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PHILADELPHIA -- The Internet engineering community will be eating its own dog food tonight. For one hour, the 1,250 network experts at the Internet Engineering Task Force meeting will be able to access the Internet only through IPv6. The IETF created IPv6 in the mid-1990s, but this upgrade to the Internet's main communications protocol has not yet been widely deployed -- even by the technology's biggest proponents here. Network World National Correspondent Carolyn Duffy Marsan talked with IETF Chair Russ Housley about the group's IPv6 experiment, why the transition to IPv6 is taking so long, and whether the IETF leadership is starting to panic about IPv4 addresses running out. Here are excerpts from their conversation:
You're turning off the IPv4 network during the plenary session tonight and requiring everyone here to use IPv6. Is this significant or is this a publicity stunt?
I didn't do it as a publicity stunt. It's become more of one than I intended. It's our strong preference to preserve the end-to-end model of the Internet and deploy IPv6 and not [network address translation.] We need to have network people use the IPv6 implementations, find out where they're fragile and fix them so IPv6 deployment will be smooth. This experiment also is about finding out how hard it is to deploy IPv6. A lot of IETF people want to have their Web sites accessible during the IPv6 experiment, and they are taking the necessary steps to make their Web sites available on IPv4 and IPv6. IPv6 has been available on our network for the whole meeting, but we're turning off the IPv4 part of our network for one hour. The point of this is to get people to move out of their comfort zones with IPv4 and start using IPv6.
The IETF created IPv6 13 years ago, and it's only in a handful of production networks. Why is it taking so long?
Economics. If you are able to get your application to work on IPv4, there's no economic reason to invest in IPv6. You're just creating a second way for the same job to get done. The thing that's changing is that we're going to run out of IPv4 addresses and so we have a choice facing us. One is to have NAT upon NAT so that the Internet continues to work, or we can preserve the end-to-end model by moving away from IPv4 to IPv6. I'm hoping that IPv6 will be the answer because we want it to be easy to add new applications to the Internet. The more things that are in the middle such as NATs, the harder it will be for new applications to deploy.
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Comments (6)
IPV6 2010 ?By Anonymous on March 14, 2008, 9:43 amDoubt it....as stated earlier, everybody is using private IP space, not only for limited public addresses, but for security in general. With NAT/Port Forwarding/...
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What were the resultsBy Anonymous on March 13, 2008, 11:01 amCan you publish what you learned during your 1 hour foray into IPv6?
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IPv6By Anonymous on March 13, 2008, 10:39 amI believe that it would be more conducive if the public would be made aware of the glitch that will be the slowdown for their internet access through their ISP and...
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Another view of IPv6By Anonymous on March 12, 2008, 3:46 pmThe NANOG meeting in Albuquerque had an excellent presentation on "IPv6 Transition & Operational Reality". Watch the whole presentation for a different view at...
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Hording will prevent free addressesBy Gregopedia on March 12, 2008, 3:31 pmI do not think any company will willingly give up their address space in IPv4 - Even way past 2010 this will still be considered the Real and reliable Net. I forsee...
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