the Regional Internet Registry
(RIR) process and their communities, the RIPE NCC will secure
continued support for the existing self-regulatory structures.

2. RIPE NCC Focus Points

Reliable and Stable Technical Co-ordination of Internet Number Resources

The RIPE NCC will improve the consistency and strengthen the
robustness of the processes for distributing Internet number resources
to members. This will enable the RIPE NCC to allocate Internet number
resources with stable service time and improved data accuracy.

There will be a specific focus on the public registration data stored
in the RIPE Whois Database. The aim will be to improve the accuracy,
consistency and completeness of the data related to Internet number
resource distribution.

High Quality Services for Operators and the Internet Community

As a neutral, credible and authoritative source of network and
Internet-related information, the RIPE NCC will continue to supply
timely, accurate and tailored services to operators and the Internet
community.

The RIPE NCC maintains high-quality, scalable services that are
resilient to a high volume of usage and responsive to the changing
needs of the Internet community. The RIPE NCC will focus on improving
the user-interfaces and written documentation of these services.

In 2005, the RIPE NCC began a significant overhaul of its internal
infrastructure. This included replacing the existing telephony system
with a modern one with Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
capabilities. This overhaul also included the introduction of a new,
company-wide ticketing system. The improved infrastructure will enable
a number of projects to be developed, including the RIPE NCC Member
Service Desk.

The aim of the RIPE NCC Member Service Desk is to provide members with
any additional help necessary to resolve queries involving RIPE NCC
Registration Services, the RIPE Database and RIPE NCC billing
procedures. The desk will be available through direct e-mail and phone
contact.

 Security of Internal IT Infrastructure and Services

The RIPE NCC will focus on IT security activities to further secure
its internal IT infrastructure and services. Over 2006, the RIPE NCC
will also develop and deploy security systems to enable the
introduction of existing and new activities, like support for routing
security.

3. New Activity 2006

Support for Routing Security

The RIPE NCC will support its members and the Internet community to
better secure the inter-domain routing system. As part of this
support, the RIPE NCC will improve the quality of Internet number
resource distribution data.

In addition, the RIPE NCC will actively work to help ISPs to improve
routing security by supporting and co-ordinating the introduction of
new technologies and procedures in this area.

Most proposals for improvements to routing security focus on Internet
Registries issuing some form of digital certificate to help
authenticate the use of IP address blocks and AS Numbers.

In 2006, the RIPE NCC will design and implement the process and
technology to enable the RIPE NCC to issue such certificates. The RIPE
NCC will also work with the RIPE community to further evaluate
particular technical proposals and technology designed to improve
routing security. These could include improved routing configuration
tools, possibly based on certificates, and BGP protocol enhancements,
such as SBGP and SoBGP.

Information about the budgeted costs for this new activity is
available in the RIPE NCC Budget 2006 at:

http://www.ripe.net/ripe/docs/ripe-364.html

4. Closure of Activities

At the time of writing, none of the current activities are expected to
close or terminate during 2006.

5. RIPE NCC Approved and Ongoing Activities 

Information on the RIPE NCC's approved and ongoing activities
(Membership Services, Co-ordination Activities and Information
Services) is available in Section B of this document, "RIPE NCC
Approved and Ongoing Activities".

6. Unforeseen Activities

The RIPE NCC will keep a reserve of resources to take up any
activities that appear necessary during the course of the year. These
activities are entirely unforeseen at the time of writing the RIPE NCC
Activity Plan 2006 or have started recently and are not at the stage
where they can be developed as regular services. A quick, well-focused
reaction to the changing environment and new requirements of the RIPE
NCC members and other stakeholders has always been a strong point of
the RIPE NCC.

								         
Section B: RIPE NCC Approved and Ongoing Activities
		

1. Membership Services

1.1 Distribution and Management of Internet Number Resources

In its role as a Regional Internet Registry (RIR), the RIPE NCC
provides allocation and registration services to Local Internet
Registries (LIRs) in its service region. This service region covers
Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia. The overall goal of the RIPE
NCC's allocation and registration services is to provide fair,
impartial and stable distribution of Internet number resources in its
service region. The specific goals for the distribution of IP address
space are: 

* Uniqueness of IP addresses 
* Conservation of IP address space 
* Procedure and policy definition for IP address space 
* Aggregation of routing information 
* Registration of network management and contact information

The key function of the RIPE NCC Membership Services is the fair
distribution of Internet number resource requests to RIPE NCC members.

