AS32
Stanford University — stanford.edu
Summary
Country |
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Organization | Stanford University |
Domain | stanford.edu |
Number of IPv4 | 329,728 |
Number of IPv6 | 7.9229× 1028 |
AS Type | Education |
Registry | ARIN |
Allocated | September 24, 1984 (about 41 years ago) |
Updated | September 14, 2023 (about 1 year ago) |
IP Ranges
AS32 announces 3 IPv4 ranges and 2 IPv6 ranges.
That's a total of 329,728 IPv4 addresses and 7.9229× 1028 IPv6 addresses.
Prefix | Organization | Size | Registry | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
128.12.0.0/16 |
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65,536 | ARIN | ALLOCATION |
171.64.0.0/14 |
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262,144 | ARIN | ALLOCATION |
204.63.224.0/21 |
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2,048 | ARIN | ALLOCATION |
Prefix | Organization | Size | Registry | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|
2607:f6d0::/32 |
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7.9228× 1028 | ARIN | ALLOCATION |
2620:6c:40c0::/48 |
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1.2089× 1024 | ARIN | ALLOCATION |
Peers
AS32 does not have any direct peering agreements. Instead, its global connectivity is achieved through transit providers. While this setup ensures comprehensive reach, future peering could reduce latency and optimize route efficiency.
Upstreams
AS32 connects to the global Internet via at least 2 upstream providers. In this setup, AS32 acts as a customer, subscribing to these transit services to obtain full BGP routing information and ensure reliable, redundant access to external networks.
Downstreams
AS32 currently has no downstream networks, meaning it does not serve as a transit provider to customer networks.