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In this document we consider and analyse the specific scenario of IPv6 transition and deployment in a large department of a university campus network. The department is large enough to operate its own instances of all the conventional university services including (for example) web, DNS, email, filestore, interactive logins, and remote and wireless access. The scenario is a dual-stack one, i.e. transition to IPv6 means deploying IPv6 in the first instance (and probably for some time) alongside IPv4. This analysis identifies the available components for IPv6 transition, while validating the applicability of the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios informational text. It focuses on the network and associated service elements of the transition, rather than the application elements.
1.
Introduction
1.1.
Site Philosophy
2.
Discussion of Scenarios Network Infrastructure Components
2.1.
Component 1: Enterprise Provider Requirements
2.2.
Component 2: Enterprise Application Requirements
2.3.
Component 3: Enterprise IT Department Requirements
2.4.
Component 4: Enterprise Network Management System
2.5.
Component 5: Enterprise Network Interoperation and Coexistence
3.
Discussion of Network Infrastructure Component Requirements
3.1.
DNS
3.2.
Routing
3.3.
Configuration of Hosts
3.4.
Security
3.5.
Applications
3.6.
Network Management
3.7.
Address Planning
3.8.
Multicast
3.9.
Multihoming
4.
Specific Scenario Component Review
4.1.
Network Components
4.1.1.
Physical connectivity (Layer 2)
4.1.2.
Routing and Logical subnets (Layer 3)
4.1.3.
Firewall
4.1.4.
Intrusion Detection System
4.1.5.
Management
4.1.6.
Monitoring
4.1.7.
Remote access
4.1.8.
IPv6 External Access
4.2.
Address Allocation Components
4.2.1.
IPv6 network prefix allocation
4.2.2.
IPv6 Address allocation
4.3.
Core Services
4.3.1.
Email
4.3.2.
Web Hosting
4.3.3.
Directory Services
4.3.4.
DNS
4.3.5.
NTP
4.3.6.
Multicast
4.4.
Hard-coded address points
5.
IPv6 Enterprise Deployment Procedure
5.1.
Advanced Planning
5.2.
Testbed/Trial Deployment
5.3.
Production Deployment
6.
Analysis: Dual-Stack Deployment - Transition toolbox
7.
Analysis: Considerations beyond the Scenarios Document
8.
Summary
9.
Acknowledgements
10.
IANA Considerations
11.
Security Considerations
12.
Informative References
§
Author's Address
§
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements
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The scope of the enterprise network transition scenarios being considered by the IETF is very large, much more so than that of the other three IPv6 transition areas that have been studied (ISP (Lind, M., Ksinant, V., Park, S., Baudot, A., and P. Savola, “Scenarios and Analysis for Introducing IPv6 into ISP Networks,” March 2005.) [RFC4029], unmanaged (Huitema, C., Austein, R., Satapati, S., and R. van der Pol, “Evaluation of IPv6 Transition Mechanisms for Unmanaged Networks,” September 2004.) [RFC3904] and 3GPP (Wiljakka, J., “Analysis on IPv6 Transition in Third Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) Networks,” October 2005.) [RFC4215]). However, an IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios (Bound, J., “IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios,” June 2005.) [RFC4057] description has been produced. In this case study document we present our experience in a specific area for IPv6 transition, namely a large department (1,500 staff and students, over 1,000 hosts) in an academic campus network. The purpose of this document is to both define and analyse the IPv6 transition of such a network, but also to test and validate the applicability of the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios document to a specific example. This document describes the transition focusing on the network elements.
Our campus study falls under Scenario 1 of the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios (Bound, J., “IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios,” June 2005.) [RFC4057] document, i.e. the campus network is an existing IPv4 network, where IPv6 is to be deployed in conjunction with the IPv4 network.
Scenario 1 has the assumption that the IPv4 network infrastructure used has an equivalent capability in IPv6. This document analyses that assumption. The Scenario also has requirements, i.e. that the existing IPv4 network infrastructure is not disrupted, and that IPv6 should be equivalent or better than the network infrastructure in IPv4. The Scenario also notes that it may also not be feasible to deploy IPv6 on all parts of the network immediately.