1.1.1 IPv4 / IPv6 Address Space and Autonomous System (AS) Numbers

Description of Activity: 

The RIPE NCC allocates and assigns IPv4 and IPv6 address space to RIPE
NCC members for use in their own and End Users networks. The RIPE NCC
also assigns AS Numbers according to RIPE community policy. It
registers these numbers and the initial associated routing policy,
ensuring the uniqueness of AS Numbers and collecting data for the
Routing Registry.  The RIPE NCC develops and maintains tools to
support the allocation process.  

Goal of Activity: 

* To ensure the fair distribution of Internet Number Resources
* To ensure the efficient use of IP address space and AS Numbers
* To facilitate the optimal aggregation of routing information

1.1.2 Reverse DNS 

Description of Activity:

The RIPE NCC delegates reverse DNS zones for the address ranges
managed by the RIPE NCC. To support this service, the RIPE NCC
provides a reliable secondary name server and checks all zones under
its responsibility to ensure they are properly set up and functioning
correctly.  As part of its efforts in the area of DNSSEC deployment,
the RIPE NCC publishes signed zones and provides tools for users to
secure delegations received from the RIPE NCC. In addition, the RIPE
NCC shares experience through publishing operational white papers,
documentation and software toolkits.

Goal of Activity:

* To support the proper address-to-name mapping for addresses
  allocated to the RIPE NCC
* To secure the in-addr.arpa zones under the RIPE NCC's management
* To support the deployment and maintenance of DNSSEC

1.1.3 Consistency, Auditing and Data Accuracy

Description of Activity:

The RIPE NCC actively checks the quality and validity of Internet
resource registry data, including the production of statistics on
address space usage. To ensure fair address space distribution, the
RIPE NCC regularly checks that appropriate assignment decisions are
made. The RIPE NCC also makes regular reports on these activities to
the RIPE Address Policy Working Group.

Goal of Activity:

* To promote a consistent and fair application of assignment criteria
  relating to the conservation of address space and aggregation of
  routing information

* To identify and improve any parts of the assignment procedure that
  cause problems in order to improve service levels and response times

* To implement mechanisms to improve the quality, range and
  accessibility of the data the RIPE NCC provides relating to its
  allocation of Internet number resources to its members

* To provide high quality data on the allocation of Internet number
  resources that can reliably be used in the daily operations of LIRs
  and ISPs

* To develop metrics that can be used to objectively measure the
  quality of Internet number resource registration data and the
  results of efforts to improve data accuracy

1.2 RIPE NCC Interaction Mechanisms

The RIPE NCC provides flexible and convenient ways for LIRs and others
from the Internet community to interact with the RIPE NCC's
systems. There is a specific focus on the security aspects of such
interactions to ensure privacy and authentication wherever needed.

1.2.1 RIPE NCC LIR Portal

Description of Activity:

The purpose of the LIR Portal is to give LIRs an easy-to-use web
interface for accessing RIPE NCC services,for managing their
registry's data and for making queries and updates.

Goal of Activity:

* To enable members to receive Internet number resources in a timely
  fashion by improving the request, evaluation and approval process

* To enable members to manage their registry data and make queries and updates

1.2.2 Security Mechanisms

Description of Activity:

The RIPE NCC provides and continues to develop secure communication
channels for members to communicate with the RIPE NCC.

Goal of Activity: 

* To provide members with simplified, consistent, and secure ways of
  requesting and managing Internet number resources using the RIPE
  Database and other RIPE NCC services

1.3 Initial Support for New LIRs

The RIPE NCC gives initial support to LIRs during their set-up
phase. Information and support is also extended to potential LIRs.

The RIPE NCC provides initial support to new, or potential LIRs, in order to:  

* Support new LIRs during their set-up phase by introducing them to
  the relevant tools, procedures and guidelines

* Give potential LIRs enough information to make an informed choice as
  to whether or not they become an LIR

1.4 Training Courses

The RIPE NCC provides a range of courses to members and non-members,
using a variety of teacher-based courses and additional training
strategies.

