CS221: IPv6 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

CS221: IPv6

Description:

The Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) : Evolution or Revolution ? Christophe Jelger Post-doctoral researcher Christophe.Jelger_at_unibas.ch – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:149
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: Christo523
Category:
Tags: ipv6 | cs221 | header | ipv6

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CS221: IPv6


1
The Internet Protocolversion 6 (IPv6)
Evolution or Revolution ?
Christophe Jelger Post-doctoral
researcher Christophe.Jelger_at_unibas.ch
2
Plan
  • Motivations behind IPv6
  • IP is History
  • Lack of IPv4 addresses ?
  • Growth of routing tables
  • Unfairness in IPv4 address allocation
  • Required features of IPng
  • So what's new in IPv6 ?
  • Address format and scoped addresses
  • IPv6 header vs. IPv4 header
  • New features autoconfiguration, improved
    mobility support

3
Plan
  • Address allocation with IPv6
  • Hierarchical routing everywhere
  • Today's IPv6 world
  • Where are we today ?
  • Current status of IPv6
  • From IPv4 to IPv6

4
Motivationsbehind IPv6
When the main issues are not related to end users

Where are We today ?
Motivations Behind IPv6
So what's New in IPv6 ?
Address Allocation With IPv6
5
IP is History and the Internet is growing
  • The current version (4) of the IP protocol is 30
    years old
  • IP is everywhere it has become the de facto
    standard
  • The Internet is growing
  • 1973 research network (100 machines)
  • Mid-80s early adoption and first address
    allocations
  • 1992 First commercial applications and start of
    the Web
  • 1993 first address crisis CIDR introduced
  • no more addresses by 1994 !
  • Exponential growth
  • 2002 600 million Internet users

6
Lack of IPv4 addresses ?
  • A very hot topic
  • Address exhaustion was predicted many times
  • Current estimates 5 to 20 years to go
  • 2011-2012 IANA unallocated address space is
    assigned
  • 2026 exhaustion of the RIRs' address spaces
  • Drawback is that getting addresses becomes very
    difficult
  • Address allocation is strongly unfair
  • IPv4
  • Address length is 32 bits theoretically, that
    is 4.5 billion addresses
  • But addressing is not so simple
  • Allocation is network-based

7
Lack of IPv4 addresses ?
  • Class-based address architecture

Network id
Host id
32 bits
Class A network 127 networks each with 16,777,216
hosts
8 bits
24 bits
Class B network 16,128 networks each with 65,536
hosts
16 bits
16 bits
Class C network 2,031,616 networks each with 256
hosts
8 bits
24 bits
1993 no Class B networks available !
Class-less Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR) introduced
8
Lack of IPv4 addresses ?
  • CIDR
  • Allows network-id of any length (e.g. /13, /26)
  • E.g. /18 16384 hosts and /19 8192 hosts
  • Aggregation and hierarchical routing
  • An ISP get a /15 address space and it
    redistributes sub-parts of it, e.g. 512 /24
    networks
  • Routing to all the ISP's clients is done via the
    /15
  • Also adddress allocation became more strict

9
Lack of IPv4 addresses ?
  • CIDR solved the problem until when ?
  • Around 41 /8 are still available (78 in November
    2004)
  • At the current pace, 5 /8 (100M addresses !) are
    used every year, but this rate is growing as
    emerging countries are hungry in addresses
    (China, India, African countries)
  • Address allocation is becoming a nightmare
  • We must move ahead before it's too late
  • Still a big waste of address space
  • UniBasel 8500 active machines but a /16 network
    (65,536 hosts)
  • Non-ISP entities still have a /8 address space
    (IBM, HP, Xerox, Apple, MIT, Ford, Lily,
    Halliburton)
  • BUT the problem is not only the lack of addresses

10
Growth of routing tables
  • In the core part of the Internet, routers do not
    have a default route this is the Default-Free
    Zone (DFZ)
  • In 2000, the size of routing tables in the DFZ is
    around 75,000 entries
  • In 2001, it is around 100,000
  • In December 2004, this value is between 150,000
    and 180,000
  • In April 2007, this value reaches 300,000 for
    some ASs !
  • In April 2008, about 255,000 prefixes for AS2.0
    (APNIC RD).
  • Routing updates are getting slower
  • Operational maintenance becomes more and more
    complex

11
Growth of routing tables
  • Main cause aggregation is not sufficient
  • The top 30 operators could reduce their
    announcements by 64.1 with proper aggregation
    (68 in 2007, 67 in 2006, 60 in 2005)
  • The DFZ size could be reduced by 35.9 with
    aggregation for all ASs (50 in 2007, 34 in
    2006, 30 in 2005)
  • Aggregation alone cannot significantly reduce the
    size of the DFZ A complete address re-allocation
    should be made
  • 131.152.0.0/16 UniBasel 131.153.0.0/16
    Sematech, TX
  • THIS IS IMPOSSIBLE !
  • Except if a new addressing scheme is used IPv6 !

