This is what I’m proposing. May be I miss explained it.

NOT asking EVERY device in our network to HAVE 464XLAT client (CLAT), but 
having ONLY our “CPE” to have it.

Nodes will not notice anything.

This is what is going to happen in the future in most of the networks because 
they will not have IPv4 for every customer, so why not trying it ourselves? 
Already happening in many cellular networks, like in US, which are close to 
have 60% IPv6 traffic already.

Saludos,
Jordi


-----Mensaje original-----
De: sunset4 <[email protected]> en nombre de Philip Homburg 
<[email protected]>
Responder a: <[email protected]>
Fecha: viernes, 7 de octubre de 2016, 12:04
Para: <[email protected]>
CC: "Bjoern A. Zeeb" <[email protected]>
Asunto: Re: [sunset4] Sunset4 work

    In your letter dated Thu, 06 Oct 2016 23:28:32 +0000 you wrote:
    > Nastygram.  So make the default IETF SSIDs IPv6-only or (+NAT64)
    > if you want.  Then have the ietf-legacy network, which would give
    > you IPv4 and a portal page penalty that you have to state the nature
    > why you have to use this network and cant live on the default one.
    > Id be so curious to see what happens when people finally have to
    > start thinking about it.. and open internal tickets ..  It was
    > great fun doing it 6-ish years ago, ..
    
    Personally, I consider offering NAT64 over wifi quite absurd. The obvious
    way to provide access to legacy IPv4 is some form of NAT4. How it is 
    transported over the rest of the network is upto the network operator. But
    the obvious interface is RFC 894.
    
    So on networks that promote NAT64 (FOSDEM has this setup for quite a number 
of
    years now) I just connect to the legacy network. Their legacy network has
    perfectly fine IPv6, so I consider it way better than the NAT64 that
    'everybody' likes to push.
    
    For the specific mobile weirdness, NAT64 make sense. But everywhere else,
    requiring every device to have 464xlat to deal with IPv4 literals is just
    bad engineering. If your backbone is IPv6-only, then the obvious solution
    is to deal with this in CPEs, wifi access points, etc. Not to require all
    hosts to know the details of your network.
    
    
    _______________________________________________
    sunset4 mailing list
    [email protected]
    https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/sunset4
    
    



**********************************************
IPv4 is over
Are you ready for the new Internet ?
http://www.consulintel.es
The IPv6 Company

This electronic message contains information which may be privileged or 
confidential. The information is intended to be for the use of the 
individual(s) named above. If you are not the intended recipient be aware that 
any disclosure, copying, distribution or use of the contents of this 
information, including attached files, is prohibited.



_______________________________________________
sunset4 mailing list
[email protected]
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/sunset4

Reply via email to