The RIPE NCC makes continued efforts to reach a broader audience,
particularly those who are unable to attend RIPE NCC training courses
due to geographical, financial, scheduling or other constraints. This
area includes developing online modules covering how the RIPE NCC
works and the RIPE Policy Development Process (PDP).
 
The RIPE NCC provides the following courses to its members for free:

* LIR Training Course
* DNSSEC Training Course
* Routing Registry Training Course

1.4.1 LIR Training Course

Description of Activity: 

The Local Internet Registry (LIR) Training Course is a one-day
introduction to procedures and policies related to obtaining and
distributing Internet number resources from the RIPE NCC, operating an
LIR and using the RIPE Database. The training material is regularly
updated to make sure that LIRs are aware of any recent policy changes
decided by the RIPE community.

Goal of Activity:

* To help members send correctly prepared Internet number resource
  requests to the RIPE NCC

* To help ensure a more timely completion of these requests

* To explain the correct procedure for registering and updating
  registry data relating to Internet number resources

1.4.2 DNSSEC Training Course

Description of Activity:
	
This course provides an introduction to DNS security extensions with
special focus on how to deploy DNSSEC.

Goal of Activity: 

* To provide DNSSEC deployment information relevant to LIRs

1.4.3 Routing Registry Training Course

Description of Activity:

The Routing Registry Training Course covers Internet Routing Registry
(IRR) usage, related tools and Routing Policy Specification Language
(RPSL).

Goal of activity: 

* To provide an introduction to the Internet Routing Registry (IRR)
  usage, related tools, Routing Policy Specification Language (RPSL)
  and the RIPE NCC Routing Information Service (RIS).

1.5 Membership Liaison 

The RIPE NCC develops liaison activities and regional support. These
play significant roles in involving RIPE NCC members, the RIPE
community and other stakeholders in the open policy-making process and
in defining the activities and services of the RIPE NCC.
 
1.5.1 Regional Support

Description of Activity:

The RIPE NCC organises Regional Meetings that provide a focused effort
to proactively encourage feedback from RIPE NCC members and the RIPE
community.

Goal of Activity: 

* To promote local contact with members and provide a forum for
  discussing issues relevant to a specific area of its service region

* To enable the RIPE NCC to continuously evaluate and address the
  changing needs of RIPE NCC members

2. Co-ordination Activities 

2.1 RIPE Whois Database: Maintenance and Development

The RIPE Whois Database contains registration details of IP addresses
and AS Numbers used by networks based in the RIPE NCC service region.

It shows the organisations that hold the resources, where the
allocations were made and contact details for the networks. The
organisations that hold those resources are responsible for updating
their information in the RIPE Whois Database.

An Internet Routing Registry (IRR), primarily for the RIPE NCC region,
is also part of the RIPE Whois Database.

The information in the RIPE Whois Database is used by a range of
people, including network engineers, system administrators,
researchers and End Users for various purposes such as network
troubleshooting or determining abuse contacts. In most cases these
users are not RIPE NCC members.

The RIPE NCC regularly makes improvements to the interface for the
RIPE Whois Database in order to provide users with more useful
features and easier ways to update the database. The RIPE NCC also
makes continued efforts to improve the accuracy and the usefulness of
the data in the RIPE Whois Database.

The RIPE NCC implements community-driven changes as they arise, making
software and system modifications in response to feedback from users
and decisions made by the RIPE community.

2.1.1 User support and software maintenance

Description of Activity:
 
The RIPE NCC manages a role mailbox for questions and comments so that
it can answer user questions promptly.

The RIPE NCC also performs regular software maintenance activities
including bug fixes and minor modifications. The results of these
software development efforts are made publicly available.

This activity includes the maintenance and improvement of
documentation associated with the RIPE Whois Database.

