Agree that in the long term support for more flexibility is good. Acknowledge that change is slow, and we're just at a point now where popular host systems even include mature DHCPv6 (but without route options). Both of the features discussed would be useful in specific applications, but more often than not what get's used is what most host implementations support, so the horse may have already left the barn on that one, at least for the next 5 years or so. RA + SLAAC is great for residential environments and automatic discovery. For a more controlled environment, RA + DHCPv6 is increasingly attractive, especially in a dual-stack environment where having a similar operational model for both protocols can simplify operations and support, and allow for a phased deployment. Remember, an RFC is just an idea on how things should work; it's not a standard until most people choose to implement it. "The nice thing about standards is that you have so many to choose from." On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 1:27 AM, Ravi Duggal <raviduggal2906@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
IPv6 devices (routers and hosts) can obtain configuration information about default routers, on-link prefixes and addresses from Router Advertisements as defined in Neighbor Discovery. I have been told that in some deployments, there is a strong desire not to use Router Advertisements at all and to perform all configuration via DHCPv6. There are thus similar IETF standards to get everything that you can get from RAs, by using DHCPv6 instead.
As a result of this we see new proposals in IETF that try to do similar things by either extending RA mechanisms or by introducing new options in DHCPv6.
We thus have draft-droms-dhc-dhcpv6-default-router-00 that extends DHCPv6 to do what RA does. And now, we have draft-bcd-6man-ntp-server-ra-opt-00.txt that extends RA to advertise the NTP information that is currently done via DHCPv6.
My question is, that which then is the more preferred option for the operators? Do they prefer extending RA so that the new information loaded on top of the RA messages gets known in the single shot when routers do neighbor discovery. Or do they prefer all the extra information to be learnt via DHCPv6? What are the pros and cons in each approach and when would people favor one over the other?
I can see some advantages with the loading information to RA since then one is not dependent on the DHCPv6 server. However, the latter provides its own benefits.
Regards, Ravi D.
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