Internet DRAFT - draft-anderson-v6ops-siit-dc
draft-anderson-v6ops-siit-dc
IPv6 Operations T. Anderson
Internet-Draft Redpill Linpro
Intended status: Standards Track October 05, 2014
Expires: April 08, 2015
SIIT-DC: Stateless IP/ICMP Translation for IPv6 Data Centre Environments
draft-anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-01
Abstract
This document describes SIIT-DC, an extension to Stateless IP/ICMP
Translation (SIIT) [RFC6145] that makes it ideally suited for use in
IPv6 data centre environments. SIIT-DC simultaneously facilitates
IPv6 deployment and IPv4 address conservation. The overall SIIT-DC
architecture is described, as well as guidelines for operators.
Finally, the normative implementation requirements are described, as
a list of additions and changes to SIIT [RFC6145].
Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on April 08, 2015.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
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This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
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the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Motivation and Goals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1.1. Single Stack IPv6 Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.1.2. Stateless Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.1.3. IPv4 Address Conservation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.1.4. No Loss of End User's IPv4 Source Address . . . . . . 5
1.1.5. Compatible with Standard IPv6 Implementations . . . . 5
1.1.6. No Architectural Dependency on IPv4 . . . . . . . . . 6
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3. Architectural Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.1. DNS Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.2. Packet Flow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
4. Deployment Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.1. Application Support for NAT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.2. Application Support for IPv6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.3. Application Communication Pattern . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.4. Choice of Translation Prefix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.5. Routing Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.6. Location of the SIIT-DC Gateways . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.7. Migration from Dual Stack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
4.8. Packet Size and Fragmentation Considerations . . . . . . 15
4.8.1. IPv4/IPv6 Header Size Difference . . . . . . . . . . 16
4.8.2. IPv6 Atomic Fragments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4.8.3. Minimum Path MTU Difference Between IPv4 and IPv6 . . 16
5. Implementation Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
5.1. Compliance with RFC6145 and RFC6052 . . . . . . . . . . . 18
5.2. Static Address Mapping Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
5.3. Support for Increasing the IPv6 Path MTU . . . . . . . . 19
5.4. Loop Prevention Mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
6. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
7. Requirements Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
9.1. Mistaking the Translation Prefix for a Trusted Network . 20
9.2. Packets Looping Through the SIIT-DC Function . . . . . . 20
10. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
10.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
10.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Appendix A. Complete SIIT-DC topology example . . . . . . . . . 23
Appendix B. Comparison to Other Deployment Approaches . . . . . 26
B.1. IPv4-only . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
B.2. IPv4-only + NAPT44 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
B.3. IPv4-only + NAT64 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
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B.4. Dual Stack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
1. Introduction
SIIT-DC is an extension of SIIT [RFC6145] that provides a network-
centric stateless translation service that allows a data centre
operator or Internet Content Provider (ICP) to run a data centre
network, servers, and applications using exclusively IPv6, while at
the same time ensuring that end users that have only IPv4
connectivity will be able to continue to access the services and
applications.
1.1. Motivation and Goals
Historically, dual stack [RFC4213] has been the recommended way to
transition from an IPv4-only environment to one capable of serving
IPv6 users. For data centre operators and Internet content
providers, dual stack operation has a number of disadvantages
compared to single stack operation. In particular, running two
protocols rather than one results in increased complexity and
operational overhead, with a very low expected return on investment
in the short to medium term, as there are practically no end-users
who have only connectivity to the IPv6 Internet. Furthermore, the
dual stack approach does not in any way help with the depletion of
the IPv4 address space.
Therefore, a better approach is needed. The design goals are:
o Promote the deployment of native IPv6 services (cf. [RFC6540]).
o Provide IPv4 service availability for legacy users with no loss of
performance or functionality.
o To ensure that that the legacy users' IPv4 addresses remain
available to the servers and applications.
o To conserve and maximise the utilisation of IPv4 addresses.
o To avoid introducing more complexity than absolutely necessary,
especially on the servers and applications.
o To be easy to scale and deploy in a fault-tolerant manner.
The following subsections elaborates on how SIIT-DC meets these
goals.
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1.1.1. Single Stack IPv6 Operation
SIIT-DC allows an operator to build their applications on an
IPv6-only foundation. IPv4 end-user connectivity becomes a service
provided by the network, which systems administration and application
development staff do not need to concern themselves with.
Obviously, this will promote universal IPv6 deployment for all of the
provider's services and applications.
It is worth noting that SIIT-DC requires no special support or change
from the underlying IPv6 infrastructure, it will work with any kind
of IPv6 network. Traffic between IPv6-enabled end users and
IPv6-enabled services will always be native, and SIIT-DC will not be
involved in it at all.
1.1.2. Stateless Operation
Unlike other solutions that provide either dual stack availability to
single-stack services (e.g., Stateful NAT64 [RFC6146] and Layer-4/7
proxies), or that provide conservation of IPv4 addresses (e.g.,
NAPT44 [RFC3022]), a SIIT-DC Gateway does not keep any state between
each packet in a single connection or flow. In this sense it
operates exactly like a normal IP router, and has similar scaling
properties - the limiting factors are packets per second and
bandwidth. The number of concurrent flows and flow initiation rates
are irrelevant for performance.
This not only allows individual SIIT-DC Gateways to easily attain
"line rate" performance, it also allows for per-packet load balancing
between multiple SIIT-DC Gateways using Equal-Cost Multipath Routing
[RFC2991]. Asymmetric routing is also acceptable, which makes it
easy to avoid sub-optimal traffic patterns; the prefixes involved may
be anycasted from all the SIIT-DC Gateways in the provider's network,
thus ensuring that the most optimal path through the network is used,
even where the optimal path in one direction differs from the optimal
path in the opposite direction.
Finally, stateless operation means that high availability is easily
achieved. If an SIIT-DC Gateway should fail, its traffic can be re-
routed onto another SIIT-DC Gateway using a standard IP routing
protocol. This does not impact existing flows any more than what any
other IP re-routing event would.
1.1.3. IPv4 Address Conservation
In most parts of the world, it is difficult or even impossible to
obtain generously sized IPv4 allocations from the Regional Internet
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Registries. The resulting scarcity in turn impacts individual end
users and operators, which might be forced to purchase IPv4 addresses
from other operators in order to cover their needs. This process can
be risky to business continuity, in the case no suitable block for
sale can be located, and/or turn out to be prohibitively expensive.