Goal of Activity:  

* To provide user-friendly interfaces to the RIPE Whois Database

* To provide a timely response to user enquiries

* To help ensure the smooth operation of the Internet Routing Registry
  System

2.1.2 Cross Registry Information Service Protocol (CRISP)

Description of Activity:

The Cross Registry Information Service Protocol (CRISP) Working Group
has developed the Internet Registry Information Service (IRIS)
protocol within the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
process. The RIPE NCC continues to provide server implementation and
client tools, while co-ordinating with other server operators, client
tool authors, and service providers to encourage use of the IRIS
protocol and the associated services the RIPE NCC provides.

Goal of Activity:  

* To support the widespread adoption of IRIS as it occurs globally

* To allow users to easily look up IP address ranges or AS Numbers
  using a single tool to automatically query the appropriate database

2.1.3 New Database Features

Description of Activity:

The RIPE NCC designs and implements new database features as requested
by the user community or proposed by the RIPE NCC. It performs the
development work based on the priorities established in the
appropriate RIPE Working Groups.

Goal of Activity: 

* To provide new features to the RIPE Database as the user community
  expresses the need for them
 
2.2 RIPE 

The RIPE NCC supports the RIPE community through technical and
administrative co-ordination.

2.2.1 RIPE Meetings

Description of Activity:

The RIPE NCC organises RIPE Meetings, providing all administrative and
technical support.

Goal of Activity: 

* To support the open, bottom-up, industry self-regulatory structure
  common to all RIR communities in managing Internet number resources

* To stimulate the participation of the RIPE community in the IP
  policy-making process and the technical co-ordination of IP
  networking

* To contribute to the stable operation of the RIPE NCC by allowing
  for guidance and advice from the RIPE Working Groups

* To enable attendees to provide input and feedback on the RIPE NCC
  Activity Plan

2.2.2 Supporting the RIPE Policy Development Process (PDP)

Description of Activity:

The RIPE NCC acts as a secretariat for the RIPE community. With
regards to the Policy Development Process, this includes activities
such as hosting mailing lists and their web archives, hosting a
document archive, providing editorial assistance to document authors
and tracking the progress of policy proposals and publishing their
status.

Goal of Activity:

* To make the status and history of policy proposals clear

* To make it easy to follow policy development

* To ease the process of proposing policy change

* To make it easier to understand the text of policy documents

2.3 Mailing List Management

The RIPE NCC maintains a number of high volume external mailing
lists. The processing of mailing list traffic is constantly
monitored. Efforts are made to support subscribers with problems and
to reduce or control the spam on external mailing lists so that they
can be easily and efficiently moderated without losing any End User
functionality.

The goal is to ensure the exchange of information among the RIPE
community and the RIPE NCC membership, as well as to provide support
for subscribers of the RIPE and RIPE NCC mailing lists.

2.4 Deployment of Internet Security Infrastructure (DISI)

Within DISI, the RIPE NCC supports the RIPE community in the
deployment of security-relevant technologies in the Internet
infrastructure. The focus is on the development and deployment of
technologies that need to be co-ordinated globally in the Internet
infrastructure. The RIPE NCC continuously monitors the development of
security-relevant technologies, such as DNSSEC deployment and secure
routing, and keeps the RIPE community informed about relevant efforts.

2.5 Domain Name System (DNS) Co-ordination

The RIPE NCC provides DNS co-ordination and support activities as well
as registrations for IPv4 and IPv6 address space managed by the RIPE
NCC.

For reverse mapping address space managed by other RIRs, the RIPE NCC
provides a secondary DNS to support the reliability of reverse
lookups.

The scalability of the DNS infrastructure for secondary, reverse and
primary DNS services is improved based on the requirements specific to
each of these services. The purpose of these activities is to maintain
and improve the operations of an efficient, responsive and robust DNS
service.

2.5.1 Reverse Delegation for the Early Registration Transfer (ERX)
    Address Space

Description of Activity: 

Together with other RIRs, the RIPE NCC provides shared zone management
for the Early Registration Transfer (ERX) address space. This enables
holders of the address blocks transferred to the RIPE NCC to maintain
reverse delegation for them with the RIPE NCC even if the higher level
zone is maintained by another RIR.

