On Thu, Feb 05, 2009 at 06:15:02PM -0500, Ricky Beam wrote:
You might like to review the DHCPv6 specification and try some of its implementations.
Joe is being a little overzealous. Unfortunately, there are very few DHCPv6 clients in the wild today. I think this has grown slightly since the last time I've had good information on it; Windows Vista, DOCSIS 3.0, Solaris and other platform specific unixes (unsure of all the right names and versions). Most free unixes have to be manhandled to install a client. The truth is it is actually not very likely that you can build an IPv6 network today using DHCPv6, unless you have large populations of those systems. Most IPv6 deployments today use SLAAC to get an address, and rely upon DHCPv4 to deliver configuration state (even IETF meetings do this). Still, it isn't bad to have a DHCPv6 server running to hand out some IPv6 addresses for configuration state now and again, so Joe is not entirely wrong.
I can recall many posts over the years from the IPng WG telling people they didn't need DHCP.
There is no need to recall! Subscribe to any IETF mailing list, and be assured you will still hear the same thing. -- David W. Hankins "If you don't do it right the first time, Software Engineer you'll just have to do it again." Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. -- Jack T. Hankins