These assumptions and requirements will be discussed later in this text. An incremental deployment strategy may, for example, be a desirable property.
It should also be noted why Scenarios 2 and 3 did not apply to this campus transition scenario. Scenario 2 talks of specific applications, but in the campus case we wish to deploy IPv6 pervasively, in wired and wireless networks, as an enabler for education and research, to encourage new application development. Scenario 3 focuses on using IPv6 as the basis for most network communication, but in the campus we already have a significant IPv4 deployment that will be utilised for the foreseeable future (Scenario 3 would perhaps be more appropriate for a green field deployment).
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The site which is the subject of this study is a large departmental network on a campus. That network (prior to transition) is an IPv4 network with around 20 subnets, using a core network infrastructure that combines switch-router functionality in central devices, with switches at the network edge. The main switching equipment is all VLAN (IEEE 802.1q) capable. There are around 1,000 networked nodes and 1,500 users, not including transient (mainly wireless) visitors.
The site wishes to deploy IPv6 dual-stack to support its own users along with its teaching and research needs. The goal is to IPv6 enable the network (on the wire) and services (DNS, SMTP, etc) such that the whole operation is dual-stack. This in due course would allow IPv6-only devices to be deployed within the fully IPv6-capable environment. Some network links may become IPv6-only in a subsequent phase in the future.
This text has evolved over time. When we began writing, the department did not have IPv6 capability on its existing IPv4 routing equipment, thus an interim deployment method was required until the next router procurement. We discuss that interim solution within this document, and present the discussion from an initial point of an interim parallel IPv6 deployment prior to unifying the IPv4 and IPv6 routing on a single platform. Our initial deployment plan used a separate IPv6 path into the department with a parallel routing infrastructure for IPv6. In practice this meant that our initial deployment used a parallel IPv6 routing infrastructure, using BSD routers, for over three years, prior to deployment of a unified solution on a commercial platform.
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In this section, we look at the issues raised by following step by step the questions and considerations in the Scenarios Network Infrastructure Components of the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios (Bound, J., “IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios,” June 2005.) [RFC4057] document, section 3.2. This section is written from the perspective of pre-transition planning, although we are writing this document having undergone transition.
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The answers to the questions posed in this section of the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios document are as follows:
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The focus of this document is network transition and services, but the answers to the next IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios section on application aspects are as follows:
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Here we list responses to the next IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios section on IT Department Requirements. Again, in this section we write our comments from a pre-transition perspective.
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The responses to the next IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios section are as follows:
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Answers to the final IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios section on Coexistence are as follows:
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In this section, we discuss the network infrastructure component requirements raised in the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios (Bound, J., “IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios,” June 2005.) [RFC4057] document, in section 4. We document current IPv4 practices, and how we see these being facilitated when IPv6 is deployed and enabled.
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The open source package BIND (version 9) is used for our three internal name servers. The servers will be made dual stack, to be available for IPv6 transport for local dual-stack or IPv6-only nodes. The three servers will each be listed with AAAA records, and AAAA glue added.
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Internal unicast routing is either statically configured or uses RIP. We thus expect to use RIPng for internal IPv6 routing. The external routing is statically configured for IPv4, and thus is likely to be statically configured for IPv6.
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IPv4 clients use DHCP for address and other configuration options. We expect to use Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6) (Droms, R., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins, C., and M. Carney, “Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6),” July 2003.) [RFC3315] for IPv6 clients. This will require analysis of the IPv4 and IPv6 Dual-Stack Issues for DHCPv6 (Chown, T., Venaas, S., and C. Strauf, “Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP): IPv4 and IPv6 Dual-Stack Issues,” May 2006.) [RFC4477]. We expect some clients, perhaps those in wireless LANs, to use IPv6 Stateless Autoconfiguration (Thomson, S. and T. Narten, “IPv6 Stateless Address Autoconfiguration,” December 1998.) [RFC2462], and these nodes will need support for Stateless Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) Service for IPv6 (Droms, R., “Stateless Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) Service for IPv6,” April 2004.) [RFC3736] for other configuration options, including the IPv6 address of a local DNS resolver.