Even so, a data centre operator will find that providing IPv4 service
is essential, as a large share of the Internet users still does not
have IPv6 connectivity.
A key goal of SIIT-DC is to help reduce a data centre operator's IPv4
address requirement to the absolute minimum, by allowing the operator
to remove them entirely from components that do not need to
communicate with endpoints in the IPv4 Internet. One example would
be servers that are operating in a supporting/backend role and only
communicates with to other servers (database servers, file servers,
and so on). Another example would be the network infrastructure
itself (router-to-router links, loopback addresses, and so on).
Furthermore, as LAN prefix sizes must always be rounded up to the
nearest power of two (or larger, if one reserves space for future
growth), even more IPv4 addresses will often end up being wasted
without even being used.
With SIIT-DC, the operator can remove these valuable IPv4 addresses
from his backend servers and network infrastructure, and reassign
them to the SIIT-DC service as IPv4 Service Addresses. There is no
requirement that IPv4 Service Addresses are assigned in an aggregated
manner, so there is nothing lost due to infrastructure overhead;
every single IPv4 address assigned to SIIT-DC can be used an IPv4
Service Address.
1.1.4. No Loss of End User's IPv4 Source Address
SIIT-DC will map the entire end-user's IPv4 source address into an
predefined IPv6 translation prefix. This ensures that there is no
loss of information; the end-user's IPv4 source address remains
available to the server/application, allowing it to perform tasks
like Geo-Location, logging, abuse handling, and so forth.
1.1.5. Compatible with Standard IPv6 Implementations
Except for the introduction of the SIIT-DC Gateways themselves, no
change to the network, servers, applications, or anything else is
required in order to support SIIT-DC. SIIT-DC is practically
invisibible from the point of view of the the IPv4 clients, the IPv6
servers, the IPv6 data centre network, and the IPv4 Internet. SIIT-
DC interoperates with all standards-compliant IPv4 or IPv6 stacks.
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1.1.6. No Architectural Dependency on IPv4
SIIT-DC will allow an ICP or data centre operator to build
infrastructure and applications entirely on IPv6. This means that
when the day comes to discontinue support for IPv4, no change needs
to be made to the overall architecture - it's only a matter of
shutting off the SIIT-DC Gateways. Therefore, by deploying native
IPv6 along with SIIT-DC, operators will avoid future migration or
deployment projects relating to IPv6 roll-out and/or IPv4 sun-
setting.
2. Terminology
This document makes use of the following terms:
IPv4 Service Address A public IPv4 address with which IPv4-only
clients will communicate. This communication will be translated
to IPv6 by the SIIT-DC Gateway.
IPv4 Service Address Pool One or more IPv4 prefixes routed to the
SIIT-DC Gateway's IPv4 interface. IPv4 Service Addresses are
allocated from this pool. Note that this does not necessarily
have to be a "pool" per se, as it could also be one or more host
routes (whose prefix length is equal to /32). The primary purpose
of using a pool rather than host routes is to facilitate IPv4
route aggregation and ease provisioning of new IPv4 Service
Addresses.
IPv6 Service Address A public IPv6 address assigned to a server or
application in the IPv6 network. IPv6-only and dual stacked
clients communicates with this address directly without invoking
SIIT-DC. IPv4-only clients also communicates with this address
through the SIIT-DC Gateway and via an IPv4 Service Address.
SIIT-DC Host Agent A logical function very similar to an SIIT-DC
Gateway that resides on a server and provides virtual IPv4
connectivity to applications, by reversing the translations done
by the SIIT-DC Gateway. It is an optional component of the SIIT-
DC architecture, that may be used to increase application support.
See [I-D.anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat].
SIIT-DC Gateway A device or a logical function that translates
between IPv4 and IPv6 in accordance with Section 5.
Static Address Mapping A bi-directional mapping between an IPv4
Service Address and an IPv6 Service Address configured in the
SIIT-DC Gateway. When translating between IPv4 and IPv6, the
SIIT-DC Gateway changes the address fields in the translated
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packet's IP header according to any matching Static Address
Mapping.
Translation Prefix An IPv6 prefix into which the entire IPv4 address
space is mapped. This prefix is routed to the SIIT-DC Gateway's
IPv6 interface. It is either an Network-Specific Prefix or a
Well-Known Prefix as specified in [RFC6052]. When translating
between IPv4 and IPv6, the SIIT-DC Gateway prepends or strips the
Translation Prefix from the address fields in the translated
packet's IP header, unless a Static Address Mapping exists for the
IP address in question.
3. Architectural Overview
This section describes the basic SIIT-DC architecture.
SIIT-DC Architecture
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+-------------------+ +----------------+
| IPv6-capable user | | IPv4-only user |
| ================= | | ============== |
| | | |
+-<2001:db8::ab:cd>-+ +-<203.0.113.50>-+
| |
(the IPv6 internet) (the IPv4 Internet)
| |
| +------------------<192.0.2.0/24>-+
| | |
| | SIIT-DC Gateway |
| | =============== |
| | |
| | Translation Prefix: |
| | 2001:db8:46::/96 |
| | |
| | Static Address Mapping: |
| | 192.0.2.1 <=> 2001:db8:12:34::1 |
| | |
| +--------------<2001:db8:46::/96>-+
| |
(the IPv6-only data centre network)
| |
| ------------------------------/
|/
|
+--<2001:db8:12:34::1>------------------------------+
| | |
| | IPv6-only server |
| | ================ |
| | |
| +-[2001:db8:12:34::1]---------------------------+ |
| | AF_INET6 | |
| | | |
| | IPv6-only application | |
| | | |
| +-----------------------------------------------+ |
+---------------------------------------------------+
Figure 1
In this example, 192.0.2.0/24 is allocated as an IPv4 Service Address
Pool. Individual IPv4 Service Addresses are assigned from this pool.
The provider must route this prefix to the SIIT-DC Gateway's IPv4
interface. Note that there are no restrictions on how many IPv4
Service Address Pools are used or their prefix length, as long as
they are all routed to the SIIT-DC Gateway's IPv4 interface.
