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Re: IPv4 outage at next IETF in Chicago

2017-01-24 19:51:10
Sometimes, is not IETF people fault, I will say most of the time.

We all are mandated, by corporate policy to use apps (that we don’t develop), 
which may still use IPv4 literals, older APIs, etc. Those will fail. The same 
that will fail if we live in a world with IPv6 only access networks for our 
offices or homes and don’t have dual-stack in our LAN with something to sort 
out the problems of those apps.

You want an example, just try skype with NAT64 … (unless they sorted it out 
already).

Some more (I found a table some time ago googling, but not sure where is it): 
Google Talk, Google+, Last.fm, Netflix, ooVoo, Pirates of the Caribean, 
Spofity, Tango, Texas Poker, …



Regards,
Jordi


-----Mensaje original-----
De: ietf <ietf-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org> en nombre de Brian E Carpenter 
<brian(_dot_)e(_dot_)carpenter(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com>
Organización: University of Auckland
Responder a: <brian(_dot_)e(_dot_)carpenter(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com>
Fecha: martes, 24 de enero de 2017, 19:21
Para: Franck Martin <franck(_at_)peachymango(_dot_)org>
CC: IETF <ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org>
Asunto: Re: IPv4 outage at next IETF in Chicago

    Franck, I try not to be religious about NAT, and I use NAT44 every day
    like most people. Also like most people, I experience occasional
    unexplained failures of web-based transactions. Whether they are due
    to a NAT garbage-collect or a load-balancer failure, I don't know,
    of course. But actually I am not deeply concerned about NAT64, although
    any failures that it generates would be very hard to identify. I am
    more concerned about IETF participants whose devices are not set up
    as dual stack nodes at all. They would be completely blocked. Yes,
    I know, such people should not exist, should be deeply ashamed, etc.
    But I don't see why we would cut them off to prove a point.
    
    Regards
       Brian
    
    On 25/01/2017 14:05, Franck Martin wrote:
    > 
    > ----- Original Message -----
    >> From: "Brian E Carpenter" 
<brian(_dot_)e(_dot_)carpenter(_at_)gmail(_dot_)com>
    >> To: "Franck Martin" <franck(_at_)peachymango(_dot_)org>, "IETF" 
<ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org>
    >> Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2017 4:33:22 PM
    >> Subject: Re: IPv4 outage at next IETF in Chicago
    > 
    >> On 25/01/2017 12:11, Franck Martin wrote:
    >>> I think it is time to move to the next level of IPv6 deployment.
    >>>
    >>> Ideally the IETF WiFi network should now only provide the following 2 
networks:
    >>> 1)IPv6-only
    >>> 2)IPv6-only with NAT64
    >>>
    >>> The later should be the default network.
    >>>
    >>> However you would say, well some stuff will break, some non technical 
people
    >>> will use the IETF network and may have a bad experience, etc...
    >>>
    >>> So to be conservative but at the same time futurist and like it was 
done a few
    >>> years back, why not create again an IPv4 outage of a few hours where 
the above
    >>> 2 networks would be the only networks available?
    >>
    >> That would be a good way of damaging IETF productivity for a few hours.
    > 
    > Do you have evidence of applications not running in a NAT64 environment? 
I'm interested to know them.
    > 
    >>
    >> And for what? Moving away from the mainstream coexistence mechanism (dual
    >> stack),
    >> to a mechanism known to be intrinsically defective (NAT). I don't see 
the point.
    >>
    > 
    > I fail to see how NAT is intrinsically defective, since it is used 
successfully by everyone...
    > 
    > Nevertheless, the goal here is to get the Internet designers (IETF) to 
have operational experience on what needs to be fixed.
    > 
    > When the IPv4 outage happened a few years back, it gave a serious impetus 
in getting IPv6 totally mainstream on many platforms.
    > 
    > IAB encourages IPv6: https://www.iab.org/2016/11/07/iab-statement-on-ipv6/
    > 
    > However going IPv6-only can only be done in walled gardens. There still 
will be many environments with IPv4 only. A solution here is to move networks 
to NAT64, so you only need to support IPv4 at the edges...
    > 
    > Yes creating an outage for the sake of an outage is pointless, experience 
on what works and not work needs to be recorded.
    > 
    > May be the first step instead of doing an outage is to have as default a 
NAT64 network at IETF meetings and a dual stack network for the people that 
experience issues.
    > 
    >  
    > 
    
    
    



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