Although IPv6 offers Stateless Autoconfiguration, it is expected that the managed environment will continue, driven from the asset database, for some time. The site administrators are comfortable with the use of DHCP for IPv4, and wish to use it for IPv6, for global address and potentially IPv6 Privacy Address assignment. Thus DHCPv6 is required. Use of Stateless Autoconfiguration implies a requirement for dynamic DNS updates for such nodes. It is not yet decided how to apply or enforce that plan; it may certainly be flexible with time.
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We need to identify new IPv6 related security considerations, and those associated with transition mechanisms (Davies, E., “IPv6 Transition/Co-existence Security Considerations,” October 2006.) [I‑D.ietf‑v6ops‑security‑overview]. Site policies may need to be updated as a result.
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Discussion of applications is out of scope of this document. However, the Application Aspects of IPv6 Transition (Shin, M-K., Hong, Y-G., Hagino, J., Savola, P., and E. Castro, “Application Aspects of IPv6 Transition,” March 2005.) [RFC4038] document describes best porting practice for applications. A new Advanced Sockets API for IPv6 (Stevens, W., Thomas, M., Nordmark, E., and T. Jinmei, “Advanced Sockets Application Program Interface (API) for IPv6,” May 2003.) [RFC3542] defines the IP version independent API that is now widely supported. Recent versions of Java support IPv4 and IPv6 operation. There should also be consideration for making any required application proxies dual-stack.
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The network management and monitoring systems will need to support IPv6, and the management and monitoring of any transition mechanisms used to deploy IPv6. Monitoring includes usage tracking (e.g. via open source packages such as MRTG) and availability monitoring (e.g. via the Nagios package).
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The department has been allocated 12 Class C prefixes for IPv4 use, and uses only globally routable addresses internally. No IPv4 NAT is used. The IPv4 address space for the campus was obtained prior to CIDR, but the IPv6 address space is allocated from the UK National Research Network (JANET) address space. The university receives a /48 prefix, and the department has a /52 allocation within this block.
Given that global IPv4 addresses are in use throughout our network, we plan to use global IPv6 addresses as well. Since we also do not expect to renumber (our IPv6 provider is expected to be JANET indefinitely) and our connectivity is expected to be stable we do not see any real need to deploy Unique Local Addresses (ULAs) (Hinden, R. and B. Haberman, “Unique Local IPv6 Unicast Addresses,” October 2005.) [RFC4193]. Doing so would require full support for Default Address Selection (Draves, R., “Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6),” February 2003.) [RFC3484] (so that ULA source addresses are used for ULA destinations, and global source addresses for global destinations) and running a two-faced DNS (with ULAs advertised only internally), which we do not currently do for IPv4.
IPv6 address assignment planning for a campus-style enterprise is discussed separately in more detail in the IPv6 Unicast Address Assignment Considerations (Velde, G., Popoviciu, C., Chown, T., Bonness, O., and C. Hahn, “IPv6 Unicast Address Assignment Considerations,” September 2008.) [I‑D.ietf‑v6ops‑addcon] text.
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IPv4 multicast is used for a number of applications, including AccessGrid multi-party videoconferencing. Connectivity is provided via the local campus and regional network. We expect to use PIM-SM (Fenner, B., Handley, M., Holbrook, H., and I. Kouvelas, “Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol Specification (Revised),” August 2006.) [RFC4601] for IPv6, initially as Any Source Multicast (ASM). We also plan to make use of Source Specific Multicast (SSM) more heavily in IPv6, bringing IPv6 and SSM together in one deployment cycle.