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The Static Address Mapping list is used when translating an IPv4
Service Address (here 192.0.2.1) to its corresponding IPv6 Service
Address (here 2001:db8:12:34::1) and vice versa. When the SIIT-DC
Gateway translates an IPv4 packet to IPv6, any IPv4 Service Address
found in the original IPv4 header will be replaced with the
corresponding IPv6 Service Address in the resulting IPv6 header, and
vice versa when translating an IPv6 packet to IPv4.
2001:db8:46::/96 is the Translation Prefix into which the entire IPv4
address space is mapped. It is used for translation of the end
user's IPv4 address to IPv6 and vice versa according to the algorithm
defined in Section 2.2 of RFC6052 [RFC6052]. This algorithmic
mapping has a lower precedence than the configured Static Address
Mappings.
The SIIT-DC Gateway itself can be either a separate device or a
logical function in another multi-purpose device, for example an IP
router. Any number of SIIT-DC Gateways may exist simultaneously in
an operators infrastructure, as long as they all have the same
translation prefix and list of Static Mappings configured.
3.1. DNS Configuration
The IPv6 Service Address of should be registered in DNS using an AAAA
record, while its corresponding IPv4 Service Address should be
registered using an A record. This results in the following DNS
records:
DNS Configuration for a SIIT-DC enabled service
app.domain.tld. IN AAAA 2001:db8:12:34::1
app.domain.tld. IN A 192.0.2.1
Figure 2
3.2. Packet Flow
In this example, "IPv4-only user" initiates a request to the
application running on the IPv6-only server. He starts by looking up
the IN A record of "app.domain.tld" in DNS, and attempts to connect
to this address on the service by transmitting the following IPv4
packet destined for the IPv4 Service Address:
Stage 1: Client -> Server, IPv4
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+------------------------------------------------+
| IP Version: 4 |
| Source Address: 203.0.113.50 |
| Destination Address: 192.0.2.1 |
| Protocol: TCP |
|------------------------------------------------|
| TCP SYN [...] |
+------------------------------------------------+
Figure 3
This packet is then routed over the Internet to the (nearest) SIIT-DC
Gateway, which translates it into the following IPv6 packet and
forward it into the IPv6 network:
Stage 2: Client -> Server request, IPv4
+-------------------------------------------------+
| IP Version: 6 |
| Source Address: 2001:db8:46::203.0.113.50 |
| Destination Address: 2001:db8:12:34::1 |
| Next Header: TCP |
|-------------------------------------------------|
| TCP SYN [...] |
+-------------------------------------------------+
Figure 4
The destination address field was translated to the IPv6 Service
Address according to the configured Static Address Mapping, while the
source address was field translated according to the [RFC6052]
mapping using the Translation Prefix (because it did not match any
Static Address Mapping). The rest of the IP header was translated
according to [RFC6145]. The Layer 4 payload is copied verbatim, with
the exception of the TCP checksum being recalculated.
Note that the IPv6 address 2001:db8:46::203.0.113.50 may also be
expressed as 2001:db8:46::cb00:7132, cf. Section 2.2 of RFC2373
[RFC2373].
Next, the application receives receives this IPv6 packet and responds
to it like it would with any other IPv6 packet:
Stage 3: Server -> Client response, IPv6
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+-------------------------------------------------+
| IP Version: 6 |
| Source Address: 2001:db8:12:34::1 |
| Destination Address: 2001:db8:46::203.0.113.50 |
| Next Header: TCP |
|-------------------------------------------------|
| TCP SYN+ACK [...] |
+-------------------------------------------------+
Figure 5
The response packet is routed to the (nearest) SIIT-DC Gateway's IPv6
interface, which will translate it back to IPv4 as follows:
Stage 4: Server -> Client response, IPv4
+------------------------------------------------+
| IP Version: 4 |
| Source Address: 192.0.2.2 |
| Destination Address: 203.0.113.50 |
| Protocol: TCP |
|------------------------------------------------|
| TCP SYN+ACK [...] |
+------------------------------------------------+
Figure 6
This time, the source address matched the Static Address Mapping and
was translated accordingly, while the destination address did not,
and was therefore translated according to [RFC6052] by having the
Translation Prefix stripped. The rest of the packet was translated
according to [RFC6145].
The resulting IPv4 packet is transmitted back to the end user over
the IPv4 Internet. Subsequent packets in the flow will follow the
exact same translation pattern. They may or may not cross the same
translators as earlier packets in the same flow.
The end user's IPv4 stack has no idea that it is communicating with
an IPv6 server, nor does the server's IPv6 stack have any idea that
is is communicating with an IPv4 client. To them, it's just plain
IPv4 or IPv6, respectively. However, the applications running on the
server may optionally be updated to recognise and strip the
Translation Prefix, so that the end user's IPv4 address may be used
for logging, Geo-Location, abuse handling, and so forth.
4. Deployment Guidelines
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In this section, we list recommendations and guidelines for operators
who would like to deploy a SIIT-DC service in their data centre
network.
4.1. Application Support for NAT
Not all application protocols are able to operate in a network
environment where rewriting of IP addresses occur. An operator
should therefore carefully evaluate the applications he would like to
make available for IPv4 users through SIIT-DC, to ensure they do not
fall in this category. In general, if an application layer protocol
works correctly through standard NAT44 (see [RFC3235]), it will most
likely work correctly through SIIT-DC as well.
Higher-level protocols that embed IP addresses as part of their
payload are especially problematic, as noted in [RFC2663], [RFC2993],
and [RFC3022]. Such protocols will most likely not work through any
form of address translation, including SIIT-DC. One well-known
example of such a protocol is FTP [RFC0959].
The SIIT-DC architecture may be extended with a Host Agent that
reverses the translation performed by the SIIT-DC Gateway before
passing the packets to the application software. This allows the
problematic application protocols described above to work correctly
in an SIIT-DC environment as well. See
[I-D.anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat] for a description of this
extension.
4.2. Application Support for IPv6
SIIT-DC requires that the application software supports IPv6
networking, and that it has no dependency on IPv4 networking. If
this is not the case, the approach described in
[I-D.anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat] may be used, as it provides the
application with seemingly native IPv4 connectivity. This allows
IPv4-only applications to work correctly in an otherwise IPv6-only
environment.
4.3. Application Communication Pattern
SIIT-DC is ideally suited for applications where IPv4-only nodes on
the Internet initiate traffic towards the IPv6-only services, which
in turn are only passively listening for inbound traffic and
responding as necessary. One well-known example of such a protocol
is HTTP [RFC2616]. This is due to the fact that in this case, an
IPv4 user looks exactly like an ordinary IPv6 user from the host and
application's point of view, and requires no special treatment.
