On 2/9/11 2:22 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
There have been IPv6 for dummies sessions at many past NANOGs.
If NANOG is willing to provide time and space for them at future events, I will be happy to conduct the tutorial sessions.
program committee would no doubt love to hear from you.
Owen
On Feb 9, 2011, at 10:30 AM, Mike Lyon wrote:
With the recent allocation of the last existing IPv4 /8s (which now kind of puts pressure on going v6), it would be wonderful if at the next couple of NANOGs if there could be an IPv6 for dummies session or two :)
-Mike
On Wed, Feb 9, 2011 at 10:22 AM, Jack Bates <jbates@brightok.net> wrote:
On 2/9/2011 12:03 PM, William Herrin wrote:
The thing that terrifies me about deploying IPv6 is that apps compatible with both are programmed to attempt IPv6 before IPv4. This means my first not-quite-correct IPv6 deployments are going to break my apps that are used to not having and therefore not trying IPv6. But that's not the worst part... as the folks my customers interact with over the next couple of years make their first not-quite-correct IPv6 deployments, my access to them is going to break again. And again. And again. And I won't have the foggiest idea who's next until I get the call that such-and-such isn't working right.
What scares me most is that every time I upgrade a router to support needed hardware or some badly needed IPv6 feature, something else breaks. Sometimes it's just the router crashes on a specific IPv6 command entered at CLI (C) or as nasty as NSR constantly crashing the slave (J); the fixes generally requiring me to upgrade again to the latest cutting edge releases which everyone hates (where I'm sure I'll find MORE bugs).
The worst is when you're the first to find the bug(which I'm not even sure how it's possible given how simplistic my configs are, isis multitopology, iBGP, NSR, a few acls and route-maps/policies), it takes 3-6 months or so to track it down, and then it's put only in the next upcoming release (not out yet) and backported to the last release.
Jack (hates all routers equally, doesn't matter who makes it)