Martin Levy presented on Hurricane Electric's IPv6 network and global IPv6 deployment. He discussed Hurricane Electric's native IPv6 backbone and global peering, and showed that IPv6 routing is now prevalent on major backbones globally. While some improvements remain, the basic global IPv6 infrastructure is largely in place. Metrics from Hurricane Electric's BGP analysis tools indicate continued growth in IPv6 routing tables and adoption. IPv6 tunnels also remain important where native connectivity is still emerging.
NANOG52 - OCN Experience to Handle the Internet Growth and the FutureChika Yoshimura
This document discusses issues related to Internet traffic growth and network design at OCN, a major ISP in Japan. It summarizes that Internet traffic and routing tables are growing significantly each year, posing challenges for backbone networks. Specifically, OCN is facing issues with large forwarding information bases slowing route convergence, and uneven traffic load balancing across link aggregation groups due to limited hash elements. The document outlines OCN's network architecture and plans to address these problems through techniques like hierarchical forwarding to improve convergence times and more hash parameters to balance traffic flow.
This document provides an overview of IPv6 deployment and discusses reasons for and against adopting IPv6. It summarizes the status of IPv4 address exhaustion and reviews IPv6 readiness statistics globally and for various networks. The document outlines choices for network operators regarding IPv6 adoption, including doing nothing, prolonging IPv4 through NAT or address trading, or deploying IPv6. It also discusses IPv6 security considerations and issues specific to IPv6.
RPKI and Me discusses the importance of implementing RPKI to secure BGP routing. It provides examples of past BGP hijacking incidents and explains how RPKI works by cryptographically signing routes and prefixes. The document analyzes the current state of RPKI deployment in Malaysia, noting some networks have implemented it well while others still have invalid route objects. It encourages all networks to sign their routes to avoid reachability issues as more invalid routes are detected. Finally, it offers resources for getting started with RPKI and becoming MANRS compliant.
The document provides an update on IPv6 deployment globally and in the APNIC region. It finds that while IPv6 deployment is increasing steadily, progress varies significantly between regions, economies, and network operators. Some mobile network operators and cable TV providers have been very active adopters of IPv6. The growth of mobile broadband and shift to all-IP networks is driving more adoption, though overall deployment levels are still relatively low in many parts of the world. APNIC is actively engaged in promoting IPv6 deployment through training, resources and its annual conference.
1. APNIC measures IPv6 deployment using online advertisements that test devices' ability to fetch URLs over IPv6. Their data shows 24.07% of end users are IPv6 capable, a over 400% increase in the past 5 years.
2. India has the highest percentage of IPv6 capable users at 63.79%, while many Asian and European economies have over 30%. Mobile networks are a major driver of IPv6 adoption.
3. IPv6 performance analysis shows a 1.4% global failure rate for TCP connections and varying results for connection speeds between regions, which may be influenced by different routing paths for IPv4 and IPv6.
Global IPv6 Summit Presentation - Global Deployment or Digital DivideAPNIC
This document summarizes IPv6 deployment efforts globally and in specific regions and countries. It discusses the growing need for IPv6 due to the depletion of IPv4 address space. Several case studies are presented on IPv6 deployment by mobile carriers like T-Mobile USA. Taiwan's government efforts to promote IPv6 are also summarized, as well as the work done by TWNIC and APNIC to measure IPv6 readiness and encourage adoption.
Overview of 'Work Item B: Overview of (national) activities, deployments and services'.
Presentation by Frans Ward, SURFnet at the TF-Media meeting in Prague, november 5, 2009.
Includes an overview of MediaMosa.
NANOG52 - OCN Experience to Handle the Internet Growth and the FutureChika Yoshimura
This document discusses issues related to Internet traffic growth and network design at OCN, a major ISP in Japan. It summarizes that Internet traffic and routing tables are growing significantly each year, posing challenges for backbone networks. Specifically, OCN is facing issues with large forwarding information bases slowing route convergence, and uneven traffic load balancing across link aggregation groups due to limited hash elements. The document outlines OCN's network architecture and plans to address these problems through techniques like hierarchical forwarding to improve convergence times and more hash parameters to balance traffic flow.
This document provides an overview of IPv6 deployment and discusses reasons for and against adopting IPv6. It summarizes the status of IPv4 address exhaustion and reviews IPv6 readiness statistics globally and for various networks. The document outlines choices for network operators regarding IPv6 adoption, including doing nothing, prolonging IPv4 through NAT or address trading, or deploying IPv6. It also discusses IPv6 security considerations and issues specific to IPv6.
RPKI and Me discusses the importance of implementing RPKI to secure BGP routing. It provides examples of past BGP hijacking incidents and explains how RPKI works by cryptographically signing routes and prefixes. The document analyzes the current state of RPKI deployment in Malaysia, noting some networks have implemented it well while others still have invalid route objects. It encourages all networks to sign their routes to avoid reachability issues as more invalid routes are detected. Finally, it offers resources for getting started with RPKI and becoming MANRS compliant.
The document provides an update on IPv6 deployment globally and in the APNIC region. It finds that while IPv6 deployment is increasing steadily, progress varies significantly between regions, economies, and network operators. Some mobile network operators and cable TV providers have been very active adopters of IPv6. The growth of mobile broadband and shift to all-IP networks is driving more adoption, though overall deployment levels are still relatively low in many parts of the world. APNIC is actively engaged in promoting IPv6 deployment through training, resources and its annual conference.
1. APNIC measures IPv6 deployment using online advertisements that test devices' ability to fetch URLs over IPv6. Their data shows 24.07% of end users are IPv6 capable, a over 400% increase in the past 5 years.
2. India has the highest percentage of IPv6 capable users at 63.79%, while many Asian and European economies have over 30%. Mobile networks are a major driver of IPv6 adoption.
3. IPv6 performance analysis shows a 1.4% global failure rate for TCP connections and varying results for connection speeds between regions, which may be influenced by different routing paths for IPv4 and IPv6.
Global IPv6 Summit Presentation - Global Deployment or Digital DivideAPNIC
This document summarizes IPv6 deployment efforts globally and in specific regions and countries. It discusses the growing need for IPv6 due to the depletion of IPv4 address space. Several case studies are presented on IPv6 deployment by mobile carriers like T-Mobile USA. Taiwan's government efforts to promote IPv6 are also summarized, as well as the work done by TWNIC and APNIC to measure IPv6 readiness and encourage adoption.
Overview of 'Work Item B: Overview of (national) activities, deployments and services'.
Presentation by Frans Ward, SURFnet at the TF-Media meeting in Prague, november 5, 2009.