12
Unfairness in address allocation
  • Historically, addresses have been assigned on a
    first-come first-serve basis
  • But today, addresses are assigned in a very
    strict way
  • Some countries fail to obtain sufficient
    addresses
  • When others have far too many addresses
  • United States 4.2 addresses / inhabitant (9.4
    per Internet user)
  • Switzerland 1.4 addresses / inhabitant (4 per
    Internet user)
  • France 0.6 addresses / inhabitant (3.4 per
    Internet user)
  • China 0.02 addresses / inhabitant (0.54 per
    Internet user)
  • India 0.003 addresses / inhabitant (0.38 per
    Internet user)
  • Senegal 8.192 addresses (10M inhabitants)
  • Mali 4.096 addresses (13 M inhabitants)
  • Congo 0 addresses (52 M inhabitants)

13
Required features of IPng (next generation)
  • RFC-1380 from IESG (Internet Engineering
    Steering Group)
  • IPng must be capable of addressing 1012 networks
  • Transition to IPng must be done without the need
    of a D-day
  • IPng must be easily extended with new features
  • Deployment features
  • Hierchical routing MUST be the norm
  • Getting an address space must be straightforward
  • Autoconfiguration

14
So what's new in IPv6 ?
Myths and reality
Where are We today ?
Motivations Behind IPv6
So what's New in IPv6 ?
Address Allocation With IPv6
15
Address format and scoped addresses (RFC 3513)
  • 128 bits (16 octets)
  • That is potentially 3.4 x 1038 addresses
  • And 1.8 x 1019 /64 networks !
  • 64-64 is the norm a /64 network can accommodate
    any number of devices !
  • Notation
  • IPv4 131.152.230.33/16
  • IPv6 20016202001200e2fffe9c2282/64
  • 200162020010001 ? 200162020011
  • New DNS record AAAA (A for IPv4)

16
Address format and scoped addresses
  • Scoped addresses
  • Link-local addresses prefix fe80/64
  • Site-local (deprecated) prefix fec0/64
  • Unique local (address scope is global but routing
    is restricted to a site) prefix fc00/7 (but
    /64 when deployed)
  • Multicast ff00/8
  • Link-scope ff02/16
  • Site-scope ff05/16
  • Global-scope ff0e/16
  • Well-known addresses no layer-3 broadcast any
    more
  • ff021 all nodes on link, ff022 all routers on
    link
  • ff0216 all MLDv2 multicast routers
  • Special addresses
  • Loopback 00000001 or 1
  • Unspecified 00000000 or

17
IPv6 header vs. IPv4 header (RFC 2460)
20 bytes (without option)
40 bytes
18
IPv6 header vs. IPv4 header
  • Header format is simplified
  • Optional headers are daisy-chained
  • No checksum at IP layer (it's done by other
    layers)
  • No re-computation by each router
  • No hop-by-hop segmentation
  • Path MTU discovery
  • 64 bits aligned
  • ARP (address Resolution Protocol) is replaced by
    Neighbor Discovery at the ICMP6 layer

19
IPv6 header vs. IPv4 header
  • Optional headers
  • Hop-by-Hop header information that must be
    processed by all intermediate hops
  • Used by ICMP6 (MLD, Multicast Listener Discovery)
  • Routing header the source node can specify one
    or multiple intermediate hops via which the
    packet must travel (source-routing)
  • Used by Mobile IPv6
  • Fragment header to send a packet which has a
    size gt MTU
  • Destination option to carry additional
    information that must be processed by the
    destination
  • Used by Mobile IPv6

20
New features
  • Stateless Address Autoconfiguration (RFC 2462)

MAC 000785927FF8
IPv6 router
Prefix EUI-64 (universal bit)
IPv6 prefix
20016604701f00220785fffe927ff8/64
20016604701f002/64
also internally done for fe8020785fffe927ff8/
64
21
New features ICMPv6
  • Neighbor Discovery (RFC 2461)
  • Main feature is the replacement of ARP

