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Ipv6 Deployment Information

Internet Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) is the next generation of the Internet Protocol that is currently in various stages of deployment on the Internet. It was designed as a replacement of the current version, IPv4, that has been in use since 1982 and is in the final stages of exhausting its unallocated address space.

Despite a decade long development and implementation history as a Standards Track protocol and imminent exhaustion of the available IPv4 address pool by 2011, IPv6 is only in its infancy in terms of general worldwide deployment.

In February 1999, The IPv6 Forum[1] was founded by the IETF Deployment WG to drive deployment worldwide. This resulted in the creation of regional and local IPv6 Task Forces.

A global view into the growing IPv6 routing tables can be obtained with the SixXS Ghost Route Hunter.[2] This tool provides a list of all allocated IPv6 prefixes and marks with colors the ones that are actually being announced into the Internet BGP tables. When a prefix is announced, it means that the ISP at least can receive IPv6 packets for their prefix.

The current integration of IPv6 on existing network infrastructures can also be monitored from other sources, for example:

According to Kshemendra Paul, chief architect at the U.S. Department of Justice, Asia is experiencing a huge demand for addresses and thus is one of the strongest adopters of IPv6.[citation needed]

Contents

Overview

In December 2008, despite marking its 10th anniversary as a Standards Track protocol, IPv6 was only in its infancy in terms of general worldwide deployment. A study by Google, reported in November 2008,[6] indicated that penetration was still less than one percent of Internet traffic in any country. The leaders were Russia (0.76%), France (0.65%), Ukraine (0.64%), Norway (0.49%), and the United States (0.45%). Although Asia led in terms of absolute deployment numbers, the relative penetration was smaller (e.g., China: 0.24%). IPv6 is implemented on all major operating systems in use in commercial, business, and home consumer environments. According to the Google study, Mac OS led in IPv6 penetration with 2.44%, followed by Linux (0.93%) and Windows Vista (0.32%).[7]

IPv6 testing, evaluation, and certification

Number of IPv6 prefixes and AS on the Internet since 2003. Monthly IPv6 allocations per RIR.

A few international organizations are involved with IPv6 test and evaluation ranging from the United States Department of Defense to the University of New Hampshire.

Government incentives

Increasingly, governments are starting to require support for IPv6 in new equipment. The U.S. Government, for example, specified in 2005 that the network backbones of all federal agencies had to be upgraded to IPv6 by June 30, 2008, which was completed before the deadline.[8][9][10][11]

The government of People's Republic of China has a 5 year plan for deployment of IPv6 called the China Next Generation Internet (see below).

Official governmental decisions can serve to further encourage the private sector and other countries to migrate to IPv6 as well.

Australia

Canada

China

The China Next Generation Internet (CNGI, 中国下一代互联网) project is a five year plan initiated by the Chinese government with the purpose of gaining a significant position in the development of the Internet through the early adoption of IPv6. Also, the CERNET (China Education and Research NETwork, 中国教育和科研计算机网, 教育网) has set up native IPv6 (CERNET2), and since then many academic institutions in China joined CERNET2 for IPv6 connectivity.

2008 Olympic Games IPv6 showcase

China showcased CNGI's IPv6 infrastructure at the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing.[18] The Olympics website was published on the IPv6 Internet at http://ipv6.beijing2008.cn/en (IP addresses: 2001:252:0:1::2008:6 and 2001:252:0:1::2008:8). All network operations of the Games were conducted using IPv6. This event was reported to be the largest showcase of IPv6 technology since the inception of IPv6.[19] The deployment of IPv6 was widespread in all related applications, from data networking and camera transmissions for sporting events, to civil applications, such as security cameras and taxis. The events were streamed live over the Internet and networked cars were able to monitor traffic conditions readily.

CERNET-2

CERNET-2 is probably the widest deployment of IPv6 in China. It is managed and operated jointly by 25 universities.[20] Students in Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, for example, get native IPv6.[21][22]

Germany

Finland

France

India

Japan

Luxembourg

Netherlands

Poland

Sweden

Operators offering native ipv6 access for business clients and collocation customers include:

United Kingdom

United States

Other Countries

See also

References

  1. ^ The IPv6 Forum
  2. ^ SixXS Ghost Route Hunter
  3. ^ IPv6 prefix allocation
  4. ^ IPv6 transit
  5. ^ IPv6 services in Japan
  6. ^ Global IPv6 Statistics - Measuring the current state of IPv6 for ordinary users, Lorenzo Colitti (Google), RIPE 57 (Dubai, Oct 2008)
  7. ^ Google: more Macs mean higher IPv6 usage in US
  8. ^ August 2005 directive from the Office of Management Budget
  9. ^ DOD to allocate its IPv6 addresses
  10. ^ Bitten by IPv6 (correction to the first report)
  11. ^ Providing the Tools for Information Sharing: Net-Centric Enterprise Services (Department of Defense Chief Information Officer Information Policy Directorate)
  12. ^ "AARNet3". AARNet. http://www.aarnet.edu.au/Content.aspx?p=19. Retrieved 2008-09-25.
  13. ^ IPv6 Historic Timeline
  14. ^ IPv6 Commercial Services
  15. ^ Internode and IPv6
  16. ^ Internode releases national IPv6 access
  17. ^ Victorian Government establishes VIC6
  18. ^ Beijing2008.cn. "Beijing 2008." Beijing2008.cn leaps to next generation Net.
  19. ^ IPv6 and the 2008 Beijing Olympics
  20. ^ Organizational structure of CERNET2
  21. ^ BUPT IPv6 portal
  22. ^ SJTU native IPv6 deployment status (Chinese)
  23. ^ (in Finnish) Status update of IPv6 support of .fi root
  24. ^ (in Finnish) Summary of IPv6 deployment status in Finland
  25. ^ AFNIC full IPv6 ready
  26. ^ IPv6 Rolled-out at ISP Free
  27. ^ Nerim - IPv6 (in French)
  28. ^ OVH : Ipv4Ipv6
  29. ^ FDN : IPv6 à la maison (in French)
  30. ^ Sify website
  31. ^ a b Press release on Sify's IPv6 deployments
  32. ^ 6Choice Project
  33. ^ Sify Portal
  34. ^ Marsan, Carolyn Duffy (March 20, 2000). "Japan's NTT to be first to offer IPv6". Network World 17 (12): pp. 41–44. http://www.nwfusion.com.
  35. ^ Luxembourg Internet exchange peering information
  36. ^ About DNS LU
  37. ^ P&T Solutions
  38. ^ P&T Luxembourg presentation at IPv6 council
  39. ^ IPv6 at SURFnet
  40. ^ IPv6 at XS4All
  41. ^ Eerste IPv6 ADSL-verbinding opgeleverd
  42. ^ http://www.xs4all.nl/nieuws/bericht.php?msect=nieuws&id=1104&taal=nl IPv6 nu al voor iedereen mogelijk bij XS4ALL
  43. ^ Computable 2004-05-14
  44. ^ SixXS History
  45. ^ http://www.ispam.nl/archives/10952/introweb-eerste-met-alleen-ipv6-internetverbinding/ Introweb eerste met IPv6-Only ADSL
  46. ^ http://www.introweb.nl/nieuws/bericht.php?id=287 Introweb stimuleert gebruik IPv6
  47. ^ http://www.signet.nl/nieuws/nieuws-index/signet-is-klaar-voor-ipv6.html Signet is als eerste provider klaar voor IPv6 over glasvezel!
  48. ^ http://groups.google.nl/group/xs4all.general/browse_thread/thread/fad43049bd5877fe www.rijksoverheid.nl via ipv6
  49. ^ http://www.pionier.net.pl/online/pl/projekty/14/6NET.html
  50. ^ http://www.plix.pl/en/member
  51. ^ http://webhosting.pl/Punkt.wymiany.ruchu.miedzyoperatorskiego.PLIX.uruchamia.obsluge.IPv6
  52. ^ JANET AND IPv6
  53. ^ http://aaisp.blogspot.com/2005/10/native-ipv6-support-on-new-pipe.html
  54. ^ Project Ocean bidders' pack
  55. ^ http://noc.eu.clara.net/ipv6.php
  56. ^ http://mdsblog.tagadab.com/?p=75
  57. ^ [1]
  58. ^ The US Department of Defense has 42 million billion billion billion IPv6 addresses
  59. ^ Hurricane Electric website
  60. ^ tunnelbroker.net IPv6 service
  61. ^ ДАИТС изгражда суперкомпютър, news.bg, 21 May 2008
  62. ^ WXNZ IPv6 Trial

External links

Internet Protocol Version 6
General IPv6 · IPv6 address · IPv6 packet · Mobile IPv6
Deployment IPv6 deployment · Comparison of IPv6 application support · Comparison of IPv6 support in routers · Comparison of IPv6 support in operating systems · List of IPv6 tunnel brokers
IPv4 to IPv6 Topics IPv4 address exhaustion · IPv6 transition mechanisms
Related protocols DHCPv6 · ICMPv6 (Neighbor Discovery Protocol · Secure Neighbor Discovery Protocol) · Site Multihoming by IPv6 Intermediation

Categories: IPv6 | Internet Protocol | 2010s

 

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