On Jul 3, 2011, at 7:17 AM, Philip Homburg wrote:
In your letter dated Sun, 3 Jul 2011 07:53:46 +0200 you wrote:
Unfortunately, in the 20% of the time that it's not working, Google has no
idea that the user has a 2002::/16 address. Google only knows, after the
fact, that the user suffered a 20 or 75-second timeout and was not happy. So
it would serve no purpose to avoid serving users that successfully connect
from 2002::/16 addresses; once the AAAA record is handed out, the damage is
done. What Google could do, however, is stop handing out AAAA records to
networks that have significant number of 6to4 users in the future. We're
considering this.
I think this clearly illustrates why the IETF should issue a strong statement
that no new 6to4 installation should be deplayed and the existing 6to4 users
should migrate to other tunneling techniques (if native is not available).
I think this clearly illustrates why IETF should issue a strong statement that
a) operators of 6to4 relays should not advertise those relays via BGP unless
they're routing traffic for all of 2002://16 or native v6, respectively
b) operators should not filter protocol 41traffic
c) (maybe) operators using LSN should use RFC 1918 addresses behind those NATs
unless/until there's another address range that 6to4 host implementations know
about
d) 6to4 should be disabled by default in both hosts and routers
e) host implementations should prefer native v4 destinations over 6to4
destinations when both are available and the application can use either IPv4 or
IPv6
Saying that no new 6to4 installation should be deployed and that existing 6to4
users should migrate to other tunneling techniques assumes that all
installations and users have the same needs, namely, to access content over
IPv6 that is also available over IPv4.
The problem with 6to4 is it was rolled out on a relatively large scale when
there was essentially no IPv6 content. As a result, the people who had a
broken 6to4 setup would only find out when content providers would start
adding AAAA records.
In other words, it was ticking time bomb.
The label "broken 6to4 setup" is misleading. Most of the time, the thing that
breaks 6to4 is not the user's "setup"; it's an ISP somewhere that is either (a)
advertising a bad relay or (b) filtering protocol 41. (If the problem were
the users' setups, the providers could just say "not our problem; fix your 6to4
setup")
What worries me is that people will start using 6to4 for bittorrent.
Bittorrent
will of course completely hide broken setups and worse, it will also hide
broken 6to4 relays.
From my understanding of bittorrent, it will just find other routes.
And all of this, because a few hobbyists are afraid that declaring 6to4 as
historic will require them to search a bit harder in the furture for a
router that supports 6to4.
You completely misunderstand both the situation, and the size and diversity of
6to4 users.
Keith
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