The use of IPv6 multicast makes it much simpler for our site to generate its own globally unique multicast group addresses than is the case for IPv4, where we need to use GLOP space (Albanna, Z., Almeroth, K., Meyer, D., and M. Schipper, “IANA Guidelines for IPv4 Multicast Address Assignments,” August 2001.) [RFC3171] from an upstream provider. For IPv6, you can generate your own unique multicast group address for regular groups (Haberman, B. and D. Thaler, “Unicast-Prefix-based IPv6 Multicast Addresses,” August 2002.) [RFC3306] or Embedded-RP groups (Savola, P. and B. Haberman, “Embedding the Rendezvous Point (RP) Address in an IPv6 Multicast Address,” November 2004.) [RFC3956] based on your unicast prefix (typically /48 or /64).
Since there is no MSDP (Fenner, B. and D. Meyer, “Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP),” October 2003.) [RFC3618] equivalent for IPv6, we only expect to use regular unicast prefix based group addresses (Haberman, B. and D. Thaler, “Unicast-Prefix-based IPv6 Multicast Addresses,” August 2002.) [RFC3306] within our own organisational scope. For wider scope multicast we expect to use Embedded-RP where possible, running our own IPv6 Rendezvous Point(s) to support our own content. In terms of the IPv6 address architecture (Hinden, R. and S. Deering, “IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture,” February 2006.) [RFC4291], we plan to use a site scope (ff05) for our department, with the university having organisational scope (ff08). Locally assigned group IDs would honour the guidelines of RFC3307 (Haberman, B., “Allocation Guidelines for IPv6 Multicast Addresses,” August 2002.) [RFC3307].
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The site is not multihomed for IPv4, and thus will not be for IPv6. This is typical for UK academic networks, where resilience is provisioned through the regional MAN links.
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Here we describe specific technology in use now in the department. Later in this section we discuss any items not included in the above section, i.e. those not explicitly mentioned in the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios document. Note that not all applications and services have at the time of writing been made IPv6 capable; in general open source packages are IPv6 capable out of the box, but discussion of specific applications is outside the scope of this text (this text aims to be a stable description of the processes and thinking followed during our campus transition).
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The hybrid Layer 2/3 routing equipment has approximately 20 internal IPv4 subnets (in effect, routed VLANs). The only specific internal routing protocol used is RIP (Malkin, G., “RIP Version 2,” November 1998.) [RFC2453]. There is a static route via the site firewall to the main upstream provider (academic) running at 1Gbit/s. We would expect to use RIPng (Malkin, G. and R. Minnear, “RIPng for IPv6,” January 1997.) [RFC2080] for IPv6 internally.
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The firewall is currently one running on a commercial hardware platform without IPv6 support. There is one internal facing interface, one external facing interface, and two DMZ interfaces, one for wired hosts and one for the Wireless LAN provision. We expect the topology to remain the same, with the DMZ(s) becoming dual-stack.
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The Snort open source package is used locally for IPv4 IDS. Work on IPv6 capability for Snort is ongoing, but needs to consider both similar (e.g. application transport) issues as IPv4 as well as IPv6-specific issues (e.g. excessive use of Hop-by-Hop options).
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Some network management is performed by SNMP; there is no specific package for this (scripts used are in-house).
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A number of open source tools are used, to monitor network usage as well as systems availability, e.g. Nagios and MRTG. The network testing tools include iperf, rude and crude.
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The department receives its IPv4 and IPv6 address allocations from the University. For IPv4, the University has a Class B allocation which is not aggregated under the JANET NREN address space post-CIDR. For IPv6, the University receives its allocation from JANET.
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For IPv6, JANET currently has a /32 prefix from RIPE-NCC, as the national academic ISP in the UK. The university has been allocated a /48 from this block by JANET. The department IPv6 deployment will be allocated a /52 size prefix from the university allocation.
In the initial deployment, we expect that IPv4 and IPv6 subnets will be congruent (and share the same VLANs). This is because the existing subnet divisions are made for geographic or administrative reasons that are not IP version dependent (e.g. by building location or research group membership).