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It is possible to combine SIIT-DC with DNS64 [RFC6147] in order to
allow an IPv6-only application to initiate communication with
IPv4-only nodes through an SIIT-DC Gateway. However, in this case,
care must be taken so that all outgoing communication is sourced from
the IPv6 Service Address that has a Static Mapping configured on the
SIIT-DC Gateway. If another unmapped address is used, the SIIT-DC
Gateway will discard the packet.
An alternative approach to the above would be to make use of an SIIT-
DC Host Agent as described in [I-D.anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat].
This provides the application with seemingly native IPv4
connectivity, which it may use for both inbound and outbound
communication without requiring the application to select a specific
source address for its outbound communications.
4.4. Choice of Translation Prefix
Either a Network-Specific Prefix (NSP) from the provider's own IPv6
address space or the IANA-allocated Well-Known Prefix 64:ff9b::/96
(WKP) may be used. From a technical point of view, both should work
equally well, however as only a single WKP exists, if a provider
would like to deploy more than one instance of SIIT-DC in his
network, or Stateful NAT64 [RFC6146], an NSP must be used anyway for
all but one of those deployments.
Furthermore, the WKP cannot be used in inter-domain routing. By
using an NSP, a provider will have the possibility to provide SIIT-DC
service to other operators across Autonomous System borders.
For these reasons, this document recommends that an NSP is used.
Section 3.3 of [RFC6052] discusses the choice of translation prefix
in more detail.
The Translation Prefix may use any of the lengths described in
Section 2.2 of RFC6052 [RFC6052], but /96 has two distinct advantages
over the others. First, converting it to IPv4 can be done in a
single operation by simply stripping off the first 96 bits; second,
it allows for IPv4 addresses to be embedded directly into the text
representation of an IPv6 address using the familiar dotted quad
notation, e.g., "2001:db8::198.51.100.10" (cf. Section 2.4 of RFC6052
[RFC6052])), instead of being converted to hexadecimal notation.
This makes it easier to write IPv6 ACLs and similar that match
translated endpoints in the IPv4 Internet. Use of a /96 prefix
length is therefore recommended.
4.5. Routing Considerations
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The prefixes that constitute the IPv4 Service Address Pool and the
IPv6 Translation Prefix may be routed to the SIIT-DC Gateway(s) as
any other IPv4 or IPv6 route in the provider's network.
If more than one SIIT-DC Gateway is being deployed, it is recommended
that a dynamic routing protocol (such as BGP, IS-IS, or OSPF) is
being used to advertise the routes within the provider's network.
This will ensure that the traffic that is to be translated will reach
the closest SIIT-DC Gateway, reducing or eliminating sub-optimal
traffic patterns, as well as provide high availability - if one SIIT-
DC Gateway fails, the dynamic routing protocol will automatically
redirect the traffic to the next-best translator.
4.6. Location of the SIIT-DC Gateways
The goal of SIIT-DC is to facilitate a true IPv6-only application and
network architecture, with the sole exception being the IPv4
interfaces of the SIIT-DC Gateways and the network infrastructure
required to connect them to the IPv4 Internet. Therefore, the SIIT-
DC Gateways should be located somewhere beween the IPv4 Internet and
the application delivery stack. This should be understood to include
all servers, load balancers, firewalls, intrusion detection systems,
and similar devices that are processing traffic to a greater extent
than merely forwarding it.
It is optimal to place the SIIT-DC Gateways as close as possible to
the direct path between the servers and the end users. If the
closest translator is located a long way from the optimal path, all
packets in both directions must make a detour. This would increase
the RTT between the server and the end user by by two times the extra
latency incurred by the detour, as well as cause unnecessary load on
the network links on the detour path.
Where possible, it is beneficial to implement the SIIT-DC Gateways as
a logical function within the routers would have handled the traffic
anyway, had the topology been dual stacked. This way, the
translation service would not need to be assigned separate networks
ports (which might become saturated and impact the service quality),
nor would it require extra rack space and energy. Some particularly
good choices of the location could be within a data centre's access
routers, or within the provider's border routers. When every single
application in the data centre or the provider's network eventually
runs on single-stack IPv6, there would no need to run IPv4 on the
inside of the SIIT-DC Gateway. This reduces complexity, and allows
the operator to reclaim IPv4 addresses from the network
infrastructure that may instead be used as IPv4 Service Address
Pools.
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Finally, another possibility is that the data centre operator
outsources the SIIT-DC service to another entity, for example his
upstream ISP. Doing so allows the data centre operator to build a
true IPv6-only infrastructure. However, in this case, care must be
taken to ensure that the path between the data centre and the SIIT-DC
operator has a stable and known MTU, and that the SIIT-DC Gateways
are not too far away from the data centre (otherwise, translated
traffic could incur a latency penalty).
4.7. Migration from Dual Stack
While this document discusses the use of IPv6-only servers and
applications, there is no technical requirement that the servers are
IPv4 free. SIIT-DC works equally well for dual stacked servers,
which makes migration easy - after setting up the translation
function, the DNS A record for the service is updated to point to the
IPv4 address that will be translated to IPv6, the previously used
IPv4 service address may continue to be assigned to the server. This
makes roll-back to dual stack easy, as it is only a matter of
changing the DNS record back to what it was before.
For high-volume services migrating to SIIT-DC from dual stack, DNS
Round Robin may be used to gradually migrate the service's IPv4
traffic from its native IPv4 address(es) to the translated IPv4
Service Address(s).
4.8. Packet Size and Fragmentation Considerations
There are some key differences between IPv4 and IPv6 relating to
packet sizes and fragmentation that one should consider when
deploying SIIT-DC. They result in a few problematic corner cases,
which can be dealt with in a few different ways. The following
subsections will discuss these in detail, and provide operational
guidance.
In particular, the operator may find that relying on fragmentation in
the IPv6 domain is undesired or even operationally impossible
[I-D.taylor-v6ops-fragdrop]. For this reason, the recommendations in
this section seeks to minimise the use of IPv6 fragmentation.
Unless otherwise stated, the following subsections assume that the
MTU in both the IPv4 and IPv6 domains is 1500 bytes.