Goal of Activity:

* To support the management of reverse delegation for the ERX address
  space transferred to the RIPE NCC

2.5.2 Operating the K-root Name Server
Description of Activity:  

The RIPE NCC operates the K-root server. Root name servers are a
crucial part of the Internet DNS infrastructure. The RIPE NCC has
operated the K-root server since 1997 when the first server was
installed at the London Internet Exchange (LINX) in London, UK.

Since 2003, the RIPE NCC has been deploying anycast instances of the
K-root server with local reachability. The RIPE NCC has also deployed
four global nodes of the K-root name server. The RIPE NCC collects and
analyses data to determine the performance of the K-root anycast nodes
that have been deployed.

Goal of Activity: 

* To improve the resiliency, efficiency, security and quality of the
  K-root service

* To isolate the impact of an "external" Denial of Service (DoS)
  attack and localise the impact of a "local" DoS attack

* To efficiently maintain the network of anycast instances of K-root
  by monitoring network and instance problems, performing trend
  analysis and determining if, and where, other anycast nodes should
  be deployed

2.5.3 Secondary DNS Service

Description of Activity: 

The RIPE NCC will also continue to offer a secondary name service and
limited support to country code top-level domain (ccTLD)
administrators. Reverse zones are served in a secondary capacity to
assist in ensuring the reliability of reverse lookups.  

Goal of Activity:

* To ensure the reliability and robustness of the general DNS
infrastructure

* To provide the secondary DNS service to any ccTLD organisation that
requests it

2.5.4 DNS Services in the e164.arpa Domain 

Description of Activity:

The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) has an agreement with the RIPE
NCC under which it is responsible for providing DNS services in the
e164.arpa domain. This domain implements support in the DNS for the
ENUM protocol, allowing mapping of telephony services into the
Internet.

Goal of Activity:

* To support operations of one of the systems required for the
  deployment of the ENUM protocol, promoting increased integration
  between the Internet and services provided through the traditional
  telephony infrastructure

2.6 Reporting on RIPE NCC and RIPE Activities and Developments

The RIPE NCC reports on its activities and RIPE developments using a
variety of media:

* The RIPE NCC website

* The RIPE NCC Annual Report, including financial statements

* The RIPE NCC Member Update newsletter (distributed to the membership
  one month prior to each RIPE Meeting)

* E-mail reporting to RIPE NCC members and interested parties

The goal of the RIPE NCC's reporting activities is to provide the
membership and other interested parties with open, detailed
information about the ongoing activities of the RIPE NCC and its role
in Internet administration. It also furthers the RIPE NCC's efforts to
communicate more effectively with its membership and stakeholders and
to increase participation in RIPE.

2.6.1 Annual Report

Description of Activity: 

The RIPE NCC Annual Report, including financial statements, is
published in advance of the RIPE General Meeting (GM) where members
vote on whether to approve the RIPE NCC's financial statements for
operations in the prior year.

Goal of Activity: 

* To provide a full account of the RIPE NCC's activities in the
  previous year

* To provide audited financial statements for the previous year for
  the RIPE NCC members to vote on at the GM

2.6.2 Minutes and Reports from RIPE Meetings

Description of Activity: 

The RIPE NCC provides minutes of Working Group and Plenary sessions at
RIPE Meetings, including links to relevant presentations.

In addition, the RIPE NCC provides reports after each RIPE Meeting
that summarise the highlights and actions that came out of the
meeting.

Goal of Activity: 

* To keep the RIPE community, the RIPE NCC membership and other
  interested parties up-to-date with the decisions and discussions
  that took place at the previous RIPE Meeting.

2.6.3 RIPE NCC Member Update

Description of Activity: 

The Member Update publication fulfils a request made by members in the
2002 RIPE NCC Membership Survey by providing information on the RIPE
NCC and the development and performance of its services to the
membership. It also provides updates on policy development issues
affecting the RIPE community.

