By Drew FitzGerald 

Network engineers are buzzing this week that the Internet is outgrowing some of its gear.

While a precise count is elusive, many technicians are reporting that the total number of world-wide Internet routes is near or already past about 512,000. Internet providers, corporations and universities all rely on this roughly common set of directions to send data where it needs to go.The number matters because the machines that send Internet data from one network to another carry a map of these routes, and older network routers from Cisco Systems Inc. and other manufacturers won't hold more routes unless they are tweaked.

The fix is simple. Engineers can solve the problem by simply raising the router's memory cap and rebooting. But it is a manual process, and the fallout is hard to judge given the numbers involved. That could cause the routers left online to become overloaded, slowing Internet speeds for billions of people around the world.

The situation echoes, if more faintly, the hubbub over the Y2K computer glitch in the late 1990s, when experts warned systems could fail because their dating functions hadn't been designed to handle the turn of the century. Internet specialists are being careful to warn against a descent into that era's hyperbole and shrill warnings of disasters that never materialized.

Still, the issue is a real one. Website hosting service Liquid Web Inc. said some users had trouble connecting to a portion of its customers' Web pages Tuesday until its technicians were able to sort out the problem.

"It's certainly an issue that pushed some of our routers over the limit, " Liquid Web spokesman Cale Sauter said. "Getting to the bottom of everything took a large portion of the business day."

More websites and broadband companies are likely to encounter the problem when they hit the seemingly arbitrary limit in the coming days, according to Jim Cowie, president of network research firm Renesys. Web companies usually have slightly different versions of this digital set of directions, so their databases will breach the 512,000 route mark at different times.

Network experts say the problem draws attention to the shrinking number of unique numbers available under the most popular routing system, IPv4, which can only fit a few billion addresses. Version 6, or IPv6, can hold many orders of magnitude more addresses but has been slow to catch fire.

"That relentless pressure has pushed the distribution of global routing table sizes up and up, as more and more people join the Internet, and find themselves fighting over smaller and smaller crumbs of IPv4 space," Mr. Cowie says in his blog post.

Write to Drew FitzGerald at andrew.fitzgerald@wsj.com

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