IPv4 as a Service such as 464XLAT, will allow them to use less IPv4 public 
addresses than CGNAT, less costly equipment (or open source) and still provide 
dual-stack inside the customers networks.

 

There is nothing from Internet that will not work. I’ve many deployments based 
on this, and this is the transition mechanism that have more millions of 
customers, even if compared with all the others together.

 

Regards,

Jordi

@jordipalet

 

 

 

El 19/2/21 21:15, "NANOG en nombre de Tony Wicks" 
<nanog-bounces+jordi.palet=consulintel...@nanog.org en nombre de 
t...@wicks.co.nz> escribió:

 

Because then a large part of the Internet won't work....

 

From: NANOG <nanog-bounces+tony=wicks.co...@nanog.org> on behalf of Mark 
Andrews <ma...@isc.org>
Sent: Saturday, 20 February 2021, 9:04 am
To: Steve Saner
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: CGNAT


Why not go whole hog and provide IPv4 as a service? That way you are not 
waiting for your customers to turn up IPv6 to take the load off your NAT box.

 

Yes, you can do it dual stack but you have waited so long you may as well miss 
that step along the deployment path.

-- 

Mark Andrews




On 20 Feb 2021, at 01:55, Steve Saner <ssa...@ideatek.com> wrote:



We are starting to look at CGNAT solutions. The primary motivation at the 
moment is to extend current IPv4 resources, but IPv6 migration is also a factor.

 

We've been in touch with A10. Just wondering if there are some alternative 
vendors that anyone would recommend. We'd probably be looking at a solution to 
support 5k to 15k customers and bandwidth up to around 30-40 gig as a starting 
point. A solution that is as transparent to user experience as possible is a 
priority.

 

Thanks


-- 

Steve Saner

ideatek HUMAN AT OUR VERY FIBER

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