[ppml] "Who's afraid of IPv4 address depletion? Apparently no one."
bmanning at vacation.karoshi.com
bmanning at vacation.karoshi.com
Sat Feb 9 14:11:40 EST 2008
- Previous message: [ppml] "Who's afraid of IPv4 address depletion? Apparently no one."
- Next message: [ppml] "Who's afraid of IPv4 address depletion? Apparently no one."
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
> IPv6 is not a flag day; there is a dual stack transition period and > ALG's can easily bridge the two. There are more than a few enterprise > networks designed with RFC1918 space internally and a small DMZ > network with dual homed mail servers, VPN servers, web proxy servers, > and the like. At least in the short term these enterprises will > be well served by getting a /48 from their upstream, putting IPv6 > on the outside interfaces of the 10 or so boxes in the DMZ, and > leaving the rest of their 10,000 internal systems alone on IPv4 > RFC1918 space. > > They will be able to send e-mail and browse web sites on IPv6 only > boxes just fine. The VPN servers will allow someone with IPv6 only > at home to create an IPv4 tunnel back to the internal corporate > network. > > -- > Leo Bicknell - bicknell at ufp.org - CCIE 3440 > PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/ right model, but (imho) 180 degrees out of phase. think IPv6 only islands w/ a thin veneer of IPv4 (say a /28) on the outside. the ALG's to support this are not well defined, with the IETF reconsidering work in this area. some call this NAT-PT, my favorite is the CERN-IVI box... which might see the light of day 3q08... --bill
- Previous message: [ppml] "Who's afraid of IPv4 address depletion? Apparently no one."
- Next message: [ppml] "Who's afraid of IPv4 address depletion? Apparently no one."
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the PPML mailing list