nanog mailing list archives
Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6
From: Mel Beckman <mel () beckman org>
Date: Fri, 10 Jul 2015 22:08:15 +0000
There is most certainly a cost to IPv6, especially in a large, complex deployment, where everything requires acceptance testing. And I'm sure you realize that IPv6 only is not an option. I agree that it would have been worth the cost, which would have been just a small fraction of the total. The powers that be chose not to incur it now. But we did deploy only IPv6 gear and systems, so it can probably be turned up later for that same incremental cost. -mel via cell
On Jul 10, 2015, at 3:03 PM, Mark Andrews <marka () isc org> wrote: In message <A24F7CF2-0CD8-4EBA-A211-07BC36988A87 () beckman org>, Mel Beckman writ es:Limited municipal budgets is all I can say. IPv6 has a cost, and if they can put it off till later then that's often good politics. -mel via cellIPv4 has a cost as well. May as well just go IPv6-only from day one and not pay the IPv4 tax at all. The cost difference between providing IPv6 + IPv4 or just IPv4 from day 1 should be zero. There should be no re-tooling. You just select products that support both initially. It's not like products that support both are more expensive all other things being equal. MarkOn Jul 10, 2015, at 2:42 PM, Mark Andrews <marka () isc org> wrote: In message<CAL9jLabA5nO6YQ99CRhDgRTHTSB0VgP3GDNeu-VU2-4R_1_pLQ () mail gmail com>, Christopher Morrow writes:On Thu, Jul 9, 2015 at 11:04 AM, Mel Beckman <mel () beckman org> wrote: I working on a large airport WiFi deployment right now. IPv6 is"allowed =for in the future" but not configured in the short term. With lessthan 10,=000 ephemeral users, we don't expect users to demand IPv6 until mostmobile=devices and apps come ready to use IPv6 by default. 'we don't expect users to demand ipv6' aside from #nanog folks, who 'demands' ipv6? Don't they actually 'demand' "access to content on the internet" ? Since you seem to have a greenfield deployment, why NOT just put v6 in place on day0? retrofitting it is surely going to cost time/materials and probably upgrades to gear that could be avoided by doing it in the initial installation, right?+1 and you will most probably see about 50% of the traffic being IPv6 if you do so. There is lots of IPv6 capable equipment out there justwaitingto see a RA. Mark -- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: marka () isc org-- Mark Andrews, ISC 1 Seymour St., Dundas Valley, NSW 2117, Australia PHONE: +61 2 9871 4742 INTERNET: marka () isc org
Current thread:
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6, (continued)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Oliver O'Boyle (Jul 09)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Alan Buxey (Jul 09)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Oliver O'Boyle (Jul 09)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Alan Buxey (Jul 10)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Marcin Cieslak (Jul 09)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Mark Andrews (Jul 10)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Mel Beckman (Jul 10)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Mark Andrews (Jul 10)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Mel Beckman (Jul 10)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Mark Andrews (Jul 10)
- Re: Hotels/Airports with IPv6 Mel Beckman (Jul 10)