On Wed, Dec 21, 2005 at 07:50:14AM -0600, Kevin Day wrote:
1) IPv6 on the internet overall seems a bit unreliable at the moment. Entire /32's disappear and reappear, gone for days at a time.
That's certainly true for people not doing it "in production". But that ain't a problem as they aren't doing it... in production. :-)
The most common path over IPv6 from the US to Europe is US->JP->US->EU.
Sorry, but that's not true anymore on grand scale. That might still be valid for some exceptionally bad IPv6 providers who still "do it 6bone style". Fortunately, those don't play any too significant role anymore in global IPv6 routing (which was hard work to achieve).
I realize this may be specific to our connection itself, but browsing looking glasses seems to back up that it's not just us.
That'd suprise me. Could you give examples?
2) Lots of providers who are running IPv6 aren't taking it as seriously as IPv4. Manual prefix filters, NOC staff that doesn't even know they're running IPv6, etc.
ACK, but "manual prefix filters" is often rooted in "there are no good tools to do the job". I've seen folks trying to beat RtConfig for months into doing sensible things. :-)
3) Some key pieces of internet infrastructure are IPv6 oblivious. ARIN's route registry doesn't support the "route6" objects, for example.
Don't get me started about IRRs. :-(
5) Our DNS software(djbdns) supports IPv6, kind of. WIth patches you can enter AAAA records, but only by entering 32 digit hexadecimal numbers with no colons or abbreviations. We were never able to get it to respond to queries over IPv6, so of all our DNS is still IPv4.
Then stop using incomplete and cumbersome software from authors with strong religious believes and a disconnection from any technological advances of the last $many years. :-) "Use the right tools for the job".
10) Smaller than normal MTUs seem much more common on IPv6, and it is exposing PMTUD breakage on a lot of people's networks.
It is, but we have tracked down most of them... at least the ones we noticed. I don't experience PMTUD problems anymore since long... the last one is prolly over half a year ago. And I use IPv6 on all my servers, desktops and laptop. :-)
11) Almost without fail, the path an IPv6 user takes to reach us (and vice-versa) is less optimal than the IPv4 route. Users are being penalized for turning on IPv6, since they have no way to fall back to IPv4 on a site-by-site basis when using a web browser.
That is indeed a problem. How big the penalty is, depends heavily on your choice of upstream provider(s). The isle of sanity gets bigger and bigger, and networks with bad IPv6 connectivity become more seldom (relatively). Thank you for sharing your experience! BTW, what timeframe are we talking about? Things have changed massively over the last 12-18 months. Best regards, Daniel -- CLUE-RIPE -- Jabber: dr@cluenet.de -- dr@IRCnet -- PGP: 0xA85C8AA0