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4.8.1. IPv4/IPv6 Header Size Difference
The IPv6 header is up to 20 bytes larger than the IPv4 header. This
means that a full-size 1500 bytes large IPv4 packet cannot be
translated to IPv6 without being fragmented, otherwise it would
likely have resulted in a 1520 bytes large IPv6 packet.
If the transport protocol used is TCP, this is generally not a
problem, as the IPv6 server will advertise a TCP MSS of 1440 bytes.
This causes the client to never send larger packets than what can be
translated to a single full-size IPv6 packet, eliminating any need
for fragmentation.
For other transport protocols, full-size IPv4 packets with the DF
flag cleared will need to be fragmented by the SIIT-DC Gateway. The
only way to avoid this is to increase the Path MTU between the SIIT-
DC Gateway and the servers to 1520 bytes. Note that the servers' MTU
SHOULD NOT be increased accordingly, as that would cause them to
undergo Path MTU Discovery for most native IPv6 destinations.
However, the servers would need to be able to accept and process
incoming packets larger than their own MTU. If the server's IPv6
implementation allows the MTU to be set differently for specific
destinations, it could be increased to 1520 for destinations within
the Translation Prefix specifically.
4.8.2. IPv6 Atomic Fragments
In keeping with the fifth paragraph of Section 4 of RFC6145
[RFC6145], an SIIT-DC Gateway will by default add an IPv6
Fragmentation header to the resulting IPv6 packet when translating an
IPv4 packet with the Don't Fragment flag set to 0.
This happens even though the resulting IPv6 packet isn't actually
fragmented into several pieces, resulting in an IPv6 Atomic Fragment
[RFC6946]. These Atomic Fragments are generally not useful in a data
centre environment, and it is therefore recommended that this
behaviour is disabled in the SIIT-DC Gateways. To this end,
Section 4 of RFC6145 [RFC6145] notes that the "translator MAY provide
a configuration function that allows the translator not to include
the Fragment Header for the non-fragmented IPv6 packets".
Note that [I-D.gont-6man-deprecate-atomfrag-generation] seeks to
update [RFC6145], making the functionality described above as the
standard and only mode of operation.
4.8.3. Minimum Path MTU Difference Between IPv4 and IPv6
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Section 5 of RFC2460 [RFC2460] specifies that the minimum IPv6 link
MTU is 1280 bytes. Therefore, an IPv6 node can reasonably assume
that if it transmits an IPv6 packet that is 1280 bytes or smaller, it
is guaranteed to reach its destination without requiring
fragmentation or invoking the Path MTU Discovery algorithm [RFC1981].
However, this assumption fails if the destination is an IPv4 node
reached through a protocol translator such as an SIIT-DC Gateway, as
the minimum IPv4 link MTU is 68 bytes. See Section 3.2 of RFC791
[RFC0791].
Section 5.1 of RFC6145 [RFC6145] specifies that an SIIT-DC Gateway
should set the IPv4 Don't Fragment flag to 1 when it translates an
unfragmented IPv6 packet to IPv4. This means that when the path to
the destination IPv4 node contains an IPv4 link with an MTU smaller
than 1260 bytes (which corresponds to an IPv6 MTU smaller than 1280
bytes, cf. Section 4.8.1), the Path MTU Discovery algorithm will be
invoked, even if the original IPv6 packet was only 1280 bytes large.
This happens as a result of the IPv4 router connecting to the IPv4
link with the small MTU returning an ICMPv4 Need To Fragment error
with an MTU value smaller than 1260, which in turns is translated by
the SIIT-DC Gateway to an ICMPv6 Packet Too Big error with an MTU
value smaller than 1280 which is then transmitted to the origin IPv6
node.
When an IPv6 node receives an ICMPv6 Packet Too Big error indicating
an MTU value smaller than 1280, the last paragraph of Section 5 of
RFC2460 [RFC2460] gives it two choices on how to proceed:
o It may reduce its Path MTU value to the value indicated in the
Packet Too Big, i.e., limit the size of subsequent packets
transmitted to that destination to the indicated value. This
approach causes no problems for the SIIT-DC function, as it simply
allows Path MTU Discovery to work transparently across the SIIT-DC
Gateway.
o It may reduce its Path MTU value to exactly 1280, and in addition
include a Fragmentation header in subsequent packets sent to that
destination. In other words, the IPv6 node will start emitting
Atomic Fragments. The Fragmentation header signals to the the
SIIT-DC Gateway that the Don't Fragment flag should be set to 0 in
the resulting IPv4 packet, and it also provides the Identification
value.
If the use of the IPv6 Fragmentation header is problematic, and the
operator has IPv6 nodes that implement the second option above, the
operator should consider enabling the functionality described as the
"second approach" in Section 6 of RFC6145 [RFC6145]. This
functionality changes the SIIT-DC Gateway's behaviour as follows:
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o When translating ICMPv4 Need To Fragment to ICMPv6 Packet Too Big,
the resulting packet will never contain an MTU value lower than
1280. This prevents the IPv6 nodes from generating Atomic
Fragments.
o When translating IPv6 packets smaller than or equal to 1280 bytes,
the Don't Fragment flag in the resulting IPv4 packet will be set
to 0. This ensures that in the eventuality that the path contains
an IPv4 link with an MTU smaller than 1260, the IPv4 router
connected to that link will have the responsibility to fragment
the packet before forwarding it towards its destination.
In summary, this approach could be seen as prompting the IPv4
protocol itself to provide the "link-specific fragmentation and
reassembly at a layer below IPv6" required for links that "cannot
convey a 1280-octet packet in one piece", to paraphrase Section 5 of
RFC2460 [RFC2460]. Note that
[I-D.gont-6man-deprecate-atomfrag-generation] seeks to update
[RFC6145], making the approach described above as the standard and
only mode of operation.
5. Implementation Requirements
This normative section specifies the SIIT-DC protocol that is
implemented by an SIIT-DC Gateway. Because SIIT-DC builds on and
closely resembles SIIT [RFC6145], this section should be read as a
set of additions and changes that are applied to an implementation
already compliant to SIIT [RFC6145]. Each of the following
subsections discuss how the requirement relates to with any
corresponding requirements in SIIT [RFC6145].
5.1. Compliance with RFC6145 and RFC6052
Unless otherwise stated in the following sections, an SIIT-DC
implementation MUST comply fully with [RFC6145]. It must also
implement the algorithmic address mapping defined in [RFC6052].
