In message <20090205030522.13d152b2...@mx5.roble.com>, Roger Marquis writes: > Mark Andrews wrote: > > All IPv6 address assignments are leases. Whether you get > > the address from a RIR, LIR or ISP. The lease may not be > > renewed when it next falls due. You may get assigned a > > different set of addresses at that point. You should plan > > accordingly. > > Exactly the problem, and the reason A) IPv6 is not and will not be a viable > option any time soon (soon being before the publication of an IPv6 NAT > RFC), and B) why network providers (and other parties who stand to gain > financially) are firmly against IPv6 NAT. > > > If we could get a true accounting of the extra cost imposed > > by NAT's I would say it would be in the trillions of dollars. > > This is exactly the sort of hyperbole, like RFC4864's proposing that > application-layer proxies are a viable substitute for NAT, that discredits > IPv6 proponents. Those who remember the financial industry's push for SET, > a failed encryption technology, will be struck by the similarities in > technical vs rhetorical arguments. > > Perhaps what we need is an IPv6 NAT FAQ? I'm suspect many junior network > engineers will be interested in the rational behind statements like: > > * NAT disadvantage #1: it costs a lot of money to do NAT (compared to what > it saves consumers, ILECs, or ISPs?)
> * NAT disadvantage #2 (re: your IPv6 address space) Owned by an ISP? It > isn't much different than it is now. (say again?) > > * NAT disadvantage #3: RFC1918 was created because people were afraid of > running out of addresses. (in 1992?) > > * NAT disadvantage #4: It requires more renumbering to join conflicting > RFC1918 subnets than would IPv6 to change ISPs. (got stats?) > > * NAT disadvantage #5: it provides no real security. (even if it were true > this could not, logically, be a disadvantage) > > OTOH, the claimed advantages of NAT do seem to hold water somewhat better: > > * NAT advantage #1: it protects consumers from vendor (network provider) > lock-in. Nope. > * NAT advantage #2: it protects consumers from add-on fees for addresses > space. (ISPs and ARIN, APNIC, ...) Only until the consumers get wind of any rip-off pricing. RIR's are charging ISP's about the same for a IPv6 /48 as they do the a IPv4 address. > * NAT advantage #3: it prevents upstreams from limiting consumers' > internal address space. (will anyone need more than a /48, to be asked in > 2018) We already know some will need more than a /48. /48 was only ever described as meeting the requirements of *most* business and consumers. > * NAT advantage #4: it requires new (and old) protocols to adhere to the > ISO seven layer model. Given were are running IP that is fiticious. > * NAT advantage #5: it does not require replacement security measures to > protect against netscans, portscans, broadcasts (particularly microsoft > netbios), and other malicious inbound traffic. What replacement? You just buy a IPv6 router with a firewall. It will be about the same cost as a IPv4 router with a NAT. > IMHO, > Roger Marquis > -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: mark_andr...@isc.org