Includes an overview of MediaMosa.
PLNOG 9: Donald E. Eastlake 3rd - Transparent Interconnection of Lost of Links PROIDEA
The document provides a high-level overview of TRILL (Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links) by Donald Eastlake, including:
- TRILL terminates spanning tree protocols and provides least cost unicast paths and multipathing capabilities for higher throughput.
- The history of TRILL from its inception in 2004 to its standardization by the IETF in 2010.
- Two examples showing how TRILL can improve performance and redundancy in bridged campus networks and data center networks compared to spanning tree.
The document discusses RPKI (Resource Public Key Infrastructure) deployment factors in Japan. It notes that RPKI deployment has been slower in Asia including Japan compared to Europe. It outlines some of the challenges including that router implementations are still being enhanced and operational practices need to mature. It also notes that JPNIC and JPNAP have recently launched public RPKI ROA caches to help accelerate deployment in Japan. The document closes by outlining some issues seen with RPKI validation and provides a proposed step-by-step approach to RPKI deployment.
IPv4 addresses are nearly exhausted while IPv6 provides a vast address space to support continued Internet growth. While IPv4 and IPv6 can coexist, IPv6 adoption is needed as the only sustainable solution. Global metrics show increasing IPv6 deployment over time through allocations, routing entries, and user access, though challenges remain around applications, skills, and justification. RIRs and IETF are committed to IPv6 to maintain the openness and development of the Internet.
NASA OIG: Status of NASA's Transition to Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6)Bill Duncan
Results NASA has taken preliminary steps to meet OMB requirements for IPv6 transition and integration, including assigning a lead official in November 2005 to coordinate NASA's efforts, developing inventories of IP-aware devices and an impact analysis, and in June 2008 demonstrating IPv6 capability of one NASA network
.
However, as of March 2010 the Agency did not have an updated or complete IPv6 transition plan as required by OMB. This occurred, in part, because the Agency has ample IPv4 addresses to meet its current and future requirements and because the individual who was leading the IPv6 transition effort left NASA in November 2006 and no one has been assigned to replace him.
As a result, the Agency does not have adequate assurance that it has considered all necessary transition elements or that the security and interoperability of its systems will not be affected as other Government agencies and entities transition to IPv6. Accordingly, even if NASA can continue meeting its communication needs using IPv4 addresses, it should ensure that its systems are prepared as other Internet users transition to IPv6.
IPv6 Deployment; Where are we now? - ASEAN ICT SMEs ConferenceAPNIC
IPv6 Deployment: Where are we now?
This document summarizes IPv6 readiness and deployment in the Asia Pacific region based on statistics and initiatives by governments and private sectors. It finds that while IPv6 adoption is growing, many networks and users still rely primarily on IPv4. Governments across the region are actively working with private industries to promote IPv6 adoption through partnerships, policies, awareness campaigns and capacity building. Mobile networks are seen as key to future growth as users shift to mobile broadband, making the transition to IPv6 important to support new services and business models. Continuous information sharing and collaboration among stakeholders will be important to a successful transition.
Academia Service Network: IPv6 Status ReportEthern Lin
This document summarizes the IPv6 status of ASNet, the Academia Sinica network in Taiwan. It provides details on ASNet's IPv6 addressing and infrastructure, including peering with commercial and academic networks domestically and internationally. It also describes NICI's 2004 project to construct an IPv6 Internet Exchange to promote IPv6 adoption among ISPs and provide IPv6 testing environments.
FPT Telecom has deployed IPv6 throughout its core network, broadband network gateway (BNG), and customer premise equipment (CPE). At the BNG, IPv6 was deployed by combining the BNG with a DHCPv6 server. Over 818,000 IPv6 subscribers have been onboarded, accounting for 24.3% of FPT Telecom's total subscribers. Case studies examined issues with generating unique DHCP client identifiers and methods for selectively deploying IPv6 to only CPE devices ready to support it.
The document compares routing tables from various large networks to see if route announcements are truly global and why some networks may have thousands more routes than others. It analyzes over 800,000 IPv4 prefixes and finds around 35,000 prefixes have limited visibility in some networks. Possible reasons for differences include RPKI and IRR filtering, route announcements limited to peers instead of the whole default-free zone, and misconfigurations. The document recommends network operators improve IRR and RPKI management to help ensure global route reachability.
This document discusses the Pan-ASEAN fiber optic network developed by GT to connect Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Hong Kong. The network provides a robust infrastructure for connectivity across ASEAN with 100% availability and fast restoration of outages. GT aims to leverage this network to better serve enterprises expanding in ASEAN, e-commerce companies looking to access the region's growing consumer base, and others seeking high service level agreements. The network allows more accessible connectivity for ASEAN's rising middle class and growing digital economy.
IPv6 infrastructure and multicasting status reportEthern Lin
This document summarizes the status of IPv6 infrastructure in Asia-Pacific regions. It discusses the IPv6 backbone networks in Taiwan including ASNet and ASIX6, which interconnect various academic and commercial networks. It also describes the M6bone testbed for IPv6 multicasting, and provides contact information for networks interested in peering or joining the IPv6 infrastructure.
IPv6 deployment experience in Japan has uncovered several key issues:
1. Early mobile networks using IPv4 experienced congestion due to limited wireless bandwidth, but IPv6 has alleviated this by allowing more efficient use of network resources.
2. Mobile carriers in Japan have taken two approaches to IPv6 deployment - some use NAT/firewalls to preserve wireless resources and protect users, while others offer a separate "pure IPv6" service for a fee.
3. A successful IPv6 rollout requires addressing challenges across many aspects of network operations, backend systems, customer support, and device compatibility to ensure a smooth transition.
The document provides an overview of 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership Project), which is a collaboration between telecommunications standards bodies to develop specifications for mobile systems. It discusses the generations of mobile technologies from 1G to 4G/LTE, the organizational structure and partners of 3GPP, the key technologies and releases developed by 3GPP including GSM, WCDMA, HSPA and LTE. It also compares 3GPP with the related 3GPP2 project.
TWNIC OPM and IPv6 Summit 2013 - IPv6 DeploymentAPNIC
George Kuo of APNIC presnted the highlights of global and regional economies IPv6 readiness, governments’ initiative in the Asia Pacific region, as well as the growth path of the Internet.
The document provides an overview of IPv6 adoption around the world and in Malaysia specifically. It discusses the depletion of IPv4 addresses forcing a transition to IPv6. The US government has mandated all federal agencies upgrade to IPv6 by certain deadlines. In Malaysia, the National IPv6 Council was established in 2004 to guide the transition. ISPs have undergone compliance audits to test IPv6 connectivity. The Malaysian government also released IPv6 transition guidelines for the public sector outlining a phased approach for agencies to upgrade networks and applications to IPv6.
