nanog mailing list archives

Re: How long will it take to completely get rid of IPv4 or will it happen at all?


From: Owen DeLong <owen () delong com>
Date: Sun, 28 Jun 2015 08:02:52 -0700


On Jun 27, 2015, at 11:48 , manning <bmanning () karoshi com> wrote:

Quite a few folks actually.  (the 802.5 & 802.4 specs)….
This is kind of like asking when we will stop using ethernet framing (ethernet was designed for a 3Mbps transmission 
rate)
yet we are deploying 100Gbps networks.  Still stuck on that 1500byte limitation.  When can we get rid of that?

Many networks have… It’s called “Jumbo Frames”

Owen



manning
bmanning () karoshi com
PO Box 12317
Marina del Rey, CA 90295
310.322.8102



On 27June2015Saturday, at 9:49, Bacon Zombie <baconzombie () gmail com> wrote:

Is anybody still using IPX or TokenRing?

I've heard that TokenRing is over 9000 times better for iSCSI since you are
guaranteed that the packets will not get collisions.
On 27 Jun 2015 18:39, "Fredy Kuenzler" <kuenzler () init7 net> wrote:

Am 27.06.2015 um 16:38 schrieb Bob Evans:
We have a greater supply for packets to travel than we do for
addresses required to move packets. Do you know how many packets a
single IP address can generate or utilize, if it was attached too
"The World's Fastest Internet" in someplace like Canadaland or Sweden
on init7's Fiber7 ?

Thanks for mentioning Fiber7, which is actually available in
Switzerland, not Sweden. And every Fiber7 customer gets a /48, too.

--
Fredy Kuenzler

---------------------
Fiber7. No Limits.
https://www.fiber7.ch
---------------------

Init7 (Switzerland) Ltd.
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CH-8400 Winterthur
Skype:   flyingpotato
Phone:   +41 44 315 4400
Fax:     +41 44 315 4401
Twitter: @init7 / @kuenzler
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