nanog mailing list archives

Re: BOOTP & ARP history


From: James R Cutler <james.cutler () consultant com>
Date: Sat, 19 Mar 2022 16:44:39 -0400

On Mar 19, 2022, at 2:49 PM, Michael Thomas <mike () mtcc com> wrote:

IPv6 in comparison was very familiar ground. To me it seemed that it was ipv4 with bigger addresses and that was 
about it. But I've never understood all of the strum und drang about ipv6.

As one tightly involved in multiprotocol networking in the '90s, I viewed with interest the evolution of IPv6. Nothing 
about IPv6 changed fundamental physical network design principals, except to remove IPv4 limits on the number of 
subnetworks. Oh, and the removal of coordinated RFC1918 addressing between members of the ever active merger and 
acquisition world. Life became much rosier. One could concievably deploy a plant floor with a million IPv6 globally 
unique device address without kludges required by IPv4.

I never ran into Sturm und Drang about IPv6 itself, only about the required investment in people and hardware, which I 
considered a short term bump with a long term payoff.

That, I discovered, was the true barrier to IPv6 planning and deployment — middle management, especial account 
managers. The basic argument was “The customer must first ask for it and sign a contract, then we will prepare for it.” 
Too much “not in my cost center” mentality crippled the ability of network implementers to even deploy IPv6 for 
demonstration purposes, as well as for learning. The idea that “my investment” might also benefit others, even in my 
own company was anathema. I have never become short sighted enough to endorse such idiocy.

As one experience with ‘joys’ of end to end connections between NATted networks with overlapping RFC1918 space, The 
advent of CGNAT and various pipe dreams (mostly in the US) of extending IPv4 address space offends my business sense 
and technical sense for wasting time, materials, and money.



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