The document summarizes the network setup and operations for the RIPE 60 technical meeting. It describes the different internal networks established, new setups, issues encountered, statistics on webcast viewership and traffic, and wireless network operations. The technical team is responsible for the network infrastructure supporting the meeting, including servers, networking equipment, and audio/visual technology. IPv6 traffic accounted for around 6% of total uplink traffic.
The document reports on Academia Sinica's IPv6 status and plans. It details Academia Sinica's IPv6 addressing and infrastructure, including campus and international connectivity. It also describes Academia Sinica's role in providing IPv6 transit to academic and business networks in Taiwan through the TaipeiGigaPoP and an IPv6 Internet exchange project. Finally, it outlines NICI's 2004 plans to expand IPv6 adoption and reduce costs for ISPs through this exchange.
Tony Smith presented on the status of IPv6 deployment globally and in the Asia Pacific region based on various statistics. He found that IPv6 deployment is varied among regions, economies, and network operators, with some being more active than others. Statistics showed growth of IPv6 adoption in countries like China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, and Taiwan due to initiatives by governments and private sectors working together. Mobile networks were also shifting to IPv6 to support growth in mobile broadband usage. Continuous information sharing and collaboration between stakeholders was key to supporting current and future Internet growth.
IPv6 Deployment, Where are we now? - APEC TEL 48APNIC
This document summarizes the state of IPv6 deployment in Asia Pacific economies based on statistics and government initiatives. It finds that while IPv6 deployment is varied, some economies like Japan, China, and Australia have been very active. Government initiatives in these economies include national IPv6 plans, mandates, and monitoring of deployment. Mobile networks are seen as an important driver of IPv6 adoption as they transition to all-IP networks using LTE. Continued collaboration between governments and industry is needed to support current and future Internet growth.
IPv6 Deployment, where are we now? - Asia Pacific Regional Internet Governanc...APNIC
This document summarizes the status of IPv6 deployment in the Asia Pacific region based on statistics from various sources. It finds that IPv6 readiness and adoption varies across countries and network operators in the region. Many governments have introduced initiatives and guidelines to promote IPv6 deployment, including national roadmaps and partnerships between public and private sectors. Key countries like Australia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam are highlighted for their active government support and progress in transitioning to IPv6.
This document discusses measurements of IPv6 deployment in Finland. It finds that while IPv6 readiness among internet infrastructure organizations in Finland is high, actual end-user IPv6 usage was only around 4% until recently, when one major Finnish ISP increased their IPv6 customers to 11%. IPv6 performance measurements show IPv6 is sometimes faster but usually on par with IPv4, suggesting dual-stack networks can take advantage of both protocols for optimal performance. In conclusion, Finland is beginning to deploy IPv6 more broadly but significant latent IPv6 capacity remains among infrastructure and end-users.
ION Islamabad, 25 January 2017
By Pubudu Jayasinghe, APNIC & Aftab Siddiqui, Internet Society
Today, we can say that IPv6 is already happening all around the world. It’s interesting to see the main reasons that made it happen, how it’s happening, and to make the audience think about their deployment status and strategy. Statistics from different sources are showed, including data from RIPE NCC measurements.
PLNOG 9: Donald E. Eastlake 3rd - Transparent Interconnection of Lost of Links PROIDEA
The document provides a high-level overview of TRILL (Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links) by Donald Eastlake, including:
- TRILL terminates spanning tree protocols and provides least cost unicast paths and multipathing capabilities for higher throughput.
- The history of TRILL from its inception in 2004 to its standardization by the IETF in 2010.
- Two examples showing how TRILL can improve performance and redundancy in bridged campus networks and data center networks compared to spanning tree.
The document discusses RPKI (Resource Public Key Infrastructure) deployment factors in Japan. It notes that RPKI deployment has been slower in Asia including Japan compared to Europe. It outlines some of the challenges including that router implementations are still being enhanced and operational practices need to mature. It also notes that JPNIC and JPNAP have recently launched public RPKI ROA caches to help accelerate deployment in Japan. The document closes by outlining some issues seen with RPKI validation and provides a proposed step-by-step approach to RPKI deployment.
IPv4 addresses are nearly exhausted while IPv6 provides a vast address space to support continued Internet growth. While IPv4 and IPv6 can coexist, IPv6 adoption is needed as the only sustainable solution. Global metrics show increasing IPv6 deployment over time through allocations, routing entries, and user access, though challenges remain around applications, skills, and justification. RIRs and IETF are committed to IPv6 to maintain the openness and development of the Internet.
NASA OIG: Status of NASA's Transition to Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6)Bill Duncan
Results NASA has taken preliminary steps to meet OMB requirements for IPv6 transition and integration, including assigning a lead official in November 2005 to coordinate NASA's efforts, developing inventories of IP-aware devices and an impact analysis, and in June 2008 demonstrating IPv6 capability of one NASA network
.
However, as of March 2010 the Agency did not have an updated or complete IPv6 transition plan as required by OMB. This occurred, in part, because the Agency has ample IPv4 addresses to meet its current and future requirements and because the individual who was leading the IPv6 transition effort left NASA in November 2006 and no one has been assigned to replace him.
As a result, the Agency does not have adequate assurance that it has considered all necessary transition elements or that the security and interoperability of its systems will not be affected as other Government agencies and entities transition to IPv6. Accordingly, even if NASA can continue meeting its communication needs using IPv4 addresses, it should ensure that its systems are prepared as other Internet users transition to IPv6.
IPv6 Deployment; Where are we now? - ASEAN ICT SMEs ConferenceAPNIC
IPv6 Deployment: Where are we now?
This document summarizes IPv6 readiness and deployment in the Asia Pacific region based on statistics and initiatives by governments and private sectors. It finds that while IPv6 adoption is growing, many networks and users still rely primarily on IPv4. Governments across the region are actively working with private industries to promote IPv6 adoption through partnerships, policies, awareness campaigns and capacity building. Mobile networks are seen as key to future growth as users shift to mobile broadband, making the transition to IPv6 important to support new services and business models. Continuous information sharing and collaboration among stakeholders will be important to a successful transition.
Academia Service Network: IPv6 Status ReportEthern Lin
This document summarizes the IPv6 status of ASNet, the Academia Sinica network in Taiwan. It provides details on ASNet's IPv6 addressing and infrastructure, including peering with commercial and academic networks domestically and internationally. It also describes NICI's 2004 project to construct an IPv6 Internet Exchange to promote IPv6 adoption among ISPs and provide IPv6 testing environments.
