> One can do that with or without NAT. This claim that one cannot > keep a network running without a service provider connected if you > don't run NAT is a myth of dubious origin.
If the hosts are running DHCP, and the ISP is running the DHCP server? I guess they will fall back (after a while) to link-local and continue on their merry way. > > can accomplish this pretty easily, because the IPv4 addresses in > > the home can be any IPv4 address whatsoever -- which allows the > > in-home CPE ("B4", in Dual Stack-Lite parlance) to assign any address > > it wants with its built-in DHCP server.) > > > > There are other ways to accomplish this as well. -d > > -d > > > >> and less technically but relevant I think is to ask about cost? who > >> pays? > > In some cases, ISPs will provide new CPE to their end users. In other > cases, > end-users will be expected to pay to upgrade their own. > > Owen > > >> > >> > >> Christian > >> > >> On 8 Sep 2011, at 15:02, Cameron Byrne wrote: > >> > >>> On Sep 8, 2011 1:47 AM, "Leigh Porter" > <leigh.por...@ukbroadband.com> > >> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>> -----Original Message----- > >>>>> From: Owen DeLong [mailto:o...@delong.com] > >>>>> Sent: 08 September 2011 01:22 > >>>>> To: Leigh Porter > >>>>> Cc: Seth Mos; NANOG > >>>>> Subject: Re: NAT444 or ? > >>>>> > >>>>>> Considering that offices, schools etc regularly have far more > than > >> 10 > >>>>> users per IP, I think this limit is a little low. I've happily > had > >>>>> around 300 per public IP address on a large WiFi network, granted > >> these > >>>>> are all different kinds of users, it is just something that > >> operational > >>>>> experience will have to demonstrate. > >>>>>> > >>>>> Yes, but, you are counting individual users whereas at the NAT444 > >>>>> level, what's really being counted is end-customer sites not > >> individual > >>>>> users, so the term > >>>>> "users" is a bit misleading in the context. A given end-customer > >> site > >>>>> may be from 1 to 50 or more individual users. > >>>> > >>>> Indeed, my users are using LTE dongles mostly so I expect they > will > >> be > >>> single users. At the moment on the WiMAX network I see around 35 > >> sessions > >>> from a WiMAX modem on average rising to about 50 at peak times. > These > >> are a > >>> combination of individual users and "home modems". > >>>> > >>>> We had some older modems that had integrated NAT that was broken > and > >>> locked up the modem at 200 sessions. Then some old base station > >> software > >>> died at about 10K sessions. So we monitor these things now.. > >>>> > >>>> > >>>>> > >>>>>> I would love to avoid NAT444, I do not see a viable way around > it > >> at > >>>>> the moment. Unless the Department of Work and Pensions release > >> their /8 > >>>>> that is ;-) > >>>>>> > >>>>> > >>>>> The best mitigation really is to get IPv6 deployed as rapidly and > >>>>> widely as possible. The more stuff can go native IPv6, the less > >> depends > >>>>> on fragile NAT444. > >>>> > >>>> Absolutely. Even things like google maps, if that can be dumped on > >> v6, > >>> it'll save a load of sessions from people. The sooner services such > >> as > >>> Microsoft Update turn on v6 the better as well. I would also like > the > >> CDNs > >>> to be able to deliver content in v6 (even if the main page is v4) > >> which > >>> again will reduce the traffic that has to traverse any NAT. > >>>> > >>>> Soon, I think content providers (and providers of other services > on > >> the > >>> 'net) will roll v6 because of the performance increase as v6 will > not > >> have > >>> to traverse all this NAT and be subject to session limits, timeouts > >> and > >>> such. > >>>> > >>> > >>> What do you mean by performance increase? If performance equals > >> latency, v4 > >>> will win for a long while still. Cgn does not add measurable > latency. > >>> > >>> Cb > >>>> -- > >>>> Leigh > >>>> > >>>> > >>>> > >> > ______________________________________________________________________ > >>>> This email has been scanned by the MessageLabs Email Security > >> System. > >>>> For more information please visit http://www.messagelabs.com/email > >>>> > >> > ______________________________________________________________________ > >>>> > > > >