5.2. Static Address Mapping Function
The implementation MUST allow the operator to configure an arbitrary
number of Static Address Mappings which override the default
[RFC6052] algorithm. It SHOULD be possible to specify a single bi-
directional mapping that will be used in both the IPv4=>IPv6 and
IPv6=>IPv4 directions, but it MAY additionally (or alternatively)
support unidirectional mappings.
An example of such a bidirectional Static Address Mapping would be:
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o 192.0.2.1 <=> 2001:db8:12:34::1
To accomplish the same using unidirectional mappings, the following
two mappings must instead be configured:
o 192.0.2.1 => 2001:db8:12:34::1
o 2001:db8:12:34::1 => 192.0.2.1
In both cases, if the SIIT-DC Gateway receives an IPv6 packet that
has the value 2001:db8:12:34::1 in either the source or destination
field of the IPv6 header, it MUST rewrite this field to 192 0.2.1
when translating to IPv4. Similarly, if the SIIT-DC Gateway receives
an IPv4 packet that has the value 192.0.2.1 as the either the source
or destination field of the IPv4 header, it MUST rewrite this field
to 2001:db8:12:34::1 when translating to IPv6. For all IPv4 or IPv6
source or destination field values for which there are no matching
Static Address Mapping, [RFC6052] compliant mapping MUST be used
instead.
Relation to [RFC6145]: The Static Address Mapping is a novel feature
feature that is not discussed in [RFC6145]. It conflicts with
[RFC6145]'s requirement that all addresses must be translated
according to the [RFC6052] algorithm.
5.3. Support for Increasing the IPv6 Path MTU
The SIIT-DC Gateway MUST provide a configuration function for the
network administrator to adjust the threshold of the minimum IPv6 MTU
to a value that reflects the real value of the minimum IPv6 MTU in
the network (greater than 1280 bytes). This will help reduce the
chance of including the Fragment Header in the resulting IPv6
packets.
Relation to [RFC6145]: This strengthens the corresponding "MAY"
requirement located in Section 4 of RFC6145 [RFC6145] to a "MUST".
5.4. Loop Prevention Mechanism
As noted in Section 9.2, there is a potential for packets looping
through the SIIT-DC function if it receives an IPv4 packet for which
there is no Static Address Mapping. It is therefore RECOMMENDED that
the implementation has a mechanism that automatically prevents this
behaviour. One way this could be accomplished would be to discard
any IPv4 packets that would be translated into an IPv6 packet that
would be routed straight back into the SIIT-DC function.
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If such a mechanism isn't provided, the implementation MUST provide a
way to manually filter or null-route the destination addresses that
would otherwise cause loops.
Relation to [RFC6145]: This security consideration applies only when
an SIIT-DC Gateway translates a packet in "pure" SIIT [RFC6145] mode
(i.e., when both address fields are translated according to
[RFC6052]). This consideration is in other words not specific to
SIIT-DC, it is inherited from [RFC6145]. In spite of this, [RFC6145]
does not describe this consideration or any methods of prevention.
The requirements in this section is therefore novel to SIIT-DC, even
though they apply equally to [RFC6145].
6. Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank the following individuals for their
contributions, suggestions, corrections, and criticisms: Fred Baker,
Cameron Byrne, Brian E Carpenter, Ross Chandler, Dagfinn Ilmari
Mannsaaker, Lars Olafsen, Stig Sandbeck Mathisen, Knut A. Syed.
7. Requirements Language
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
8. IANA Considerations
This draft makes no request of the IANA. The RFC Editor may remove
this section prior to publication.
9. Security Considerations
9.1. Mistaking the Translation Prefix for a Trusted Network
If a Network-Specific Prefix from the provider's own address space is
chosen for the translation prefix, as is recommended, care must be
taken if the translation service is used in front of services that
have application-level ACLs that distinguish between the operator's
own networks and the Internet at large, as the translated IPv4 end
users on the Internet will appear to be located within the provider's
own IPv6 address space. It is therefore important that the
translation prefix is treated the same as the Internet at large,
rather than as a trusted network.
9.2. Packets Looping Through the SIIT-DC Function
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If the SIIT-DC Gateway receives an IPv4 packet destined to an address
for which there is no Static Address Mapping, its destination address
will be rewritten according to [RFC6052], making the resulting IPv6
packet have a destination address within the translation prefix,
which is likely routed to back to the SIIT-DC function. This will
cause the packet to loop until its Time To Live / Hop Limit reaches
zero, potentially creating a Denial Of Service vulnerability.
To avoid this, it should be ensured that packets sent to IPv4
destinations addresses for which there are no Static Address
Mappings, or whose resulting IPv6 address does not have a more-
specific route to the IPv6 network, are immediately discarded.
10. References
10.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC6052] Bao, C., Huitema, C., Bagnulo, M., Boucadair, M., and X.
Li, "IPv6 Addressing of IPv4/IPv6 Translators", RFC 6052,
October 2010.
[RFC6145] Li, X., Bao, C., and F. Baker, "IP/ICMP Translation
Algorithm", RFC 6145, April 2011.
10.2. Informative References
[I-D.anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat]
tore, t., "SIIT-DC: Dual Translation Mode", draft-
anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat-00 (work in progress),
September 2014.
[I-D.gont-6man-deprecate-atomfrag-generation]
Gont, F., Will, W., and t. tore, "Deprecating the
Generation of IPv6 Atomic Fragments", draft-gont-6man-
deprecate-atomfrag-generation-01 (work in progress),
August 2014.
[I-D.taylor-v6ops-fragdrop]
Jaeggli, J., Colitti, L., Kumari, W., Vyncke, E., Kaeo,
M., and T. Taylor, "Why Operators Filter Fragments and
What It Implies", draft-taylor-v6ops-fragdrop-02 (work in
progress), December 2013.
[RFC0791] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791, September
1981.
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[RFC0959] Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "File Transfer Protocol", STD
9, RFC 959, October 1985.
[RFC1918] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and
E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets", BCP
5, RFC 1918, February 1996.
[RFC1981] McCann, J., Deering, S., and J. Mogul, "Path MTU Discovery
for IP version 6", RFC 1981, August 1996.
[RFC2373] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
Architecture", RFC 2373, July 1998.