FPT Telecom has deployed IPv6 throughout its core network, broadband network gateway (BNG), and customer premise equipment (CPE). At the BNG, IPv6 was deployed by combining the BNG with a DHCPv6 server. Over 818,000 IPv6 subscribers have been onboarded, accounting for 24.3% of FPT Telecom's total subscribers. Case studies examined issues with generating unique DHCP client identifiers and methods for selectively deploying IPv6 to only CPE devices ready to support it.
The document compares routing tables from various large networks to see if route announcements are truly global and why some networks may have thousands more routes than others. It analyzes over 800,000 IPv4 prefixes and finds around 35,000 prefixes have limited visibility in some networks. Possible reasons for differences include RPKI and IRR filtering, route announcements limited to peers instead of the whole default-free zone, and misconfigurations. The document recommends network operators improve IRR and RPKI management to help ensure global route reachability.
This document discusses the Pan-ASEAN fiber optic network developed by GT to connect Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Hong Kong. The network provides a robust infrastructure for connectivity across ASEAN with 100% availability and fast restoration of outages. GT aims to leverage this network to better serve enterprises expanding in ASEAN, e-commerce companies looking to access the region's growing consumer base, and others seeking high service level agreements. The network allows more accessible connectivity for ASEAN's rising middle class and growing digital economy.
IPv6 infrastructure and multicasting status reportEthern Lin
This document summarizes the status of IPv6 infrastructure in Asia-Pacific regions. It discusses the IPv6 backbone networks in Taiwan including ASNet and ASIX6, which interconnect various academic and commercial networks. It also describes the M6bone testbed for IPv6 multicasting, and provides contact information for networks interested in peering or joining the IPv6 infrastructure.
IPv6 deployment experience in Japan has uncovered several key issues:
1. Early mobile networks using IPv4 experienced congestion due to limited wireless bandwidth, but IPv6 has alleviated this by allowing more efficient use of network resources.
2. Mobile carriers in Japan have taken two approaches to IPv6 deployment - some use NAT/firewalls to preserve wireless resources and protect users, while others offer a separate "pure IPv6" service for a fee.
3. A successful IPv6 rollout requires addressing challenges across many aspects of network operations, backend systems, customer support, and device compatibility to ensure a smooth transition.
The document provides an overview of 3GPP (3rd Generation Partnership Project), which is a collaboration between telecommunications standards bodies to develop specifications for mobile systems. It discusses the generations of mobile technologies from 1G to 4G/LTE, the organizational structure and partners of 3GPP, the key technologies and releases developed by 3GPP including GSM, WCDMA, HSPA and LTE. It also compares 3GPP with the related 3GPP2 project.
TWNIC OPM and IPv6 Summit 2013 - IPv6 DeploymentAPNIC
George Kuo of APNIC presnted the highlights of global and regional economies IPv6 readiness, governments’ initiative in the Asia Pacific region, as well as the growth path of the Internet.
The document provides an overview of IPv6 adoption around the world and in Malaysia specifically. It discusses the depletion of IPv4 addresses forcing a transition to IPv6. The US government has mandated all federal agencies upgrade to IPv6 by certain deadlines. In Malaysia, the National IPv6 Council was established in 2004 to guide the transition. ISPs have undergone compliance audits to test IPv6 connectivity. The Malaysian government also released IPv6 transition guidelines for the public sector outlining a phased approach for agencies to upgrade networks and applications to IPv6.
The document summarizes the network setup and operations for the RIPE 60 technical meeting. It describes the different internal networks established, new setups, issues encountered, statistics on webcast viewership and traffic, and wireless network operations. The technical team is responsible for the network infrastructure supporting the meeting, including servers, networking equipment, and audio/visual technology. IPv6 traffic accounted for around 6% of total uplink traffic.
The document reports on Academia Sinica's IPv6 status and plans. It details Academia Sinica's IPv6 addressing and infrastructure, including campus and international connectivity. It also describes Academia Sinica's role in providing IPv6 transit to academic and business networks in Taiwan through the TaipeiGigaPoP and an IPv6 Internet exchange project. Finally, it outlines NICI's 2004 plans to expand IPv6 adoption and reduce costs for ISPs through this exchange.
Tony Smith presented on the status of IPv6 deployment globally and in the Asia Pacific region based on various statistics. He found that IPv6 deployment is varied among regions, economies, and network operators, with some being more active than others. Statistics showed growth of IPv6 adoption in countries like China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, and Taiwan due to initiatives by governments and private sectors working together. Mobile networks were also shifting to IPv6 to support growth in mobile broadband usage. Continuous information sharing and collaboration between stakeholders was key to supporting current and future Internet growth.
IPv6 Deployment, Where are we now? - APEC TEL 48APNIC
This document summarizes the state of IPv6 deployment in Asia Pacific economies based on statistics and government initiatives. It finds that while IPv6 deployment is varied, some economies like Japan, China, and Australia have been very active. Government initiatives in these economies include national IPv6 plans, mandates, and monitoring of deployment. Mobile networks are seen as an important driver of IPv6 adoption as they transition to all-IP networks using LTE. Continued collaboration between governments and industry is needed to support current and future Internet growth.
IPv6 Deployment, where are we now? - Asia Pacific Regional Internet Governanc...APNIC
This document summarizes the status of IPv6 deployment in the Asia Pacific region based on statistics from various sources. It finds that IPv6 readiness and adoption varies across countries and network operators in the region. Many governments have introduced initiatives and guidelines to promote IPv6 deployment, including national roadmaps and partnerships between public and private sectors. Key countries like Australia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam are highlighted for their active government support and progress in transitioning to IPv6.
This document discusses measurements of IPv6 deployment in Finland. It finds that while IPv6 readiness among internet infrastructure organizations in Finland is high, actual end-user IPv6 usage was only around 4% until recently, when one major Finnish ISP increased their IPv6 customers to 11%. IPv6 performance measurements show IPv6 is sometimes faster but usually on par with IPv4, suggesting dual-stack networks can take advantage of both protocols for optimal performance. In conclusion, Finland is beginning to deploy IPv6 more broadly but significant latent IPv6 capacity remains among infrastructure and end-users.
ION Islamabad, 25 January 2017
By Pubudu Jayasinghe, APNIC & Aftab Siddiqui, Internet Society
Today, we can say that IPv6 is already happening all around the world. It’s interesting to see the main reasons that made it happen, how it’s happening, and to make the audience think about their deployment status and strategy. Statistics from different sources are showed, including data from RIPE NCC measurements.
