This is part of one of the many reasons corporate acceptance of IPv6 is so low. The IPv6 design appears to be oriented toward residential, ISP, and public wifi usages, with little care to corporate needs. Not only is static IPs desired, but in many cases required by regulation (Auditing, access, etc...). Things like DHCPv6 not supporting DNS server announcements is a good example (it's available recently, but not across all platforms). Private address may be a great thing for residential / public wifi, etc... but must be disabled in many, if not all, corporate environments.
Also, we have found that many software vendors certify their products for IPv6, but as soon as the PR release is done, their devs no longer test with IPv6 and their tech support almost always recommend disabling it the first time you open a ticket. -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Nick Hilliard Sent: Friday, October 25, 2019 11:10 AM To: Michael Sturtz <[email protected]> Cc: [email protected]; Gert Doering <[email protected]>; Fernando Gont <[email protected]> Subject: Re: ipv6-ops Digest, Vol 159, Issue 1 Michael Sturtz wrote on 25/10/2019 16:03: > This sort of operational nonsense will limit the wider acceptance of > IPv6! I am responsible research and for the documentation and > implementation of IPv6 for a Fortune 200 company. We have locations > worldwide. The allocation of unstable end network addresses > complicates the deployment and support of IPv6. most service providers view this as a commercial issue rather than a protocol issue. This is just an observation, btw. Nick
