Owen DeLong wrote: [..]
Hurricane Electric has a full production dual-stack environment.
I'm being tasked with coming up with an IPv6 migration plan for a data center.
Mostly interested in if ATT, Level3, GLBX, Saavis, Verizon Business and Qwest are capable as those are the typical ones I deal with.
To the best of my knowledge, each of those has varying degrees of IPv6 availability and none is "full production product" yet. My information could be old.
Always fun to read how people who work for some place (you might want to use either your work address or actually disclose directly why you are pimping something) like to bash their competition else while they run a 'full production' network without providing true arguments to counter that, nevertheless lets take a look at that "full production network": 3 10g-3-2.core1.sjc2.ipv6.he.net (2001:470:0:3c::1) 66.649 ms 66.555 ms 66.511 ms 4 10g-3-2.core1.pao1.ipv6.he.net (2001:470:0:32::2) 59.644 ms 62.214 ms 62.164 ms 5 3ffe:80a::b2 (3ffe:80a::b2) 61.770 ms 62.135 ms 62.506 ms 6 hitachi1.otemachi.wide.ad.jp (2001:200:0:4401::3) 182.958 ms 181.156 ms 181.346 ms 7 2001:200:0:1c04::251 (2001:200:0:1c04::251) 183.827 ms 181.617 ms 181.554 ms Yes, 6bone is still alive (sing along to that well known Portal tune ;) I, and others, have mentioned that problem already several times since 2006-06-06, you know the day that 6bone got shut down. It is also still amazing that "full production networks" are not able to do proper uRPF or let alone IRR based filtering as in that case you would not even see that nonsense... Also if you are running such a "full production network" you might want to disclose the traffic levels that you do. Or is there something to hide there? Thus: please actually FINALLY fix your "full production network" by finally renumbering at PAIX. You are peering with other folks, thus you know who is on the other side, as such, after 4 years, you might want to finally move on from this 6bone space and possibly deploy uRPF. Then again, you'll notice those traffic levels one day when you will go into history as the source of the first large spoofed DoS attack against whatever truly important service. Thanks for your attention. Greets, Jeroen (who has no true ISP hat ;)