IPv6 - delegations, deployment and trends, SANOG 29APNIC
Presented by Pubudu Jayasinghe, from APNIC Members Services team, at the 29th South Asian Network Operators Group meeting (SANOG29) held in Islamabad, Pakistan from 23 to 30 January 2017
The document discusses the need to transition from IPv4 to IPv6 due to the depletion of IPv4 address space and the need to support continued growth of the internet. IPv6 offers benefits like more IP addresses, built-in security features, quality of service, and support for new applications and technologies. Research is increasingly being conducted using IPv6, and strategies are discussed for transitioning networks to support both IPv4 and IPv6.
This document discusses the linkages between governmental policy and IPv6 adoption. It begins with background on IPv4 address exhaustion and the need to adopt IPv6. It then examines IPv6 readiness around the world and provides examples from various countries and economies. Recommendations are made to SATRC to encourage a multi-stakeholder approach, establish IPv6 guidelines, conduct industry readiness research, and develop policies and human capacity. APNIC can contribute training, monitoring, and outreach efforts to support the transition.
Leslie Daigle - IPv6 Global Deployment – Momentum and MilestonesIPv6 Conference
The document discusses the growing momentum and milestones around global IPv6 deployment. It notes that the number of internet-connected devices is growing rapidly and will exceed IPv4 address space. IPv6 is needed for a globally-connected future internet. Many governments, service providers, and content providers are making commitments and progressing IPv6 networks and services. Organizations are encouraged to make IPv6 a high priority and communicate plans to help drive further deployment.
The document discusses IPv4 to IPv6 transition methods, comparing the BD-SIIT and NAT-PT translators. It outlines the objectives, introduction to the problem, proposed BD-SIIT methodology including address mapping, translation process, and protocol translation algorithms. Tables show address mappings and the v4-v6 enabled gateway.
The document discusses IPv4 to IPv6 transition methods, comparing the stateless BD-SIIT and stateful NAT-PT translators. It proposes using BD-SIIT for transition and describes its address mapping and translation process, which involves determining corresponding IPv4 and IPv6 addresses and translating headers between the protocols while maintaining end-to-end connectivity. The methodology and performance of BD-SIIT are evaluated against NAT-PT for efficient transition from IPv4 to IPv6 networks.
The document discusses IPv4 to IPv6 transition methods, comparing the stateless BD-SIIT and stateful NAT-PT translators. It proposes using BD-SIIT and describes its address mapping, header translation process, and protocol translation in more detail over multiple slides with figures and tables. The methodology and limitations of both BD-SIIT and NAT-PT are presented.
The document discusses the current state and future of IPv4 and IPv6. It provides the following summary:
1. IPv4 addresses are becoming increasingly scarce and expensive as they are exhausted. Address sharing through Carrier Grade NAT is common but creates issues for identifying users.
2. IPv6 adoption is growing globally, with over 20% of traffic now over IPv6. Major networks, cloud providers, device makers, and operating systems increasingly support IPv6-only.
3. In Japan, major ISPs like NTT and mobile carriers have over 50% of customers using IPv6. However, IPv4 congestion is a problem due to overuse of CGN address sharing. The effects of IPv4
Update on the Why and How of IPv6 DeploymentRIPE NCC
The document discusses IPv6 deployment globally and in Europe. It finds that while overall IPv6 growth is high, there are significant differences between regions and countries. In Europe, IPv6 adoption is growing linearly but unevenly between nations. Metrics on IPv6 resource allocation and routing by LIRs in the RIPE NCC service region show varying levels of IPv6 deployment over time, with some LIRs in Romania lagging behind. The presentation encourages network operators to evaluate their own IPv6 status and decide how urgently to adopt IPv6.
ION Bucharest, 12 October 2016 - Today, we can say that IPv6 is already happening all around the world. It’s interesting to see the main reasons that made it happen, how it’s happening, and to make the audience think about their deployment status and strategy. Statistics from different sources are showed, including data from RIPE NCC measurements.
Similar to PLNOG 6: Martin J Levy - The State of the Global IPv6 Tables (20)
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Carrer goals.pptx and their importance in real lifeartemacademy2
Career goals serve as a roadmap for individuals, guiding them toward achieving long-term professional aspirations and personal fulfillment. Establishing clear career goals enables professionals to focus their efforts on developing specific skills, gaining relevant experience, and making strategic decisions that align with their desired career trajectory. By setting both short-term and long-term objectives, individuals can systematically track their progress, make necessary adjustments, and stay motivated. Short-term goals often include acquiring new qualifications, mastering particular competencies, or securing a specific role, while long-term goals might encompass reaching executive positions, becoming industry experts, or launching entrepreneurial ventures.
Moreover, having well-defined career goals fosters a sense of purpose and direction, enhancing job satisfaction and overall productivity. It encourages continuous learning and adaptation, as professionals remain attuned to industry trends and evolving job market demands. Career goals also facilitate better time management and resource allocation, as individuals prioritize tasks and opportunities that advance their professional growth. In addition, articulating career goals can aid in networking and mentorship, as it allows individuals to communicate their aspirations clearly to potential mentors, colleagues, and employers, thereby opening doors to valuable guidance and support. Ultimately, career goals are integral to personal and professional development, driving individuals toward sustained success and fulfillment in their chosen fields.
This presentation by Professor Alex Robson, Deputy Chair of Australia’s Productivity Commission, was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the 77th meeting of the OECD Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Nathaniel Lane, Associate Professor in Economics at Oxford University, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Suzanne Lagerweij - Influence Without Power - Why Empathy is Your Best Friend...Suzanne Lagerweij
This is a workshop about communication and collaboration. We will experience how we can analyze the reasons for resistance to change (exercise 1) and practice how to improve our conversation style and be more in control and effective in the way we communicate (exercise 2).
This session will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
Abstract:
Let’s talk about powerful conversations! We all know how to lead a constructive conversation, right? Then why is it so difficult to have those conversations with people at work, especially those in powerful positions that show resistance to change?
Learning to control and direct conversations takes understanding and practice.
We can combine our innate empathy with our analytical skills to gain a deeper understanding of complex situations at work. Join this session to learn how to prepare for difficult conversations and how to improve our agile conversations in order to be more influential without power. We will use Dave Gray’s Empathy Mapping, Argyris’ Ladder of Inference and The Four Rs from Agile Conversations (Squirrel and Fredrick).
