On Fri, Mar 5, 2010 at 10:16 AM, Owen DeLong <owen@delong.com> wrote:
there is a real danger here ... wholesale adoption of a translation technology, esp one that is integrated into the network kind of ensures that it will never get pulled out - or that the enduser will have a devil of a time routing around it when it no longer works for her - but the ISP sees her as a statistically anomaly.
I would argue that the right/correct place for such translation technology is very close to the edge - in much the same way as NAT technology is roughl an "edge" technology. (ok - it used to be but w/ CGN .. its clearly moved.
we -need- the technologies - but only for a while. otherwise they become a drug that we are dependent on. and we will be stuck on the dual-stack plateau for a much longer time that we should.
imho of coure ... YM (and business models) MV
Bill, While the DS-LIte mechanism does involve moving the NAT towards the Core instead of leaving it at the edge, the advantage is that you can route around it very easily as an end-user. Every thing the end user sends to an IPv6 destination bypasses the NAT box completely and only IPv4 is afflicted.
NAT64/DNS64 is the same way, it gracefully drops out of the network as more and more content provides publish their own AAAA records. Most mobile providers today do NAT44, so NAT64 from an IPv6-only host (phones) is very appealing and familiar The day we switch from NAT44 to NAT64 (it's not a flag day, one new device model at a time), we will have a substantial NET savings in NAT state since all the IPv6 content folks with AAAA will no longer have their content hobbled by the NAT44 that exists today. Mobile network operator will begin to see the light at the end of the NATx(x|y) tunnel. The end of the NAT tunnel means lower cost and higher availability. And once again, the content folks passing IPv4 literals may have heart burn since IPv6-only won't initiate a connection to an IPv4 literal address embedded in HTML / XML .... DNS64 helps with this in the normal FQDN case, but passing IPv4 literals breaks the model and communications fails.
I think that will be fairly easy to deprecate over time vs. many many edge-NATs and layers of NATs near the edge.
Owen