> 
> This sounds a lot like most peoples ipv6 rationale as well.
> 
> 
> I'm still feeling some scars from last time Ecn was enabled in my
> hosts. Many firewalls would eat packets with. Ecn enabled.


That was, I believe, nearly 10 years ago, was it not?  

There has been considerable testing with ECN with the bufferbloat folks and I 
have done some myself and haven't noticed anyone blocking ECN lately.  There 
might still be a few corner cases out there still, but none that I have 
noticed.  What you will find, according to what I have read by others doing 
testing is that some networks will clobber the ECN bits (reset them) but pass 
the traffic.  These days at worst you would not be able to negotiate ECN but 
the traffic wouldn't be blocked.  Anyone clearing the entire DSCP byte on 
traffic entering their network, for example, would clobber ECN but not block 
the traffic.

The key thing here would be to have people NOT clear ECN bits on traffic 
flowing through their network to allow it to be negotiated end to end by the 
hosts involved in the transaction.



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