In the session you will experience how preparing and reflecting on your conversation can help you be more influential at work. You will learn how to communicate more effectively with the people needed to achieve positive change. You will leave with a self-revised version of a difficult conversation and a practical model to use when you get back to work.
Come learn more on how to become a real influencer!
The importance of sustainable and efficient computational practices in artificial intelligence (AI) and deep learning has become increasingly critical. This webinar focuses on the intersection of sustainability and AI, highlighting the significance of energy-efficient deep learning, innovative randomization techniques in neural networks, the potential of reservoir computing, and the cutting-edge realm of neuromorphic computing. This webinar aims to connect theoretical knowledge with practical applications and provide insights into how these innovative approaches can lead to more robust, efficient, and environmentally conscious AI systems.
Webinar Speaker: Prof. Claudio Gallicchio, Assistant Professor, University of Pisa
Claudio Gallicchio is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Computer Science of the University of Pisa, Italy. His research involves merging concepts from Deep Learning, Dynamical Systems, and Randomized Neural Systems, and he has co-authored over 100 scientific publications on the subject. He is the founder of the IEEE CIS Task Force on Reservoir Computing, and the co-founder and chair of the IEEE Task Force on Randomization-based Neural Networks and Learning Systems. He is an associate editor of IEEE Transactions on Neural Networks and Learning Systems (TNNLS).
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “Pro-competitive Industrial Policy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/pcip.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Yong Lim, Professor of Economic Law at Seoul National University School of Law, was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Katharine Kemp, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law & Justice at UNSW Sydney, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
XP 2024 presentation: A New Look to Leadershipsamililja
Presentation slides from XP2024 conference, Bolzano IT. The slides describe a new view to leadership and combines it with anthro-complexity (aka cynefin).
This presentation by OECD, OECD Secretariat, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Why Psychological Safety Matters for Software Teams - ACE 2024 - Ben Linders.pdfBen Linders
Psychological safety in teams is important; team members must feel safe and able to communicate and collaborate effectively to deliver value. It’s also necessary to build long-lasting teams since things will happen and relationships will be strained.
But, how safe is a team? How can we determine if there are any factors that make the team unsafe or have an impact on the team’s culture?
In this mini-workshop, we’ll play games for psychological safety and team culture utilizing a deck of coaching cards, The Psychological Safety Cards. We will learn how to use gamification to gain a better understanding of what’s going on in teams. Individuals share what they have learned from working in teams, what has impacted the team’s safety and culture, and what has led to positive change.
Different game formats will be played in groups in parallel. Examples are an ice-breaker to get people talking about psychological safety, a constellation where people take positions about aspects of psychological safety in their team or organization, and collaborative card games where people work together to create an environment that fosters psychological safety.
This presentation by Professor Giuseppe Colangelo, Jean Monnet Professor of European Innovation Policy, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Juraj Čorba, Chair of OECD Working Party on Artificial Intelligence Governance (AIGO), was made during the discussion “Artificial Intelligence, Data and Competition” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 12 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/aicomp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
This presentation by Tim Capel, Director of the UK Information Commissioner’s Office Legal Service, was made during the discussion “The Intersection between Competition and Data Privacy” held at the 143rd meeting of the OECD Competition Committee on 13 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found at oe.cd/ibcdp.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
PLNOG 6: Martin J Levy - The State of the Global IPv6 Tables
1. The State of the Global IPv6 Tables
– A global view of IPv6 routing readiness
Hurricane Electric
IPv6 Native Backbone – Massive Peering!
PLNOG
Warsaw, Poland – 16th March 2011
Martin J. Levy, Director IPv6 Strategy
Hurricane Electric
2. IPv6 Global Connectivity – Talk Outline
IPv6 at Hurricane Electric
16'th Mar 2011 Page 2
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
Why do we need IPv6?
Is the IPv6 routing table ready for the real world?
Can you motivate people to implement IPv6?
Should we panic or be happy?
(Just kidding – I’m assuming that!)
(I’ll keep it short and sweet!)
4. Founded 16+ years ago - ISP & datacenter operator
Roots within the Silicon Valley high-tech community
1999 – Expanded IPv4 network nationwide
2001 – IPv6 native and tunnel connectivity ( http://tunnelbroker.net )
2006 – Full “technology refresh” enabled native dual-stack IPv6 backbone
2008 – Became largest IPv6 backbone globally ( > 1Gbps IPv6 traffic level)
2009 – Continued expansion into Asia; enabled IPv6 6to4 & Teredo service
2010 – Added more geographic coverage; expanded IPv6 6to4 service
2011 – Stop talking about IPv6; just talk about the “Internet”
Hurricane Electric – Roots and History
16'th Mar 2011 Page 4
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
IPv6tunnelbroker
expandedto9US,
4EuropeanCities
Added
IPv6services
inHongKong
AddedIPv6
servicesinAtlanta
andToronto,Canada
Purchased
206,000sqft
datacenterbuilding
Rolledout
dual-stack
IPv6backbone
Ranked#1IPv6
BackboneforBGP
adjacencies
Q4 2008Q3 2008Q2 2008Q1 2008Q1 20072006
European
Expansion
2005
DeployedIPv6
6to4andteredo
relaysglobally
Q1 2009
Addedservices
InStockholm,
TokyoandZurich
Q2 2009
Addedservices
InSingaporeand
fiveothercities
Q2 2010
5. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 Network Reach
All Hurricane Electric POPs are full IPv6 Native routing and peering
IPv6 peering at all major peering
points in US, Europe & Asia.
Private and public peering
capacity at 10Gbps and above.
16'th Mar 2011 Page 5
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
6. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 Native Services
Four+ years into native IPv6 network deployment
Nine+ years of IPv6 on the network
IPv6 native router platform across all POP’s
All IPv6 BGP customer connections are native
All IPv6 datacenter customer are native
Every customer connection is IPv6 enabled by default!
IPv6 dual-stack & native DNS servers
IPv6 dual-stack & native NTP servers
IPv6 & IPv4 public looking glass & route servers
24/7 NOC with IPv6 expertise
IPv6 hosting services
Not just “Joe” on Thursdays
16'th Mar 2011 Page 6
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
7. Applied for and got IPv6 address allocation from RIR?
Picked hardware & firmware?
Enabled IPv6 (dual stack) everywhere?
IPv6 peering & global connectivity?
Built IPv6 routing for customer interconnections?
Reverse-DNS & other backbone IP layer offerings?
Evangelized IPv6 excessively?
Saw real use from customers?
We’re done!
Hurricane Electric – IPv6 Native Services
16'th Mar 2011 Page 7
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
8. Hurricane Electric
Why do we need IPv6?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 8
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
(Just kidding – I’m assuming that!)