IPv6 fe8020785fffe927ff8/64 MAC
000785927FF8 3333ff927ff8
IPv6 fe8020b5dfffe589eec/64 MAC
000B5D589EEC
Neighbor sollicitation
Neighbor advertisement
Eth dst addr 3333ff927ff8 (multicast MAC
address) IPv6 dst addr ff021ff927ff8
(sollicited multicast address) Target
fe8020785fffe927ff8
22
New features
  • Stateless Address Autoconfiguration
  • Duplicate Address Detection (DAD)
  • Security issues and DNS dynamic updates are
    currently being investigated by IETF.
  • Who's behind which machine ? (URZ)
  • Improved support for
  • Mobility (Mobile IPv6)
  • Security (IPSec) is integrated
  • Multicast deployment through RP-embedded
    addresses
  • Myths IPv6 does NOT provide
  • Any QoS features
  • Any kind of improved performance

23
Address Allocationwith IPv6
Where the BIG difference is
Where are We today ?
Motivations Behind IPv6
So what's New in IPv6 ?
Address Allocation With IPv6
24
AGUA (Aggregatable Global Unicast Addresses)
Host
Site
Provider
64 bits
16 bits
45 bits
3 bits 001
SLA
Global Routing Prefix
Host ID
  • Current allocation scheme
  • IANA has decided to start with 2001/16
  • IANA allocates /23 to registries
  • RIPE (Europe) 2001600/23
  • ARIN (North America) 2001400/23
  • APNIC (Asia) 2001200/23
  • Registries allocate /32 to ISP
  • SWITCH 2001620/32
  • RENATER 2001660/32

25
Allocation Scheme
  • ISP allocate /48 or /64 to customers
  • UniBasel 2001620200/48
  • UniStrasbourg 20016604701/48
  • /64s are for end users (via ADSL or cable)
  • Hierarchical routing IS the norm
  • With IPv4, SWITCH announces 94 prefixes (could be
    reduced to 91) which CANNOT be aggregated !
  • With IPv6, SWITCH announces one prefix !
    (2001620/32)
  • Current DFZ size is around 1100, 850 in 2007
    (250,000-300,000 for IPv4!)
  • Proper aggregation could reduce this by 5.8 (4
    in 2007).
  • Max DFZ until re-allocation is 4096

26
Today's IPv6 world
  • Only 0.0008 of the entire IPv6 address space is
    used ! (i.e. the equivalent of about 160,000
    billion /64 networks !)
  • In 2007, 0.0008 and 152,000 billion /64s
  • In 2006 0.0007 and 130,000 billion /64s
  • In 2005 0.0005 and 90,000 billion /64s
  • IPv6 ready-networks WIDE, Geant (european
    academic network), Internet2 (US academic
    network), AOL, Swisscom, NASA, FT, BT etc
  • Deployment in end-sites is slow
  • IPv6 is not a revolution not much added value
    for end-users
  • Developed countries have plenty of IPv4 addresses
  • Still, IPv6 will eventually replace IPv4 it's a
    matter of time !

27
Where are we today ?
Status of IPv6 specifications
Where are We today ?
Motivations Behind IPv6
So what's New in IPv6 ?
Address Allocation With IPv6
28
IPv6 status
  • Most part of the protocol is specified and has
    proved to work well (around 10 years of
    experimentation)
  • Areas that are currently considered
  • Default router selection and specific routes
    (multi-homing)
  • Load sharing
  • Privacy extensions for address autoconfiguration
  • Secure DNS update and secure autoconfiguration
  • Most systems are IPv6-ready
  • BSD, Linux, Windows 2000 and XP
  • Cisco, Juniper, and 6Wind routers
  • Most applications are also IPv6-ready

29
From IPv4 to IPv6
  • Transition is difficult
  • End-users and end-sites do not feel concerned
  • There is no killer application for IPv6
  • Many transitioning tools available
  • Dual-stack
  • Tunneling techniques 6to4, ISATAP
  • Translation tools NAT-PT, DSTM
  • Sooner or later IPv6 will prevail
  • In networks with IPv4 addresses dual-stack is
    best
  • In native IPv6 networks, tunneling or translation
    is needed to reach IPv4 world

30
Thank you
Questions ?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com