Personally my view is that DHCPv6-PD support would be much better for tethering, but I don't get to tell Google how to do that just like they don't get to tell me how to give out addresses. My only request would be if you do implement DHCPv6-PD for tethering, please make it only request a prefix when you actually enable tethering, not as the default. That would be bad for different reasons. Wouldn't the simple play here be for Android to just throw up a message saying "This network does not support tethering" if SLAAC isn't enabled, and to let users complain to local operators if that's something they want? Google doesn't get blamed, operators are happy, and ultimately users have a better experience because the expectations of the network are clear rather than trying something that will likely not work consistently across networks. If the concern is that you don't want to carriers to use DHCPv6 then you could just limit it to 802.11. The point is that there are several options here to address peoples concerns and make IPv6 adoption that much easier, but the position of Google on DHCPv6 support for Android is just another barrier to widespread adoption of IPv6. I honestly appreciate the work Google has been doing for years to promote IPv6 adoption, but they're wrong here. On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 11:30 AM, Todd Underwood <toddunder@gmail.com> wrote:
lorenzo already stated that the cost was in user satisfaction related to tethering and the business reason was the desire to not implement NAT in v6 on android.
many people didn't like those reasons or think that they are less important than their own reasons.
shockingly, everyone believes that their own priorities are more important than everyone else's priorities.
the 'cranky about the lack of DHCPv6' crowd has already made their points and further shut down conversation by demanding that lorenzo speak for Google on this thread. indeed, shouting loudly and shutting down conversation was almost certainly the intent of many of the posts here. so mission accomplished.
fists have been pounded. conversation has been halted. well done.
can me move on now?
t
On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 11:18 AM, James R Cutler < james.cutler@consultant.com> wrote:
Ray Soucy has given us an nice summary. It goes along with “please let me manage my business and don’t take away my tools just to satisfy your prejudices.”
Selection of management policies and implementations is ALWAYS a local issue (assuming consideration of legal necessities). Especially in the end-to-end model, the requirements management of end systems has not changed because the IP layer protocol has changed. This is a good reason for not prohibiting continuing use of DHCP-based solutions. “Purity of protocols” is not a reason for increasing management costs such as described by Ray.
This debate about DHCPv6 has been going on far too long. I want to know how much it will cost the “SLAAC-only” faction to quit fighting DHCPv6. My conjecture is that it would be minimal, especially as compared to the costs for the activities described by Ray.
Putting it differently: What business purpose is served by fighting full-functioned DHCPv6 deployment. Don’t give me any RFC or protocol arguments - just tell me the business reasons for forcing others to change how they manage their business.
James R. Cutler James.cutler@consultant.com PGP keys at http://pgp.mit.edu
On Jun 12, 2015, at 10:07 AM, Ray Soucy <rps@maine.edu> wrote:
The only thing I would add is that DHCPv6 is not just about "tracking" clients. Yes there are ways to do so using SLAAC, but they are not pretty.
Giving too much weight to tracking being the reason for DHCPv6 is just as bad as giving too much weight to tethering as the reason against it. It skews the conversation.
For us, DHCPv6 is about *operational consistency*.
Universities have been running with the end-to-end model everyone is looking to IPv6 to restore for a very long time.
When you connect to our network, wired or wireless, you get a public IP with no filtering in place in most cases.
We have been living the end-to-end model, and that has given us operational experience and insight on what it actually takes to support access networks using this model.
Almost every peer institution I talk to has implemented custom systems refined over decades to preserve the end-to-end model in a time of increasing security incidents and liability. These include IPAM systems, which feed into vulnerability scanning, or host filtering for incident response, etc.
These systems are in place for IPv4, and modifying them to support IPv6 (which most of us have done) is relatively easy in the case of DHCPv6.
By maintaining consistency between IPv4 and IPv6 we avoid having to retrain hundreds of IT workers on supporting connectivity. By saying that you won't support DHCPv6, you effectively force us into a choice between investing considerable effort in redesigning systems and training IT personnel, while introducing confusion in the support process because IPv4 and IPv6 are delivered using completely different methods.
You have just made it cheaper for us to turn to NAT than to support IPv6. That's unacceptable.
You might be thinking "well that's just universities and a small percent of users", but the point here is that we do these things for a reason; we've been living without NAT and our collective operational experience doing so is something that would be wise to take into consideration instead of dismissing it or trying to call us names.
Organizations running SLAAC who say everything is fine, think everything is fine because IPv6 has received almost no attention from bad actors in terms of security incidents or denial of service attacks. Even well known servers with IPv6 addresses on our network rarely see SSH attempts over IPv6 today.
*This will fundamentally change as IPv6 adoption grows*.
Are you prepared to be able to deal with abuse reports of hosts on your network participating on denial of service attacks? Can you associate the identity of a system to an individual when law enforcement demands you to do so? How much longer will it take you to track down a host by its IPv6 address to disable it? How many other users have degraded service while they're waiting for you to do that?
For most people that are used to the typical IPv4 model (NAT and open pool DHCP), these events are very infrequent, so of course they don't get it. For those of us running a more liberal network which preserves the end-to-end model, free from aggressive filtering on user traffic, these incidents are literally daily occurrences.
The fact is that you never know what service a user might enable on their device only to be exploited and degrade service for their peers.
So yes, we are looking to the future in the case of DHCPv6, because we've learned from the past.
On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 3:05 AM, <Valdis.Kletnieks@vt.edu> wrote:
On Fri, 12 Jun 2015 02:07:22 -0000, Laszlo Hanyecz said:
> university net nazis
Did you really just write that?
As far as "net nazi", I meant it in the same sense as a BOFH. Someone who is intentionally degrading a user's experience by using technical means to block specifically targeted applications or behaviors.
Well, which is more BOFH-ish:
1) We insist that you connect in a way that allows us to identify and track you for DMCA and other legal requirements that, quite frankly, we'd really rather not have to do, but it's a cost of doing business.
2) We don't let you connect at all because we can't do so without exposing ourselves to more legal liability than we want.
Besides which, that's a total red herring.
If you actually go back and *read*, I don't think anybody's "intentionally degrading by blocking targeted applications" - except those who are refusing to provide features to allow the applications to work on more network configs. The vast majority of us would *prefer* that Android got fixed so it can ask for more addresses and do more stuff. Most of us don't *care* if a user sucks up 13 adresses across 4 devices at the same time - IPv6 addresses are *cheap*. On the other hand, covering your ass when a subpoena shows up and you realize you don't have the data needed to point at the user they're *really* looking for is incredibly expensive.
OK? Let me say that again: We're all asking Google to quit being stubborn and add a feature to Android so we can make the user experience *better*.
Now who you calling a BOFH?
On the other hand, if it becomes common and acceptable to use DHCPv6 to provide a single address only
I encourage my competitor universities to design their networks that way. :)
-- Ray Patrick Soucy Network Engineer University of Maine System
T: 207-561-3526 F: 207-561-3531
MaineREN, Maine's Research and Education Network www.maineren.net
-- Ray Patrick Soucy Network Engineer University of Maine System T: 207-561-3526 F: 207-561-3531 MaineREN, Maine's Research and Education Network www.maineren.net