9. Hurricane Electric
Does IPv6 have
global coverage?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 9
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
10. IPv6 and global deployment worldwide
IPv6 deployment is everywhere
IPv6 active at nearly all global Internet peering points
90+ countries had a “live” IPv6 presence in Jan 2010
Now 125 countries
DatafromJan/2010
16'th Mar 2011 Page 10
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
11. IPv6 and the global backbone story
16'th Mar 2011
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy Page 11
IPv6awareness
GlobalBackbones
12. IPv6 deployment can be measured many ways
Measurement methods …
… via peering?
… via bandwidth?
… via press releases?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 12
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
13. IPv6 questions to check on global deployment
Is IPv6 supported? (the basic questions)
Is IPv6 native on all backbones?
Is IPv6 interconnections/peering prevalent?
Is IPv6 part of the standard product mix?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 13
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
14. Hurricane Electric
Is the IPv6 routing table
ready for real world use?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 14
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
15. Basic question: Is IPv6 routing ready?
Theory #1: It’s been ready for years…
Plenty of backbones running v6 routing
Plenty of v6 inter-backbone peering
Plenty of v6 talks at conferences
Theory #2: We are not ready yet; but close…
Still a few gaps in the routing tables
Still some spotty cleanup’s here-and-there
16'th Mar 2011
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy Page 15
16. Checking global IPv6 routing – graphically!
16'th Mar 2011 Page 16
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
Caveat:
- This tool is only as good as its source data.
- IP information is uploaded from RIPE RIS & Oregon routeviews.
- Some views are missing; not all routes and paths are visible.
- NOT based on the Hurricane Electric routing tables.
Showing IPv4/IPv6 route propagation
in a graphical form
17. http://bgp.he.net/ - Searching on ASN, IP, etc.
16'th Mar 2011
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy Page 17
Search command
ASN AS6714
IPv4 address 94.42.88.36
IPv4 block 94.42.0.0/16
IPv6 address 2001:6d8:0:1::a:6
IPv6 block 2001:1a68::/32
DNS name plnog.pl
…etc …
18. Example of BGP tools – IPv4/IPv6 statistics
16'th Mar 2011
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy Page 18
http://bgp.he.net/
IPv6 and IP4 BGP
and routing information
19. http://bgp.he.net/ – Available information
BGP Prefix Report
Prefixes, Networks, Distribution
IPv4/IPv6 Prefixes Originated (90 Days)
ASN’s with IPv4/IPv6 Announcements (90 Days)
IPv4/IPv6 Announced Prefix Count by CIDR
BGP Peer Report
Adjacencies, Adjacency History
IPv4/IPv6 Adjacencies
IPv4/IPv6 Adjacency Count (90 Days)
Prefixes, Prefix History
IPv4/IPv6 Prefixes Announced
IPv4/IPv6 Prefixes Announced (90 Days)
IPv4 Addresses Originated
IPv4 Addresses Originated
Top Host Report
Top Hosts
Internet Statistics
Internet Statistics
16'th Mar 2011
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy Page 19
20. http://bgp.he.net/ – Route propagation graphs
16'th Mar 2011
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy Page 20
Peers that see routesASN originating routes Routes see downstream of peers
Select tab for v4 or v6 graphs
21. Is IPv6 routing/interconnections/peering prevalent?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 21
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
Simple conclusion #1 – “up and to the right”
http://bgp.he.net/report/prefixes#_prefixes
http://bgp.he.net/report/prefixes#_networks
67% increase in 8 months!
48% increase in 8 months!
22. Is IPv6 alive and kicking in Poland?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 22
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
http://bgp.he.net/country/PL
http://bgp.he.net/report/prefixes#_countriesv6
However only 90 ASNs have IPv6 enabled (out of 1,288)
Poland #8
23. Is IPv6 native on all backbones? (globally)
TInet
Sprint
TATA
Telia
Cogent
NTT
Level3
AT&T
Simple conclusion #2 – global routing seems to exist on nearly every tier1 backbone
GBLX
http://bgp.he.net/
HE.NET
16'th Mar 2011 Page 23
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
24. IPv6 routing on backbones (the summary)
Classic backbones have (finally) got IPv6
This is not news to a savvy IPv6 crowd!
The last “tier1 backbone” only-recently enabled IPv6
Some backbones still missing some routes
Uninteresting to multi-homed networks
Expect the trickle-down effect to other networks
16'th Mar 2011
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy Page 24
Simple conclusion #3 – it took till 2010 for some Tier1 backbones to get v6 ready!
25. Hurricane Electric
Hurricane Electric’s IPv6 Tunnelbroker
http://tunnelbroker.net/
(IPv6 Tunnels Exist! – sometimes it’s the only way)
16'th Mar 2011 Page 25
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
26. AVAILABLE
BGP
AVAILABLE
BGP
BGP
AVAILABLE
BGP AVAILABLE
BGP
AVAILABLE
BGP
AVAILABLE
AVAILABLE
AVAILABLE
Geographically diverse locations allowing customers
best routing – coincident with IP peering
AVAILABLE
AVAILABLE
AVAILABLE
AVAILABLE
Hurricane Electric – IPv6 tunnelbroker.net
Three step process:
1) Go to http://tunnelbroker.net/
2) Setup an account – choose a location
3) Setup your own host or router to allow tunnels
16'th Mar 2011 Page 26
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
27. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 tunnelbroker.net setup
Select Global Location
16'th Mar 2011 Page 27
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
28. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 tunnelbroker.net setup
BGP
Configuration
information
16'th Mar 2011 Page 28
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
29. Juniper JunOS
interfaces {
ip-0/1/0 {
unit 0 {
tunnel {
source ##.##.##.##;
destination 72.52.##.##;
}
family inet6 {
address 2001:470:##:##::2/64;
}
}
}
}
routing-options {
rib inet6.0 {
static {
route ::/0 next-hop 2001:470:##:##::1;
}
}
}
Linux
modprobe ipv6
ip tunnel add he-ipv6 mode sit
remote 72.52.##.## local ##.##.##.## ttl 255
ip link set he-ipv6 up
ip addr add 2001:470:##:##::2/64 dev he-ipv6
ip route add ::/0 dev he-ipv6
ip -f inet6 addr
Hurricane Electric – IPv6 tunnelbroker.net setup
Windows XP
ipv6 install
ipv6 rtu ::/0 2/::72.52.##.## pub
ipv6 adu 2/2001:470:##:##::2
Cisco IOS
configure terminal
interface Tunnel0
description Hurricane Electric IPv6 Tunnel Broker
no ip address
ipv6 enable
ipv6 address 2001:470:##:##::2
tunnel source ##.##.##.##
tunnel destination 72.52.##.##
tunnel mode ipv6ip
ipv6 route ::/0 Tunnel0
end
write
MacOS X
