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  1. #1
    Iron Fist Senior Member Husar's Avatar
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    Default Re: IPv6 Is Coming ... Brutha!

    I'm currently doing communication networks at the uni and we still use IPv4, I thought IPv6 was 6 Bytes instead of 4 though, but 128 bits(16 Bytes) is a bit much...
    Confusing indeed.


    "Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu

  2. #2
    Senior Member Senior Member naut's Avatar
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    Default Re: IPv6 Is Coming ... Brutha!

    I'm glad I'm not doing a networking major. I hated doing IPv4 stuff. IPv6 just looks... gah.
    #Hillary4prism

    BD:TW

    Some piously affirm: "The truth is such and such. I know! I see!"
    And hold that everything depends upon having the “right” religion.
    But when one really knows, one has no need of religion. - Mahavyuha Sutra

    Freedom necessarily involves risk. - Alan Watts

  3. #3
    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: IPv6 Is Coming ... Brutha!

    Here's a longer, clearer article about the Comcast IPv6 trial:

    Comcast plans four trials. The first one will use a transition technique that is still under development, called 6RD. 6RD is similar to the 6to4 automatic tunneling mechanism that is available in Windows (it's enabled automatically when the system has a public IPv4 address under Windows 7 and Vista). The difference is that 6RD only tunnels IPv6 packets across an IPv4-only part of the service provider's network, while 6to4 can tunnel across large parts of the Internet, possibly incurring slowdowns.

    The second trial will be with native IPv6. Here, IPv6 packets are transmitted across the infrastructure without encapsulating them in IPv4 packets. IPv4 remains available, creating a "dual stack" deployment. "Native, dual-stack is central to our IPv6 strategy and we expect that the native dual-stack solution will be a significant part of the IPv6 transition, enabling IPv6 technology to evolve globally while still being able to provide seamless services to the traditional IPv4 Internet," says Comcast.

    The third trial will basically be the opposite of the first: rather than encapsulate IPv6 packets in IPv4 packets in order to traverse IPv4-only network sections, IPv4 is now encapsulated in IPv6 to get across IPv6-only parts of the service provider network. The technique for this will be "Dual Stack Lite," a protocol that is being developed in the IETF Softwires working group, which is co-chaired by Comcast's Alain Durand. In Dual Stack Lite, the IPv4 hosts use private IPv4 addresses. A home router encapsulates those in IPv6 packets, and a "carrier grade NAT" both decapsulates the packets and performs Network Address Translation so that a lot of DS-Lite clients can share a single IPv4 address.

    The fourth trial will evaluate how to provide IPv6 to business class customers.

    And since I have been linking to Seventies exploitation films for no obvious reason, here's Sugar Hill and Her Zombie Hit Men.

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