[ppml] Summary of Trial Balloons for DealingwithIPv4AddressCountdown
michael.dillon at bt.com
michael.dillon at bt.com
Mon Apr 2 13:43:43 EDT 2007
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> there's nothing in > place to handle > v4-only hosts on a v6-capable network. > > Eventually vendors will figure this out and provide a > solution, but I don't > have much hope that vendor enlightenment is imminent based on > their (lack > of) progress over the last decade. Uhm, did you miss my posting with all the URLs? One was for a company that makes an IPv6 gateway for the edge of an IPv4 network provider. http://www.hexago.com Given that this is where the current market is and will remain until the large providers consider shutting down their IPv4 backbones, why should the vendors offer a box that does the reverse? If you are building a network in compliance with DOD or USG directives on IPv6 and want to leverage IPv4 Internet access instead of fixed WAN links, then the Hexago boxes do the trick. At some point these tricks may well move inside the network provider. In fact, for providers who run an MPLS core, the IETF has a trick called 6MPE that allows them to implement IPv6 services by just configuring a few PE (edge) routers with pure V6. No doubt others will implement v6 tunnels across a v4 core or v4 tunnels across a v6 core or simply use ATM. Like the MAE-East days of the Internet when I sent traffic across the continent in order to get across town, the paths taken by traffic between the v4 and v6 nets will often be strange. But it can be made to work. In fact there are so many ways to make it work that it is a bit of a job just going through them all and figuring out which one to use. If you ask me, the best route is to go to MPLS, then add 6MPE and a few Teredo servers. > The day they turn off IPv4 isn't as interesting to me as the > day they turn > on IPv6. I'll probably be dead before the former happens, > but there's a > fair chance the latter may occur before I retire. IPv6 was turned on years ago. It is in an early exponential growth phase which is why it is almost unnoticeable. But that slow exponential curve will suddenly kick upwards when people least expect it, rather like the IPv4 Internet back in 93, 94, 95... -- Michael Dillon
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