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Autonomous System details for AS2484

AS2484
AFNIC (Association Francaise pour le Nommage Internet en Cooperation) • nic.fr

AS2484 — AFNIC (Association Francaise pour le Nommage Internet en Cooperation)

AS Name
NIC-FR-DNS-ANYCAST-AFNIC
Country
France (FR)
Website
Number of IPv4
256
Number of IPv6
1.21 × 1024
ASN type
Business
Status
Allocated
Registry
RIPE
Allocated
September 20, 2002
Last updated
November 15, 2017

IP Ranges

1 IPv4 prefixes, 1 IPv6 prefixes
Prefix Company Number of IPs
194.0.9.0/24 AFNIC (Association Francaise pour le Nommage Internet en Cooperation) 256
2001:678:c::/48 AFNIC (Association Francaise pour le Nommage Internet en Cooperation) 1.21 × 1024

IP ranges are the different blocks of IP addresses advertised by an Autonomous System (AS). These ranges can be used by the same organization operating the AS, or by different organizations.

Peers of AS2484

220 peers
AS1828 AS1921 AS2119 AS553 AS1140 AS1764 AS1836 AS2027 AS2906 AS3214 AS3223 AS5405 AS5466 AS5500 AS6057 AS6424 AS6507 AS6677 AS6717 AS6866 AS7552 AS7713 AS8298 AS8529 AS8544 AS8681 AS8758 AS8878 AS8896 AS9002 AS9009 AS9354 AS9498 AS9902 AS10310 AS12390 AS12399 AS12496 AS12859 AS12969 AS13030 AS13037 AS13122 AS13213 AS13237 AS13414 AS14537 AS14630 AS14907 AS15547 AS15605 AS15802 AS15830 AS16164 AS16247 AS16265 AS16303 AS16637 AS17639 AS18106 AS20596 AS20712 AS20915 AS20932 AS21700 AS23028 AS23889 AS24482 AS24916 AS24940 AS24961 AS25091 AS25152 AS25220 AS25369 AS25376 AS28792 AS29140 AS29452 AS29504 AS30081 AS30740 AS30844 AS31019 AS31042 AS31122 AS31510 AS31631 AS31742 AS32590 AS33182 AS33353 AS33763 AS34087 AS34119 AS34177 AS34288 AS34428 AS34549 AS34927 AS35280 AS35313 AS35551 AS35710 AS36351 AS37100 AS37271 AS37468 AS37662 AS37678 AS38719 AS39063 AS39120 AS39122 AS39202 AS39351 AS39356 AS39498 AS39602 AS40934 AS40994 AS41354 AS41666 AS41811 AS42295 AS42473 AS42541 AS42947 AS43256 AS44600 AS44735 AS45352 AS45758 AS47147 AS47692 AS48185 AS48362 AS48825 AS48919 AS48945 AS49415 AS49425 AS49544 AS49600 AS49605 AS50300 AS50304 AS50763 AS50823 AS51043 AS51184 AS51553 AS51873 AS51918 AS52075 AS54113 AS56329 AS56478 AS57695 AS57777 AS58057 AS58299 AS58511 AS58580 AS59624 AS59890 AS60610 AS61124 AS61955 AS62217 AS62955 AS63927 AS64475 AS140984 AS199452 AS199938 AS200612 AS200700 AS201864 AS203462 AS203582 AS204092 AS204598 AS206067 AS206530 AS206999 AS207995 AS210258 AS210805 AS212027 AS212109 AS212483 AS213054 AS213241 AS215638 AS271253 AS396986 AS398465 AS3216 AS3333 AS6233 AS12637 AS12779 AS13786 AS16552 AS25160 AS34224 AS35369 AS35598 AS35600 AS37721 AS48070 AS50673 AS51185 AS52320 AS57406 AS62167 AS132337 AS137409 AS199524

AS2484 peers with these other Autonomous Systems.

Peering is a direct, often free, traffic exchange between Autonomous Systems (ASNs). They share routes only to their own networks and customers, making connections faster and cheaper for that specific traffic, without providing full internet access to each other.

Upstreams of AS2484

7 upstreams

AS2484 uses these Autonomous Systems as its upstreams.

An upstream (or transit provider) is another AS that AS2484 pays for full internet connectivity, allowing it to reach all global destinations and be reachable by them.

Downstreams of AS2484

0 downstreams

AS2484 has no downstreams recorded.