[RFC2460] Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6
(IPv6) Specification", RFC 2460, December 1998.
[RFC2616] Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J., Frystyk, H.,
Masinter, L., Leach, P., and T. Berners-Lee, "Hypertext
Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1", RFC 2616, June 1999.
[RFC2663] Srisuresh, P. and M. Holdrege, "IP Network Address
Translator (NAT) Terminology and Considerations", RFC
2663, August 1999.
[RFC2991] Thaler, D. and C. Hopps, "Multipath Issues in Unicast and
Multicast Next-Hop Selection", RFC 2991, November 2000.
[RFC2993] Hain, T., "Architectural Implications of NAT", RFC 2993,
November 2000.
[RFC3022] Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network
Address Translator (Traditional NAT)", RFC 3022, January
2001.
[RFC3235] Senie, D., "Network Address Translator (NAT)-Friendly
Application Design Guidelines", RFC 3235, January 2002.
[RFC4213] Nordmark, E. and R. Gilligan, "Basic Transition Mechanisms
for IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 4213, October 2005.
[RFC4217] Ford-Hutchinson, P., "Securing FTP with TLS", RFC 4217,
October 2005.
[RFC6146] Bagnulo, M., Matthews, P., and I. van Beijnum, "Stateful
NAT64: Network Address and Protocol Translation from IPv6
Clients to IPv4 Servers", RFC 6146, April 2011.
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[RFC6147] Bagnulo, M., Sullivan, A., Matthews, P., and I. van
Beijnum, "DNS64: DNS Extensions for Network Address
Translation from IPv6 Clients to IPv4 Servers", RFC 6147,
April 2011.
[RFC6540] George, W., Donley, C., Liljenstolpe, C., and L. Howard,
"IPv6 Support Required for All IP-Capable Nodes", BCP 177,
RFC 6540, April 2012.
[RFC6946] Gont, F., "Processing of IPv6 "Atomic" Fragments", RFC
6946, May 2013.
[RFC7269] Chen, G., Cao, Z., Xie, C., and D. Binet, "NAT64
Deployment Options and Experience", RFC 7269, June 2014.
Appendix A. Complete SIIT-DC topology example
This figure shows a more complete SIIT-DC topology, in order to
better demonstrate the beneficial properties it has. In particular,
it tries to highlight the following:
o Stateless operation: Any number of SIIT-DC Gateways may be
deployed side-by side, or indeed anywhere in the IPv6 network, as
any standard routing mechanism may be used to direct traffic to
them (shown here with BGP on the IPv4 side and ECMP on the IPv6
side). This in turn leads to high availability, should one of the
SIIT-DC Gateways fail or become unavailable, those standard
routing mechanisms will ensure that traffic is automatically
redirect one of the remaining SIIT-DC Gateways.
o IPv4 address conservation: Even though the to customers in the
example have several hundred servers, most of them are not used
for externally available services, and thus do not require an IPv4
address. The network between the servers and the SIIT-DC Gateways
require no IPv4 addresses, either. Furthermore, the IPv4
addresses that are used do not have to be assigned to customers in
the form of aggregated blocks or prefixes; which makes it easy to
achieve 100% effective utilisation of the IPv4 service address
pools.
o Application support: The translation-friendly applications HTTP
and SMTP will work through SIIT-DC without requiring any special
customisation. Furthermore, translation-unfriendly applications
such as FTP will also work if an host agent in present, cf.
[I-D.anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat].
o Native IPv6 as the foundation: Every server, application, and
network component has access to native and untranslated IPv6
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connectivity to each other and to the Internet. Traffic through
the SIIT-DC Gateways will diminish over time as IPv6 is deployed
throughout the Internet. Eventually they may be shut down
entirely, which causes no disruption to the application stacks'
ability to deliver their services over native IPv6.
Example data centre topology using SIIT-DC
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/--------------------------------\ /---------------\
| IPv4 Internet | | IPv6 Internet |
\-+----------------------------+-/ \--------+------/
| | |
| <----------[BGP]---------> | |
| | |
+---------<192.0.2.0/24>----------+ +---<192.0.2.0/24>---+ |
| | | | |
| SIIT-DC Gateway 1 | | SIIT-DC Gateway 2 | |
| ================= | | ================= | |
| | | | |
| Translation Prefix: | | | |
| 2001:db8:46::/96 | | | |
| | | | |
| Static Address Mappings: | | Exactly the same | |
| 192.0.2.1 <=> 2001:db8:12:34::1 | | configuration as | |
| 192.0.2.2 <=> 2001:db8:12:34::2 | | SIIT-DC Gateway 1 | |
| 192.0.2.3 <=> 2001:db8:fe:dc::1 | | | |
| 192.0.2.4 <=> 2001:db8:12:34::4 | | | |
| [...] | | | |
| | | | |
+--------<2001:db8:46::/96>-------+ +-<2001:db8:46::/96>-+ |
| | |
| <---------[ECMP]---------> | |
| | |
/-----------------+----------------------------+-\ |
| IPv6 data centre network +----------+
\-+-----------------------------------+----------/
| |
| Customer A's server LAN | Customer B's server LAN
| 2001:db8:12:34::/64 | 2001:db8:fe:dc::/64
| |
| |
+-- www ::1 (IPv6+SIIT-DC) +-- www ::1 (IPv6+SIIT-DC)
| |
| +-- file01 ::f:01 (IPv6)
+-- mta ::2 (IPv6+SIIT-DC) | [...]
| +-- file99 ::f:99 (IPv6)
+-- ftp ::3 (IPv6)
| ::4 (SIIT-DC/Host Agent)
|
+-- app01 ::a:01 (IPv6)
| [...]
+- app99 ::a:99 (IPv6)
|
+-- db01 ::d:01 (IPv6)
| [..]
+-- db99 ::d:99 (IPv6)
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Figure 7
Appendix B. Comparison to Other Deployment Approaches
There are a number of alternative deployment strategies a data centre
operator may follow. They each have different properties and helps
solve a different set of challenges. This section aims to compare
the SIIT-DC approach with each of the most common ones, by
highlighting the benefits and disadvantages of each.
B.1. IPv4-only
At the time of writing, IPv4-only operation remains the status quo
for most operators. As such, it is well understood and supported.
An operator can reasonably expect everything to work correctly in an
IPv4-only environment.
