On Thu, Oct 04, 2007 at 10:37:22AM +0200, Iljitsch van Beijnum wrote:
The crucial difference is that there is an upgrade path. There is no upgrade path from a network with NAT to a network where you don't have to work around NAT. That's why it's so important to keep the NAT in IPv4 and not let it sneak into IPv6.
Most of us debating this with you _don't care_ if NAT happens to exist on the IPv6 Internet. It's on the IPv4 Internet and we still manage to use the network for the things we want to use it for, so we're mounting an empirical case to say that portrayal of NAT that you're presenting is false. Basically, your argument boils down to aesthetics. You don't like NAT. You want it to go away. Fine, I don't like it either and I wouldn't mind if it went away... But funnily enough, I can remember having exactly these same arguments with people about IPv4 NAT. And y'know what? They didn't make a lick of difference, because NAT could be (and was) deployed unilaterally, without any semblance of global coordination. {Your|My} aesthetic sense isn't actually in charge here. Moan about it all you want, but it's _inevitable_ that every tool in the toolbox, including NAT-PT, will be used to smooth-over IPv6 adoption challenges. And if you don't like it, you're just gonna have to cope. Your alternatives are: - NAT-PT with well-understood standards and operational guidelines aimed at maximizing interoperability; and - NAT-PT without well-understood standards and operational guidelines, where interoperability is a flukish crapshoot, where random stuff just fails to work because there are no agreed-upon ways to use application awareness at layer-4 to work around breakage. In that universe, where you have to pick one, which one would you rather see in widespread deployment? And if it's the first alternative, what kind of results do you think you'll get by opposing efforts to develop standards for NAT? - mark [ wondering how long it'll be before I'll be able to buy a CEF- accelerated TCAM-equipped layer-4 switching blade for a 7600 :-) ] -- Mark Newton Email: newton@internode.com.au (W) Network Engineer Email: newton@atdot.dotat.org (H) Internode Systems Pty Ltd Desk: +61-8-82282999 "Network Man" - Anagram of "Mark Newton" Mobile: +61-416-202-223