A downstream is a customer Autonomous System that pays another AS (its provider) for internet access. The provider AS carries the downstream's traffic and makes its network reachable.

FAQs

An Autonomous System Number (ASN) is a unique identifier assigned to an Autonomous System (AS), which is a group of IP addresses under a single administrative domain. ASNs are used to manage and route internet traffic efficiently.

Peering is a direct, often cost-neutral, interconnection between independent internet networks (Autonomous Systems). Instead of paying an intermediary (an upstream provider) to carry all their traffic, peered ASNs agree to exchange traffic destined for each other's networks and customers directly.

This results in lower latency, reduced costs, and more efficient paths for traffic. A peering relationship is distinct from a customer/provider relationship; peers generally only exchange routes to their own and their customers' networks, not the full internet routing table.

An upstream, also known as a transit provider, is an internet network (Autonomous System) that another AS pays to provide connectivity to the entire global internet.

Essentially, the customer Autonomous System announces its own IP address space (and that of its own customers, if any) to its upstream providers. In return, these upstreams provide the customer AS with routes to all other destinations on the internet, often including a default route (a path for any traffic not explicitly known).

This ensures that:

  • Users and services within the customer AS can reach any website or service globally.
  • The rest of the internet can reach the IP addresses advertised by the customer AS.

Unlike peering, which is typically a selective, often settlement-free exchange of traffic between networks and their customers, an upstream relationship is a commercial one where an AS purchases comprehensive internet access. Think of it like your home internet service provider (ISP); you pay them, and they connect you to everything online.

A downstream is an Autonomous System (customer) that pays another Autonomous System (the provider) for internet connectivity. The provider AS essentially acts as the upstream for its downstream customers.

In this relationship:

  • The provider AS supplies its downstream customers with routes to the rest of the internet (or a portion of it, depending on the service agreement).
  • The provider AS announces the IP address prefixes of its downstream customers to its own upstreams and peers, making the downstream customers reachable globally.

This is a classic customer-provider relationship. The downstream AS relies on its provider AS to carry its traffic to and from the wider internet. An individual end-user or a small business buying internet access from an ISP is effectively a downstream of that ISP's Autonomous System.

IP Ranges are blocks of IP addresses that an Autonomous System (AS) announces it controls. These ranges can be used by the organization operating the AS itself, or by its customers if the AS provides internet services.

The IPv6 address space is vastly larger than IPv4 by design, to accommodate the internet's ongoing growth. A single ASN might be allocated an enormous number of IPv6 addresses, even if they only use a fraction currently. This ensures plenty of addresses for future expansion.

ASN types categorize the primary function or nature of the organization operating the Autonomous System:

  • isp: Primarily provides internet access to end-users or other businesses.
  • hosting: Primarily provides services like web hosting, cloud computing, or data center colocation.
  • education: Networks operated by universities or research institutions.
  • government: Networks operated by government agencies.
  • business: A large organization that manages its own network for internal use and external services, but isn't primarily an ISP.

The ASN type is provided by the ASN operator or inferred from activity on the ASN's networks, the ASN or organisation's name, or its website.

  • Allocated: The date when the ASN was originally assigned to the organization by a Regional Internet Registry (RIR).
  • Last updated: The date when the registration records for this ASN were last modified in the RIR's database. This could be due to changes in contact information, organization details, or other administrative updates.

These relationships are primarily inferred by analyzing BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) routing data collected from various points on the internet.

  • Upstreams are identified as networks providing broad internet transit.
  • Downstreams are customers receiving transit from the AS.
  • Peers are networks exchanging traffic directly, often identified by the limited scope of routes they share.

Large networks, especially content providers or major ISPs, often rely heavily on peering to exchange traffic efficiently and cost-effectively. They might have enough peering partners to cover most of their traffic needs, reducing their reliance on paid upstream transit. Some may still use upstreams for redundancy or to reach niche parts of the internet not covered by peers.

If an ASN is an Internet Service Provider (ISP) or provides transit services, other ASNs (its customers) will connect to it as their downstream. The provider AS then carries traffic for these downstream customers to the rest of the internet.

Our ASN data is compiled from Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), like APNIC, RIPE, ARIN, LACNIC, and AFRINIC; from BGP data, and others. We update our data daily to ensure all active ASNs and networks are included. If you notice any inaccuracies, please contact us.

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