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What Should an Engineer Address when 'Selling' IPv6 to Executives?
Dual stack is a (very) temporary solution while waiting for some others to catch
up and deploy IPv6. Contemplating dual-stack as a permanent or long-term
solution ignores the extent to which IPv4 is utterly unsustainable at this point.
Owen
On Mar 12, 2013, at 02:45 , kpospisek at bigpond.com wrote:
>
> I would be concerned in strongly spruiking advantages of IPv6 to
> executives if an IPv6 dual stack solution is actually being deployed.
> (ie. some given IPv6 SS advantages below do not apply to IPv6 DS)
>
>> 1. Decreased application complexity:
>> Because we will be able to get rid of all that NAT traversal code,
>> we get the following benefits:
>>
>> I. Improved security
>> A. Fewer code paths to test
>> B. Lower complexity = less opportunity to introduce flaws
>> II. Lower cost
>> A. Less developer man hours maintaining (or developing) NAT traversal code
>> B. Less QA time spent testing NAT traversal code
>> C. No longer need to keep the lab stocked with every NAT implementation ever invented
>> D. Fewer calls to support for failures in product's NAT traversal code
>> 2. Increased transparency:
>> Because addressing is now end-to-end transparent, we gain a
>> number of benefits:
>>
>> I. Improved Security
>> A. Harder for attackers to hide in anonymous address space.
>> B. Easier to track down spoofing
>> C. Simplified log correlation
>> D. Easier to identify source/target of attacks
>> II. Simplified troubleshooting
>> A. No more need to include state table dumps in troubleshooting
>> B. tcpdump inside and tcpdump outside contain the same packets.
>>
>
>
> There are two well documented advantages to IPv6 dual stack:
>
> - responding to customers requesting IPv6 dual stack connectivity
> - excellent access to the IPv4 network
>
> IPv6 is a *different* network to IPv4 even if both networks happen to be
> carried on the same platforms (thank you Cisco, F5, Juniper etc -
> without this, our execs would be seriously baulking at having to replace fairly
> modern hardware).
>
> I have also noticed examples given of historic protocol changes. Not all of
> these are relevant as some of them only involved "middle" OSI layers, so
> do not apply very well to the IPv6->IPv6 transition.
>
>
> Greets
> Engineer Karl Pospisek (alias kpospisek at telstra.com)