Goal of Activity: 

* To publish and distribute the latest Member Update at least four
  weeks prior to each RIPE Meeting

2.7 RIPE NCC External Relations

The purpose of the RIPE NCC's external relations activities is to:

* Support and represent the interests of the RIPE NCC's membership and
  the RIPE community

* Communicate the RIPE NCC's role in IP address management and the
  technical co-ordination of the Internet

* Win continued support for RIPE's long-established, bottom-up,
  industry self-regulation and promote the open structures and
  processes in which RIPE and the RIPE NCC operate

* Ensure that the RIPE NCC and the RIPE community continue to play an
  effective role in the further formalisation of Internet
  administration, particularly technical co-ordination and the
  development of policy related to Internet number resource
  distribution

2.7.1 Co-ordination with Governments and Regulators 

Description of Activity: 

Building on its position as a neutral and trusted organisation with
proven expertise in the technical co-ordination of IP networking, the
RIPE NCC continues to develop relations with government and regulator
representatives.

The RIPE NCC facilitates Roundtable Meetings to discuss Internet
management issues relevant to governments, regulators and industry
partners. The Roundtable Meetings provide a chance for attendees to
learn more about how to participate in IP address management
policy-making. High-level discussions of IPv4/IPv6 address space and
root name servers also provide attendees with an overview of the main
elements involved in the technical co-ordination of the Internet.

Goal of Activity: 

* To develop close contact with governments and regulators with an
  interest in the technical co-ordination of IP networking

* To explain the proven, long-standing industry self-regulatory
  structures of the RIRs and secure continued support for the existing
  registry process

* To communicate the principles of Internet industry self-regulation
  to policy makers, both in the public and the private sector, and to
  encourage well-informed decisions

* To encourage the participation of public and private sectors in the
  formation of policies related to Internet number resource
  distribution

2.7.2 Co-ordination with Industry Bodies  

Description of Activity: 

The RIPE NCC continues to support and represent the interests of its
membership and the RIPE community to Internet industry groups. The
main goal of these outreach activities remains the promotion of the
open, bottom-up, industry self-regulatory structure common to all RIR
communities in managing Internet number resources.

The RIPE NCC represents the interest of its members and the RIPE
community by actively participating in various industry-related forums
and meetings.

Goal of Activity: 

* To increase the awareness of RIPE and the RIPE NCC with existing and
  new players in the Internet community

* To ensure that the RIPE NCC continues to play an effective role in
  the further formalisation of Internet administration

2.8 RIR Co-ordination

The RIPE NCC participates in co-ordination activities with the other
RIRs. These co-ordination activities include:

* Services

* The consistent application of approved policy 

* Joint technical and communication projects

* Liaison activities

* The presentation of a global view of IP address management

The RIRs work together thorough the Number Resource Organization (NRO)
to develop and implement formalised co-ordination activities that are
of relevance to all RIR communities.

The NRO facilitates RIR co-ordination, provides third parties with a
convenient single contact point to the RIR system and acts as a body
capable of safeguarding the unallocated Internet number resource pool.

The NRO also develops relationships with government, regulators and
industry partners to ensure they have an informed understanding of how
Internet address space management and distribution works and why it
has proven so successful. The focus of these activities is to win
continued support for the industry self-regulatory structures of the
RIRs and the existing registry process.

3. Information Services

The RIPE NCC provides a range of data and analysis on Internet
infrastructure, measurement and usage. The RIPE NCC continues to
integrate new and existing services into a service portfolio while
developing overviews that explain how these services can be used and
the benefits they offer.

3.1 Routing Information Service (RIS) 

The Routing Information Service (RIS) provides an integrated view of
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) routing information collected at
multiple locations worldwide. The service integrates multiple views,
provides information about the routing state at specific times in the
past and enables users of the service to monitor their Internet
address space.

The data collected by the RIS is time-stamped, stored in a database
and is used as the raw data for a number of additional services
provided by the RIPE NCC, such as BGPlay and myASn. The RIPE NCC
investigates and develops additional services based on analysis of
this data and feedback from the Internet community.

BGPlay is a Java application that displays animated graphs of the
routing activity of a certain Internet address prefix within a
specified time interval. MyASn is a notification system for BGP route
propagation that allows users to specify expected paths and other
attributes and notifies them if a deviation in routing information is
detected.

3.2 Active Measurement Service

The RIPE NCC operates an active measurement network. The data
collected from this network is available to the Internet community for
both operational and statistical analysis. The strategy behind the
Active Measurement Service is defined and evaluated in consultation
with the RIPE Test Traffic Working Group so that it can be reviewed
and adjusted to meet current user needs.