One advantage of IPv6 is that subnets will not need to be resized to conserve or efficiently utilise address space as is the case currently for IPv4 (as subnet host counts rise and fall for administrative or research group growth/decline reasons).
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It is expected that the network devices will use a combination of address allocation mechanisms:
For devices using stateless or RFC3041 mechanisms, at least a Stateless DHCPv6 service (Droms, R., “Stateless Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) Service for IPv6,” April 2004.) [RFC3736] will be required for other (non-address) configuration options, e.g. DNS and NTP servers. It is likely that a full DHCPv6 service would provide this function however.
As discussed above, due to current experience with DHCP for IPv4, where all addresses are managed centrally, we expect that use of DHCPv6 for address allocation and management will be preferred (once implementations are mature).
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There are three MX hosts for inbound email, and two main internal mail servers. Sendmail is the MTA. MailScanner is used for anti-spam/anti-virus. This uses external services including various RBLs for part of its spam checking. Successful reverse DNS lookup is required for sendmail to accept internal SMTP connections for delivery. Email access is provided by a variety of open source and commercial client and server applications (including a web front end) the details of which are outside the scope of this document.
We expect to continue to use sendmail for MX and MTA functions, as it supports IPv6 out of the box. Each of our MX servers will be made dual stack, noting the considerations in RFC3974 (Nakamura, M. and J. Hagino, “SMTP Operational Experience in Mixed IPv4/v6 Environments,” January 2005.) [RFC3974].
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Web content hosting is provided either with Apache 2.x (open source) or in some cases commercial equivalents. Common components used to build systems with are MySQL, PHP and Perl; these enable local tools such as Wikis to be run. Apache 2.x has support for IPv6 included.
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The following directory services are used:
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The three DNS servers are running BIND9. A DNS secondary is held at another UK university site. While we will make our three DNS servers dual-stack, our DNS secondary would remain IPv4-only since it is out of our administrative control.
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The JANET NREN offers a stratum 1 NTP server. The department also has a GPS-based NTP server built-in to its own RIPE NCC test traffic server and an NTP device from a commercial provider. Both support IPv6 operation and transport.
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PIM-SM IPv4 multicast is facilitated via a dedicated commercial router, using a Rendezvous Point operated by our regional network. This supports applications including the IPv4 AccessGrid conferencing system. A number of bugs in the existing IPv4 routing equipment prevent heavy use of IPv4 Multicast within the department network (another reason that an IPv6 Multicast solution is desirable). An IPv4 Multicast beacon is used for monitoring Multicast. Our IPv6 multicast deployment plans are discussed in Section 3.8 above.
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Usage of IPv4 hard-coded addresses is interesting for at least two reasons. One is that it illustrates where IPv6 hard-coded addresses may appear, and thus secondly it is useful to analyse which hard-coded addresses may be barriers to smooth IPv6 renumbering. A procedure for renumbering has been described in Procedures for Renumbering an IPv6 Network without a Flag Day (Baker, F., Lear, E., and R. Droms, “Procedures for Renumbering an IPv6 Network without a Flag Day,” September 2005.) [RFC4192]. A non-exhaustive list of instances of such addresses includes:
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In this section we document (retrospectively) the procedure we went through in deploying IPv6 within our campus site.
The work described in this document has also been fed into the IPv6 Enterprise Analysis (Bound, J., “IPv6 Enterprise Network Analysis - IP Layer 3 Focus,” December 2006.) [I‑D.ietf‑v6ops‑ent‑analysis]. The reader is referred in particular to Section 4 ("Wide-Scale Dual-Stack Deployment") and Section 7 ("General issues and applicability for all Scenarios") which were directly contributed from the work here.
As described in the IPv6 Enterprise Analysis (Bound, J., “IPv6 Enterprise Network Analysis - IP Layer 3 Focus,” December 2006.) [I‑D.ietf‑v6ops‑ent‑analysis] document, the scenario here is one of wide-scale dual-stack deployment. The plan for deployment follows the general guidelines of Section 7 of that document, though we have expanded that description here from subsequent experience.
