[arin-ppml] Fantasyland
Bill Darte
BillD at cait.wustl.edu
Fri Aug 29 07:32:00 EDT 2008
Now THAT is interesting....and disappointing...
I believe it makes a fantastic scorecard and target for 'anyone' who wishes to influence practical participation in the IPv6 Internet.
I know that I will be sharing this with my colleagues at Washington University in St. Louis.
I hope we all learn to appreciate the taste of dogfood.
Bill Darte
ARIN AC
Washington University in St. Louis
-----Original Message-----
From: arin-ppml-bounces at arin.net on behalf of bmanning at vacation.karoshi.com
Sent: Thu 8/28/2008 4:45 PM
To: michael.dillon at bt.com
Cc: ppml at arin.net
Subject: Re: [arin-ppml] Fantasyland
On Thu, Aug 28, 2008 at 12:03:29PM +0100, michael.dillon at bt.com wrote:
> > > Why shouldn't the company in question just deploy IPv6 and install
> > > NAT-PT gateways to cover the next 2-3 years before
> > > IPv6 transit is widely available?
>
> > Please provide a vendor list for NAT-PT gateways that
> > provide production level service/availability - today.
>
> I would hope that the company in question would plan their deployment
> exercise and not just rush out buying equipment and blasting out their
> old network. As part of the planning exercise, they might go to the ARIN
> IPv6 wiki at <http://www.getipv6.info/index.php/Investigate_Middleboxes>
> where they will note vendor names. If they contact said vendors, then
> there is motivation for said vendors to provide production level service
> and availabilty within the timeframe for implementation. Note that there
> is also the possibility of consulting firms using open-source NAT-PT who
> would then provide the SLA and support component.
>
> Obviously, today, there is only one vendor on that page and no mention
> of
> where open-source NAT-PT can be found. I would hope that anyone with
> more
> information would log on to the wiki and update this page and others.
which raises the question of "eating our own dogfood"...
there have been a number of calls for folks to take first
steps to get their "externally" facing DNS, SMTP, HTTP services
visable on IPv6. One might find this survey of interest.
http://www.mrp.net/IPv6_Survey.html
clearly we have a ways to go to meet the first hurdle. As for NAT-PT,
the IETF is still trying to settle on a standard.
--bill
_______________________________________________
PPML
You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to
the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List (ARIN-PPML at arin.net).
Unsubscribe or manage your mailing list subscription at:
http://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/arin-ppml
Please contact info at arin.net if you experience any issues.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://lists.arin.net/pipermail/arin-ppml/attachments/20080829/aefbc398/attachment.htm>
More information about the ARIN-PPML
mailing list