[ppml] Buying time...
JORDI PALET MARTINEZ
jordi.palet at consulintel.es
Tue Apr 24 17:46:10 EDT 2007
Agree, but the current estimations for the "exhaustion" seems to still make
if possible if anyone of those big carriers has not started yet, I believe.
Also, I guess your figures are the worst case and if your existing hardware
don't have that support already.
I still believe that most of the time you're upgrading your network for
other reasons, not necessarily because IPv6, and IPv6 hardware is coming as
a value added choice. Of course, there are cases and cases ...
Regards,
Jordi
> De: Jason Schiller <schiller at uu.net>
> Responder a: <schiller at uu.net>
> Fecha: Tue, 24 Apr 2007 17:30:22 -0400 (EDT)
> Para: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <jordi.palet at consulintel.es>
> CC: <ppml at arin.net>
> Asunto: Re: [ppml] Buying time...
>
> Jordi,
>
> Many IPS have a normal 5 year refresh cycle. Depending on where they are
> in the process, starting an upgrade now may short cut the refresh cycle
> and require an investment in hardware upgrades (ISPs require packet
> forwarding in hardware, and not all hardware that forward IPv4 traffic in
> hardware can also forward IPv6 in hardware). These investments would be
> in IPv6 which generate no new revune.
>
> Large networks can take a long time to upgrade if a fork-lift upgrade is
> required (think 2-3 years).
>
> __Jason
> ==========================================================================
> Jason Schiller (703)886.6648
> Senior Internet Network Engineer fax:(703)886.0512
> Public IP Global Network Engineering schiller at uu.net
> UUNET / Verizon jason.schiller at verizonbusiness.com
>
> The good news about having an email address that is twice as long is that
> it increases traffic on the Internet.
>
> On Tue, 24 Apr 2007, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ wrote:
>
>> Date: Tue, 24 Apr 2007 16:41:27 -0400
>> From: JORDI PALET MARTINEZ <jordi.palet at consulintel.es>
>> To: ppml at arin.net
>> Subject: Re: [ppml] Buying time...
>>
>> I don't really agree with the need for "buying" more time for deploying
>> IPv6. It will take 1, 2 or 3 years more, but there will be no new products
>> in the market in 1-2 years that don't support IPv6.
>>
>> Market will not accept it, and manufacturers will have no interest on doing
>> so, just a matter of competition.
>>
>> Now, even if (some) ISPs decide not to deploy IPv6, neither transition tools
>> in their networks, the addresses needed for running IPv4-only devices
>> (considering the increase in the use of NAT if required), are already there.
>> We don't need many more IPv4 addresses for keeping the network that we have
>> today and the grown in the next couple of years.
>>
>> If we ever do anything, it will be just an artificial measure, never a
>> perfectly fair solution. There is no way we can decide that we need to
>> reserve some of the /8s for this or that region. Based on what ? And what if
>> the development progress on this or that region is different after two years
>> ? It may be a fair distribution now, but it can be radically different in 2
>> years.
>>
>> I also believe, as indicated already today in the previous session, that as
>> much as we progress with IPv6 deployment and more traffic is dominant versus
>> IPv4 one, there will be more and more core/distribution/access networks that
>> will turn to be only-IPv6 instead of dual stack (always keeping the LANs
>> with dual stack, even with private IPv4 and NAT), using mechanisms such as
>> softwires to automatically setup IPv4-in-IPv6 tunnels for those
>> applications/hosts that are not yet (or never will be) IPv6 ready. This will
>> mean that some of the today used IPv4 addressing space may be returned, very
>> slowly, and reused just in case new networks appear and they still decide to
>> be dual stack for whatever reason (I tend to think that it will not make
>> sense if IPv6 traffic is becoming dominant, but may be cases that I'm not
>> thinking about).
>>
>> Regards,
>> Jordi
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>> De: Raul Echeberria <raul at lacnic.net>
>>> Responder a: <ppml-bounces at arin.net>
>>> Fecha: Tue, 24 Apr 2007 17:02:54 -0300
>>> Para: 'ARIN PPML' <ppml at arin.net>
>>> Asunto: Re: [ppml] Buying time...
>>>
>>>
>>> Tony, Bill:
>>>
>>> I think that the situation is a bit more
>>> complicated that what I can understand from your comments.
>>> I agree regarding IPv6 is the solution, but IPv6
>>> will not be widely adopted only because we think that would be the solution.
>>> So, we will have to deal with IPv4 still for some
>>> more time. And we have to work in ensuring the
>>> same possibilities of access to IPv4 resources to everybody around the
>>> world.
>>> IMHO we have to work in making IPv6 more feasible
>>> bat also in paralel we have to work in optimizing
>>> the usage of IPv4. It can be done in a "non very
>>> painful" way. I guess that nobody can obstract
>>> Intenet development. Concluding, "buying time"
>>> could be benefitial for the community, and it is enough for me.
>>>
>>> Raúl
>>>
>>> At 03:45 p.m. 24/04/2007, Bill Woodcock wrote:
>>>>> The discussion about 'buying time' to prepare for IPv6 is just
>>>>> a stalling tactic that will only make the
>>>> eventual effort that much more
>>>>> painful. It is absolutely understandable
>>>> that people want to have more time
>>>>> to prepare, but to do that they should have started earlier. Making the
>>>>> current processes more painful for new
>>>> comers just so the lethargic can feel
>>>>> better is not 'stewardship'.
>>>>
>>>> Agreed. ARIN just isn't in a position to save people from themselves.
>>>> We're running out of v4. The solution to that is v6. If people want to
>>>> avail themselves of the solution, it's there. We can't force them, and
>>>> it's twenty years too late to come up with a different solution.
>>>>
>>>> -Bill
>>>>
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>>>
>>>
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>>
>>
>>
>>
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