Note that our analysis does not include issues relating to deployment of new IPv6-specific technology, e.g. MIPv6 (Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, “Mobility Support in IPv6,” June 2004.) [RFC3775]. The focus of our deployment has been deploying dual-stack pervasively on the wire, with core network oriented services being IPv6 enabled.
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A first phase for deployment includes the following actions.
Following these action points should allow sites or networks to be ready for a trial or pilot IPv6 deployment, and to have confidence they understand and have control of their current - perhaps unwitting - usage of IPv6 (from systems which have it enabled by default).
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In this stage a site is validating IPv6 for deployment, and will thus take actions including the following:
In parallel, other preparation can be undertaken for a production deployment:
Once the site is satisfied in the testbed deployment, then a production deployment can be considered, enabling IPv6 for appropriate links and services.
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A production deployment includes the following action points:
The depth of the IPv6 deployment may vary from site to site. By enabling key services you make your site ready for a fuller deployment, and gain confidence and experience in the technology, which is good for your support staff, your students, staff and researchers.
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Within our network we initially deployed IPv6 such that it was routed in parallel to IPv4, but with data running on the same end-host links, using a VLAN-based method as cited below. This allowed us to pilot IPv6 without risking adverse impact on our existing IPv4 platforms. This method was used for over two years. Towards the end of its use, the BSD platforms used to facilitate this were showing signs of strain under the load, in terms of pure unicast and multicast forwarding requirements under heavier traffic bursts. We have since deployed a unified IPv4 and IPv6 commercial routing platform from a single vendor, which met all our IPv4 and IPv6 procurement requirements for IPv4 and IPv6 unicast and multicast functions, including but not limited to:
We have used the following mechanisms in our department's transition process:
We do NOT currently see a requirement for:
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Here we mention issues or scenario components that were not explicitly listed in the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios document. Due to the scope, that document could not embrace all details. We mention here components that other sites may also wish to consider:
The brevity of this list shows that the IPv6 Enterprise Network Scenarios text includes very good coverage of the issues and considerations faced by our enterprise site.
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In this document we have analysed the specific campus transition scenario for the author's site, and reported the analysis for the benefit of others who may be in a similar scenario, or for whom parts of the scenario may be relevant.
In our case transition does not mean from IPv4 only to IPv6 only, rather from IPv4 only to a dual-stack environment that could support IPv6 only nodes at a later date. We would probably best describe the process as dual stack integration.
We have described how a phased approach to transition can be adopted at a campus site (or part thereof), from a planning stage through a pilot to a fuller deployment. During our transition we initially ran a parallel IPv6 routing infrastructure, then in 2005 unified the routing to a single platform, for unicast and multicast IPv6. We enabled key services for dual-stack operation from the outset (DNS, web and mail/MX) and have enabled other services as and when they have become available. The VLAN-based interim step was useful for two years until a dual-protocol routing solution could be procured.
We do not discuss detailed availability of IPv6 capability in the services described in Section 4 above in this text, and we leave application support as an issue out of scope (though we observe that open source support for IPv6 is in general very good). For the purposes of our network-oriented transition, we are happy that the path taken and current solution is stable and complete.
The deployment has now been in full dual-stack operation for over two years, with key services enabled (including public-facing DNS, SMTP, web) without any significant adverse effects on the IPv4 service. The author welcomes discussion with other sites that are undergoing or have undergone a similar transition or integration process.
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Discussions with fellow participants on the 6NET and Euro6IX projects have been valuable. Input from the IETF IPv6 Operations WG list have also been welcomed.
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The document contains no IANA considerations.
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There are no specific new considerations from this scenario description and analysis.
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Tim Chown | |
University of Southampton | |
School of Electronics and Computer Science | |
Southampton, Hampshire SO17 1BJ | |
United Kingdom | |
Email: | tjc@ecs.soton.ac.uk |
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