Добро пожаловать, Гость. Пожалуйста авторизуйтесь здесь.
FGHIGate на GaNJa NeTWoRK ST@Ti0N - Просмотр сообщения в эхоконференции IPV6
Введите FGHI ссылку:


Присутствуют сообщения из эхоконференции IPV6 с датами от 31 Jul 11 14:37:00 до 03 Oct 24 21:46:09, всего сообщений: 7440
Ответить на сообщение К списку сообщений Предыдущее сообщение Следующее сообщение
= Сообщение: 3995 из 7440 ============================================= IPV6 =
От   : Michiel van der Vlist            2:280/5555         01 Jan 17 11:19:43
Кому : All                                                 01 Jan 17 11:19:43
Тема : IPv6 in 2016
FGHI : area://IPV6?msgid=2:280/5555+5868d7bf
= Кодировка сообщения определена как: UTF-8 ==================================
==============================================================================

                IPv6 in 2016
                By Michiel van der Vlist, 2:280/5555


Another year has passed. When we compare the statistics as published
by the end of 2015 with those of today, we see that IPv6 in Fidonet
has grown again. From 39 to 51 nodes.


  50 -|                                         .
      |
     -|
      |
  40 _|  N                                .
      |
     _|
      |
  30 _|
      |
     _|                             .
      |
  20 _|
      |
     _|
      |
  10 _|                       .
      |
     _|                 .
      |           .
   0 _|________.__________________________________
      |     |     |     |     |     |     |     |
     2010  2011  2012  2013  2014  2015  2016  2017


The exponential growth in the previous five years however did not
continue. Until the end of 2015, the number almost doubled every
year. In 2016 we had a mere net increase of 12 nodes. I say "net"
because in 2016, not only did we see new IPv6 nodes, we also saw
nodes disappear from the list. Three stopped supporting IPv6, two
left Fidonet altogether.

Another trend we see continue is the move towards native IPv6. In last
year's list we saw 18 nodes with native IPv6 and 21 nodes that used a
tunnel. In today's list we see 33 nodes with native IPv6 and 18 using
a tunnel. Raising the precentge from 46% to 64%.

I myself was one of the lucky ones that upgraded to native IPv6. My ISP
said that they would roll out IPv6 by the end of the year. They have
been saying that for at least five years and nothing happened, but now
they finally seem to get moving. To get it though, I had to find the
one and only model of CPE that they presently support in combination
with IPv6. Their Native IPv6  support is still not official, so it
could be gone again tomorrow. I have not cancelled my tunnel accounts
with SixXs and he.net yet.

As for SixXs, they show signs of fatigue. In April 2016 they stopped
honouring requests for new accounts and for existing accounts they
stopped honouring requests for new tunnels and subnetss. It does not
look like this is a temporary thing. Their explanation is that it is
time that ISPs start providing native IPv6 for their customers instead
of letting tunnel providers do it for them. I can't argue with that,
but it does leave those depending on their tunnels in the cold. I would
not be surprised if they close down altogether in the not too distant
future. They say there are no plans for complete shutdown yet, but
another writing on the wall is that they refuse to move existing
tunnels tot another POP, when a POP closes down. Thereby effectively
closing that tunnel. The main driving force, Jeroen Massar, shows signs
of getting tired of the project. He is a bit of a personality that has
antagonised many people. But let's not be too hard on him. He provided
a valuable - and free - service for almost 15 years.

The other major tunnel provider - he.net - does not show ant signs of
preparing to close shop yet. But since nothing lasts forever, their
free services won't last forever either. Not only do they provide
free tunnels, they also provide an interesting education programme.
If you succesfully complete all the stages of their course you are
awarded the rank of "sage" and get a free T-shirt to show off. I got
mine on the 2nd of July. On my birthday. If I am not mistaken, there
are three other sysops on the Fidonet IPv6 list that have the T-shirt.

http://www.vlist.eu/fotos/sage-f.jpg
http://www.vlist.eu/fotos/sage-b.jpg


What we did not see in 2016 is the coming of nodes that no longer have
a public IPv4 address. Many providers, mostly in Europe and Australasia
are switching to DS-lite. Even in my onw country, The Netherlands, my
own ISP, Ziggo, is now putting new customers on DS-Lite in the area
serviced by the company they recently merged with and that was formerly
known as UPC. DS-Lite means that customers get a public routable IPv6
prefix, but for IPv4 they will have to make do with an address or
adresses in the RFC-1918 or RFC-6598 range. Customers not running
servers will not be affected very much, but the unability to run
servers from behind a CGNAT will definitely affect Fidonet. There is
little doubt we will see that happen in the future. Maybe not in 2017,
but surely in the years to come.


Happy IPv6 in 2017.


--- Fmail, Binkd, Golded
* Origin: he.net certified sage (2:280/5555)

К главной странице гейта
Powered by NoSFeRaTU`s FGHIGate
Открытие страницы: 0.050101 секунды