On Mon, 2004-11-15 at 11:03 -0500, Jared Mauch wrote:
On Mon, Nov 15, 2004 at 09:29:25AM -0500, Christian Kuhtz wrote:
On 11/15/04 12:18 AM, "Daniel Roesen" <dr@cluenet.de> wrote:
Unfortunate, even today there are not many option of transit ISPs who have a real native dual-stack deployment (I consider 6PE to be native)... most have just tunnels inside. Currently I cannot think of more than... hm... 3-4 ISPs who can deliver real amounts of native US-EU bandwidth.
What sort of customers do these v6 SP's have for IPv6? What demands are there for real amounts of IPv6 bandwidth?
http://www.sixxs.net/misc/traffic/
I've historically found that there are a number of FTP sites that get congested on IPv4 but are accessable via IPv6 (only).
There are, as demonstrated from above graphs, quite a number of people who also found out that some news server has this feature ;)
I have a /48 at home, but am only using about 4 /64's on my various subnets (servers, wireless, office lan, etc..)
I guess most people, who are a bit into computers, at least have 2 LAN's: wired and wireless. Some, like Jared apparently, even make seperate subnets per room. Though 2 is quite common. With the future in mind though (read: toys toys toys), I see it very likely that the amount of subnets will grow at a large rate.
I'd say that about 1-5% of my home bandwidth usage (on average) is IPv6 only. I'm sure it's going up with the number of sites doing v4+v6 (eg: roots) increasing.
I guess my usage is somewhat the same when I was still really actively using that network. The only solution to getting more IPv6 content: crontab that request message and spam Google and others to provide IPv6 capable servers (and crawlers). Doom3 doesn't do IPv6 either yet unfortunately (afaik)... I still wonder, it is even easier to use getaddrinfo()* to write socket related code, thus what is the problem of doing IPv6 in software? (Except for the lame excuse of having 'latency' when the stuff is not configured correctly and you have to time out before connecting) Greets, Jeroen * = http://gsyc.escet.urjc.es/~eva/IPv6-web/ipv6.html http://www.kame.net/newsletter/19980604/