ifconfig gif0 tunnel ##.##.##.## 72.52.##.##
ifconfig gif0 inet6 2001:470:##:##::2 2001:470:##:##::1 prefixlen 128
route -n add -inet6 default 2001:470:##:##::1
16'th Mar 2011 Page 29
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
Windows Vista & Windows 7
netsh interface ipv6 add v6v4tunnel IP6Tunnel ##.##.##.## 72.52.##.##
netsh interface ipv6 add address IP6Tunnel 2001:470:##:##::2
netsh interface ipv6 add route ::/0 IP6Tunnel 2001:470:##:##::1
30. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 tunnelbroker.net stats
Statsavailableat:http://tunnelbroker.net/
16'th Mar 2011 Page 30
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
Poland #7
31. Hurricane Electric
Hurricane Electric’s Free
IPv6 Certification Program
http://ipv6.he.net/certification/
16'th Mar 2011 Page 31
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
32. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 Certification (and learning)
http://ipv6.he.net/certification/
• Prove that you have IPv6 connectivity
• Prove that you have a working IPv6 web server
• Prove that you have a working IPv6 email address
• Prove that you have working forward IPv6 DNS
• Prove that you have working reverse IPv6 DNS for your mail
server
• Prove that you have name servers with IPv6 addresses that
can respond to queries via IPv6
• Prove your knowledge of IPv6 technologies through quick and
easy testing
• the format of IPv6 addresses
• AAAA records
• reverse DNS for IPv6
• the IPv6 localhost address
• the IPv6 default route
• the IPv6 documentation prefix
• the IPv6 link local prefix
• the IPv6 multicast prefix
• do an IPv6 ping
• do an IPv6 traceroute
• common IPv6 prefix
• and more!
16'th Mar 2011 Page 32
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
33. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 Certification (sample test)
http://ipv6.he.net/certification/
The test – to send and receive IPv6 emails
16'th Mar 2011 Page 33
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
34. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 Certification Levels
16'th Mar 2011 Page 34
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
Newbie Test
This is a basic level test of the information here. With this primer at hand these questions should be a snap for you.
Enthusiast Test
This test validates that you have an IPv6 capable machine setup that can browse the web via IPv6, as well as the fact that you have a web
server setup that can serve files via IPv6.
Administrator Test
This test validates that your SMTP server is able to accept mail over IPv6
Professional Test
This test validates that Reverse DNS for the IPv6 address of your SMTP server is properly configured.
Guru Test
This test validates that your nameservers have AAAA records for themselves and that these nameservers can be queried over IPv6 for your
domain.
Enthusiast Questionnaire
These are a few questions to gauge interest and usage level for IPv6 and gather data as to your experiences with IPv6 deployments.
Administrator Questionnaire
These are a few questions to gauge interest and usage level for IPv6 and gather data as to your experiences with IPv6 deployments.
Professional Questionnaire
These are a few questions to gauge interest and usage level for IPv6 and gather data as to your experiences with IPv6 deployments.
Guru Questionnaire
These are a few questions to try to gauge interest and usage level for IPv6 and gather data as to your experiences with IPv6 deployments.
Enthusiast Technical Test
This test covers technical knowledge of ping and traceroute commands on Linux and Windows.
Administrator Technical Test
This test covers technical knowledge of DNS and general IPv6 topics.
Professional Technical Test
This test covers technical knowledge of well known IPv6 prefixes and expands on your understanding of IPv6 related Linux and Windows
commands.
Guru Technical Test
This test covers technical knowledge of IPv6 routing and IPv6 related protocols.
Explorer Test
This test validates that you have Native or Tunneled IPv6.
Sage Test
This test validates that you have IPv6 Glue at your registrar
35. Hurricane Electric – IPv6 Certification – Sages
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Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
http://tunnelbroker.net/usage/sages_by_country_and_state.php
2,583 IPv6 Certified Sages from 76 Countries
Sagelevelisthehighestlevelobtainable.
EU (European Union) 1,051
United States 948
Europe 1,202
North America 1,057
South America 39
Asia 125
Africa 8
Oceania 105
Unknown 47
TOTAL 2,583
Poland #17
36. Summary
16'th Mar 2011 Page 36
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
Motivating people to
think about IPv6
IPv6 certification (on a lighter note) …
… maybe t-shirts will help?
37. From: <ipv6@he.net>
Date: Thu, May 27, 2010 at 11:32 PM
Subject: Hurricane Electric IPv6 Update
…
* Attention Sages!
Hurricane Electric would like to send you an "IPv6" T-shirt!
Please log into http://ipv6.he.net/certification/, and verify your address information which
will only be used for shipping out this T-shirt.
After making certain it is correct (remember to click "Update Info" if you made changes,
before validating), you will see T-shirt size selections for S/M/L/XL/XXL, and a button that
will submit your preferred shirt size and log that you have validated your address.
This is optional, and will only be sent to validated addresses.
We'll be adding on some points to your score for Sages that want to get a T-shirt!
We are looking to get the t-shirts out around the end of June. We need make sure to get
enough of each size before sending them out to all of you. …
Summary – IPv6 certifications and t-shirts
Hurricane Electric sends email
saying “free IPv6 t-shirt”
for sage-level users
16'th Mar 2011 Page 37
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
38. Summary – IPv6 certifications and t-shirts
16'th Mar 2011 Page 38
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
39. Hurricane Electric - Exhaustion Counters
Exhaustion Counters
http://ipv6.he.net/statistics/
Finally. Maybe this will help convince
someone important…
16'th Mar 2011 Page 39
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
40. Hurricane Electric IPv4 Exhaustion Counters
http://ipv6.he.net/statistics/
http://bgp.he.net/ipv6-progress-report.cgi
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Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
41. Time
IPv6
Summary – Have a positive IPv6 mindset
16'th Mar 2011 Page 41
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy
42. Q&A
Contact:
Martin J. Levy
Director, IPv6 Strategy
Hurricane Electric
760 Mission Court
Fremont, CA 94539, USA
http://he.net/
martin at he dot net
+1 (510) 580 4167
?
16'th Mar 2011 Page 42
Hurricane Electric - IPv6 - PLNOG - Warsaw, Poland
- Martin J. Levy - Director IPv6 Strategy