Overcoming the Challenges of IPv4 Exhaustion  - Photo by Gian Cescon on UnsplashAs hundreds of regional communications service providers rush to deploy broadband and add thousands of new subscribers to their networks, they face a long list of tasks and budget items to be addressed. Most of the budget and buildout schedule will focus on the physical deployment of the fibre (FTTH) or wireless access. However, back in the core network, one of the important early decisions is how to approach IP connectivity.

We are running out of IPv4 addresses. Migrating customers from IPv4 to IPv6 is costly and complex. It means operators need to think carefully about how they will provide an IP address for every customer. After all, a network won’t run without IP connectivity.

It isn’t just a technical decision. The choices made now can make a 15% difference in annual operating expenses. It directly impacts how effectively the business will be able to grow and scale over time. In this blog, we’ll discuss the issues and options around IPv4 exhaustion. Should you acquire additional IPv4 addresses? What is the feasibility of migrating to IPv6? How can operators address the co-existence of IPv4 and IPv6 within their existing network infrastructure?

Why IPv4 Exhaustion Is an Issue

In a sense, IPv4 exhaustion results from the internet being too popular for its own good. When the IETF introduced the standard in 1981, the more than 4 billion addresses it encompassed seemed more than ample. Within a decade, though, it had become apparent that far more would be needed. IPv6, a successor specification introduced in 1998 and ratified as a standard in 2017, can accommodate virtually unlimited IP connectivity.

However, making the transition from IPv4 to IPv6 has proved anything but simple. Due to a lack of backward compatibility, IPv6 compatibility is required across every element of communication: devices, networks, and content. With IPv6 adoption uneven in all these elements, communication service providers must continue to support customers’ connectivity to IPV4 resources regardless of their plans for migrating their own infrastructure to IPv6.

As they face this complex situation, operators have three basic choices. They can seek to acquire IPv4 addresses to expand their existing pool. They can try to accelerate their IPv4 to IPv6 infrastructure conversion while applying a transition technology to address uneven adoption. Or they can extend their existing IPv4 investment while planning for migrating to IPv6.

What IPv4 Exhaustion Means for Rural Broadband Providers

Many regional or rural broadband communications service providers have built their networks on IPv4. They have dedicated a public IP to each subscriber or household served. As these operators expand their coverage to previously unserved areas, acquire new subscribers through acquisition, or respond to increased demand for upgraded broadband access from existing subscribers, they are finding that their allocation of IPv4 addresses will soon be inadequate. The faster their subscriber base grows, the larger and more urgent their IPv4 exhaustion challenge becomes.

Deciding Whether to Acquire Additional IPv4 Address Space

As communications service providers consider their options for IP connectivity, they need to consider the long-term growth of their subscriber base and its economic implications. This is especially true if they choose to buy IPv4 address blocks. It is an approach that can quickly become expensive.

In some ways, it’s not true that we have run out of IPv4 addresses. There are IPv4 addresses available to be acquired, mostly through third-party brokers. Technically, IPv4 addresses are not bought or sold but are acquired from a third party (usually at an auction price), then assignment is transferred through a regional internet registry (RIR).

However, they’re not cheap, and their quality can be questionable. In 2015, IPv4 addresses could be acquired for about £4 each. Today, the price has skyrocketed 5X. On today’s open market, IPv4 addresses cost up to £23 each, or £231,000 to support 10,000 subscribers. With an annual growth rate of 23% over the past three years, this price could nearly double by 2023 to almost £43 per address, or £434,000 to support 10,000 subscribers.

FTTH is a more cost-effective choice

Even at the current price, £231,000 is a lot for a fast-growing communication service provider to spend on IP connectivity. Consider that the capital budget for a fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) location is roughly £1,300. The operator could build out 178 more locations for the same amount of money and accommodate many more subscribers at that price.

Alternatively, the regular addition of IPv4 addresses as subscribers are added over time can add nearly 15% to operating expenses. The Fiber Broadband Association has estimated that the average operating expense for FTTH is £38 per subscriber per year.

Assume an average of £22–38 per subscriber to buy IPv4 address space. Operators spreading this cost over five years will face an additional expense of nearly eight dollars per subscriber per year. That is almost a 15% increase over the base operating expense.

What about Migrating from IPv4 to IPv6?

Migrating to IPv6 will likely be inevitable in the years to come. However, for large enterprise and regional SPs with extensive legacy infrastructure, full conversion from IPv4 to IPv6 is often not practical in the short term. It is a long, costly, and complex process involving inventorying and evaluating all existing network elements and devices, reconfiguring routers, changing out incompatible customer premises equipment (CPE), and managing customer communication.

There are ample opportunities for things to go wrong along the way, bringing the requirement for extensive testing and troubleshooting to reduce risk.

Extending IPv4 blocks with CGNAT

Given the problems posed by either buying IPv4 addresses or attempting a full IPv6 migration, many rural and regional broadband providers are turning to a third option. They are extending their existing IPv4 investment while preparing for migrating to IPv6. This approach hinges on carrier-grade NAT (CGNAT). It is a technology that makes it possible for one public IP address to be shared across multiple subscribers, most commonly at a ratio of 32:1 or 64:1.

Developed specifically to address IPv4 exhaustion, CGNAT helps service providers extend the life of existing IPv4 network infrastructure without the need for acquiring additional IPv4 addresses. CGNAT, combined with one of the many available transition technologies, can help operators make a simultaneous and seamless IPv6 migration.


A10 LogoA10 Networks (NYSE: ATEN) provides Reliable Security Always™, with a range of high-performance application networking solutions that help organisations ensure that their data center applications and networks remain highly available, accelerated and secure. Founded in 2004, A10 Networks is based in San Jose, Calif., and serves customers globally with offices worldwide.

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