nanog mailing list archives

Re: Remember "Internet-In-A-Box"?


From: Mark Andrews <marka () isc org>
Date: Thu, 16 Jul 2015 12:32:19 +1000


In message <55A682E6.1050607 () matthew at>, Matthew Kaufman writes:
On 7/14/2015 11:22 PM, Mark Andrews wrote:

Yet I can take a Windows XP box.  Tell it to enable IPv6 and it
just works.  Everything that a node needed existed when Windows XP
was released.  The last 15 years has been waiting for ISP's and CPE
vendors to deliver IPv6 as a product.  This is not to say that every
vendor deployed all the parts of the protocol properly but they
existed.

This is only true for dual-stacked networks. I just tried to set up an 
IPv6-only WiFi network at my house recently, and it was a total fail due 
to non-implementation of relatively new standards... starting with the 
fact that my Juniper SRX doesn't run a load new enough to include RDNSS 
information in RAs, and some of the devices I wanted to test with 
(Android tablets) won't do DHCPv6.

You can blame the religious zealots that insisted that everything
DHCP does has to also be done via RA's.  This means that everyone
has to implement everything twice.  Something Google should have
realised when they releases Android.

The XP box is in an even worse situation if you try to run it on a 
v6-only network.

Which is fixable with a third party DHCPv6 client / manual configuration
of the nameservers.

And yet we've known for years now that dual-stack wasn't going to be an 
acceptable solution, because nobody was on track to get to 100% IPv6 
before IPv4 runout happened.

Go to any business with hardware that is 3-5 years old in its IT 
infrastructure and devices ranging from PCs running XP to the random 
consumer gear people bring in (cameras, printers, tablets, etc.) and see 
how easy it is to get everything talking on an IPv6-only (no IPv4 at 
all) network... including using IPv6 to do automatic updates and all the 
other pieces that need to work. We're nowhere near ready for that.

None of which is the fault of the protocol.  Blame the equipement vendors
for being negligent.
 
Matthew Kaufman

-- 
Mark Andrews, ISC
1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia
PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742                 INTERNET: marka () isc org


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