On 4/7/11 7:04 AM, Owen DeLong wrote:
On Apr 7, 2011, at 6:51 AM, Tomas Podermanski wrote:
Hi Daniel, all IPv6 multihoming ideas are very theoretical today. None of them is ready to use. Shim6 looks very good, but it requires support on both a client and a server side. As you can guess, there is only experimental support for some operating systems. Microsoft and Apple doesn't support it.
Well, BGP multihoming works today quite well. It's no different from IPv4 and is a perfectly viable technology.
to reiterate, if you are multihoming in ipv4, you likely have a pi assigned prefix or one that you have permission to advertise from an upstream. If you obtain a pi v6 prefix via the same channel you obtained the v4 one it is likely that you simply advertise to 1 or more upstreams and you are done. I have done this too good effect in three different organizations that I've had the privilege of working with so far. I'd go so far as to say that the experience was exactly the same.
A one possible solution I have found is based on a network prefix translation (NPTv6 http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-mrw-nat66-12). Using NPTv6 you can do multihoming that is very similar to multihoming based on IPv4 NAT.
You can also use thumb cuffs to suspend yourself from a rafter, but, I don't recommend it unless you are into pain.
Owen