Benefits of IPv4-only operation compared to SIIT-DC include:
o No translation occurs, the end-to-end principle is intact.
o Compatible with all common application protocols.
o Compatible with IPv4-only devices.
o Compatible with IPv4-only application software, without requiring
a host agent.
Disadvantages of IPv4-only operation compared to SIIT-DC include:
o Does not provide any form of IPv6 connectivity.
o Does not alleviate IPv4 address scarcity.
B.2. IPv4-only + NAPT44
An operator who would otherwise chose a traditional IPv4-only
approach, but cannot due to having insufficient public IPv4 addresses
available, could chose to deploy using a combination of private IPv4
addresses [RFC1918] and NAPT44 [RFC3022] devices which will translate
between a smaller number of public IPv4 addresses and the private
addresses assigned to the servers that provide public services to the
Internet.
Benefits of IPv4-only + NAPT44 operation compared to SIIT-DC include:
o Compatible with IPv4-only devices.
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o Compatible with IPv4-only application software, without requiring
a host agent.
Disadvantages of IPv4-only + NAPT44 operation compared to SIIT-DC
include:
o Does not provide any form of IPv6 availability.
o Requires network devices that track all flow state, which may
create a performance bottleneck and be an easy target for Denial
of Service attacks.
o Limits routing flexibility (prevents closest exit routing), as
outbound traffic must pass across the same NAPT44 device that
handled the inbound traffic.
o Limited potential for horizontal scaling, as packets cannot be
load-balanced across multiple NAT devices.
o Depending on whether or not the NAPT44 device rewrites source
addresses in order to attract the return traffic to itself:
o
* Obscures the true source address of the user from the server/
application, preventing it from e.g. performing geo-location
lookups, or:
* Requires an IPv4 default route to be pointed to the NAPT44
device, also attracting native traffic that does not need to
undergo translation.
In addition, application compatibility is a consideration with both
NAPT44 and SIIT-DC, but the exact nature depends from application to
application, so it is hard to objectively quantify if there is a
clear advantage to either approach here. Some translation-unfriendly
application protocols may work without host modifications through the
use of Application Layer Gateway support in the NAPT44 device (e.g.,
FTP [RFC0959]), or in the SIIT-DC architecture when a host agent is
being used [I-D.anderson-v6ops-siit-dc-2xlat]. Other application
protocols might not work with NAPT44 at all, but will work in the
SIIT-DC if a host agent is being used (e.g., FTP/TLS [RFC4217]).
In summary, the most accurate statement would be to say that an
NAPT44 architecture is more compatible with translation-unfriendly
protocols than plain SIIT-DC, while SIIT-DC is more compatible than
NAPT44 if a host agent is used.
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For a more complete discussion of potential issues with running
NAPT44, see Architectural Implications of NAT [RFC2993].
B.3. IPv4-only + NAT64
An operator who would otherwise chose a traditional IPv4-only
approach, but would in addition like to provide service availability
for IPv6 end users, could use Stateful NAT64 [RFC6146] to accomplish
this. In a sense, this would be the mirror image of an SIIT-DC
architecture: The infrastructure and servers remains single-stacked,
while connectivity to the other IP stack is provided through a
translation system. Further information about operating Stateful
NAT64 is found in [RFC7269].
Note that Stateful NAT64 can be deployed with or without NAPT44.
With the exception that IPv6 service availability is being provided,
the discussion in the previous two sections fully applies to an
IPv4-only environment that includes NAT64.
Benefits of IPv4-only + NAT64 operation compared to SIIT-DC include:
o Compatible with IPv4-only devices.
o Compatible with IPv4-only application software, without requiring
a host agent.
Disadvantages of IPv4-only + NAT64 operation compared to SIIT-DC
include:
o Does not alleviate IPv4 address scarcity (assuming NAPT44 isn't
used).
o Requires network devices that track all flow state, which may
create a performance bottleneck and be an easy target for Denial
of Service attacks.
o Limits routing flexibility (prevents closest exit routing), as
outbound traffic must pass across the same NAT64 device that
handled the inbound traffic.
o Limited potential for horizontal scaling, as packets cannot be
load-balanced across multiple NAT devices.
o Obscures the true source address of the user from the server/
application, preventing it from e.g. performing geo-location
lookups.
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o The traffic levels on the Stateful NAT64 routers will increase
over time, in lockstep with the increased deployment of IPv6 in
the Internet. For this reason, Section 3.2 of RFC7269 [RFC7269]
notes that the use of Stateful NAT64 in a data centre environment
"is only reasonable at an early stage". With SIIT-DC, the inverse
is true; the traffic levels on the SIIT-DC Gateways will decrease
over time, as end users will prefer to use native IPv6 once it is
available to them.
B.4. Dual Stack
Dual Stack [RFC4213] could be used both with or without NAPT44 to
handle IPv4. In general, the benefits and disadvantages are equal to
the corresponding IPv4-only option, except for the fact that Dual
Stack does provides IPv6 connectivity. Therefore, his section only
lists the benefits and disadvantages which are unique to a Dual Stack
environment.
Benefits of Dual Stack operation compared to SIIT-DC include:
o No translation occurring, the end-to-end principle is intact
(assuming NAPT44 isn't used).
o Compatible with all common application protocols (assuming NAPT44
isn't used).
o Compatible with IPv4-only devices.
o Compatible with IPv4-only application software, without requiring
a host agent.
Disadvantages of Dual Stack operation compared to SIIT-DC include:
o Does not alleviate IPv4 address scarcity (assuming NAPT44 isn't
used).
o Increases the complexity of the infrastructure, as many things
must done twice (once for IPv4 and once for IPv6). Examples of
things that must be duplicated in this manner under Dual Stack
include: Firewall rules/ACLs, IGP topology, monitoring,
troubleshooting.
o Encourages software developers, systems administrators, etc. to
build architectures that cannot operate correctly without IPv4.
This in turn makes it difficult to make use of Dual Stack as a
short term transitional stage, rather than a near-permanent end
state.
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Internet-Draft SIIT-DC October 2014
o Increases the amount of things that can encounter failures, and
increases the time required to locate and fix such failures. This
reduces reliability.
Author's Address
Tore Anderson
Redpill Linpro
Vitaminveien 1A
0485 Oslo
NORWAY
Phone: +47 959 31 212
Email: tore@redpill-linpro.com
Anderson Expires April 08, 2015 [Page 30]