3.2.1 Test Traffic Measurements (TTM)

Description of Activity: 

The Test Traffic Measurements (TTM) Service provides impartial
measurements of the end-to-end performance characteristics of the
inter-provider Internet. This is achieved by installing test-boxes at
participating sites. These test-boxes send measurement traffic to each
other. From this traffic, packet-losses, delays and other parameters
are determined according to the metrics developed by the IETF IP
Performance Working Group (IPPM WG).

Goal of Activity: 

* To collect independent measurements of performance-related
  quantities of the Internet, particularly between the networks
  operated by users of the TTM service

* To allow users to monitor the connectivity of their network to other
  parts of the Internet, and to provide them with trend analysis

* To measure performance-related quantities such as: one way delays
  between hosts (latency), packet losses, path information
  ("traceroute"), bandwidth and delay variation (jitter)

* To refine the system based on user feedback

3.2.2 DNS Monitoring (DNSMON)

Description of Activity: 

The RIPE NCC DNS Monitoring Service (DNSMON) provides a comprehensive,
objective and up-to-date overview of the quality of the service
offered by certain DNS root and Top-Level Domain (TLD) name servers.
DNSMON measures DNS performance between sites that take part in the
TTM service and those where DNS servers are installed. The high number
of probes and the method of presenting the results are unique. The
information is updated every hour.

The measurements are presented at various levels of granularity,
allowing users to switch between general representations and more
detailed views specific to particular domains, servers, and probes for
freely selectable time frames.

The RIPE NCC provides DNS Monitoring as a free service to the Internet
community. For interested parties, TLD operators in particular, value
added services such as monitoring of specific name servers and access
to the DNSMON helpdesk are provided for an additional cost recovery
fee.

Goal of Activity: 

* To provide high-quality monitoring of important DNS servers and
  participating Top-Level Domain (TLD) name servers

* To allow users to view historical data, enabling a quick analysis of
  both past and present DNS issues

3.2.3 Additional Active Measurements

Description of Activity: 

The Active Measurements Network can accommodate additional active
measurements.  In consultation with the RIPE Test Traffic Working
Group, the RIPE NCC investigates and discusses development plans for
using the Active Measurements Network to make additional active
measurements.

Goal of Activity:

* To respond to requests from the Internet community to investigate
  the possibilities for making additional active measurements

* To monitor the latest research and technical developments related to
  the Active Measurements Network and the measurements that can be
  made using this network

3.3 Reporting and Statistics Collection

The RIPE NCC provides authoritative data and reports on the growth of
the Internet and the consumption rate of Internet number resources. As
part of this activity, the RIPE NCC also raises awareness of issues
related to the consumption of Internet number resources. The purpose
of this activity is to provide useful, up-to-date information relevant
to a range of interested parties, including:

* Network operators
* RIPE Working Groups
* Industry bodies
* Governments and regulators
* The media

A range of statistics are gathered and incorporated in order to
improve cross-checks and cross-referencing as well as to unify the
presentation of statistics and to improve their accessibility.

The RIPE NCC also develops metrics that can be used to objectively
measure the quality of Internet number resource registration data and
the results of efforts to improve data accuracy.

3.3.1 Hostcount 

Description of Activity: 

The RIPE NCC region Hostcount has been performed monthly since 1992 to
indicate the growth in the RIPE NCC service region.

The Hostcount provides statistics on the number of hosts connected to
the Internet in Europe and surrounding areas. The statistics are
gathered in collaboration with a range of organisations doing local
counts per country Top-Level Domain.

Goal of Activity: 

* To provide the Internet community with an up-to-date view of the
  number of hosts connected to the Internet in the RIPE NCC service
  region

* To increase the accuracy and usability of the Hostcount, and to
  develop the Hostcount in consultation with the Internet community

3.3.2 Information Dissemination 

Description of Activity: 

As a neutral source of information about the Internet, the RIPE NCC
provides a selection of papers on Internet infrastructure,
administration, measurement and usage.

Goal of Activity: 

* To provide an overview for those unfamiliar with each topic, as well
  as in depth information relevant to network operators, industry
  bodies and other interested parties