Is there anyone that would be interested in providing a tunnel to the 6bone for us? We are in Charlotte, NC and would prefer to establish a tunnel with someone close by. We'd be doing this via a cisco router so brokers are no an option for us. We are AS8175. Thanks in advance, Jeff --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.449 / Virus Database: 251 - Release Date: 1/27/2003
We operate a free IPv6 tunnel broker at http://tunnelbroker.com Mike. On Fri, 14 Feb 2003, Jeffrey Wheat wrote:
Is there anyone that would be interested in providing a tunnel to the 6bone for us? We are in Charlotte, NC and would prefer to establish a tunnel with someone close by. We'd be doing this via a cisco router so brokers are no an option for us. We are AS8175.
Thanks in advance, Jeff
--- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.449 / Virus Database: 251 - Release Date: 1/27/2003
+----------------- H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C -----------------+ | Mike Leber Direct Internet Connections Voice 510 580 4100 | | Hurricane Electric Web Hosting Colocation Fax 510 580 4151 | | mleber@he.net http://www.he.net | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
On Sat, 2003-02-15 at 02:39, Mike Leber wrote:
We operate a free IPv6 tunnel broker at http://tunnelbroker.com
Jeffrey Wheat said: "so brokers are no an option for us".
On Fri, 14 Feb 2003, Jeffrey Wheat wrote:
Is there anyone that would be interested in providing a tunnel to the 6bone for us? We are in Charlotte, NC and would prefer to establish a tunnel with someone close by. We'd be doing this via a cisco router so brokers are no an option for us. We are AS8175.
-- Nicolas DEFFAYET, NDSoftware NDSoftware NOC: http://noc.ndsoftwarenet.com/ FNIX6: http://www.fnix6.net/ EuroNOG: http://www.euronog.org/
We also do IPv6 BGP4+ via the tunnel broker as well, although he would need to correspond with ipv6@he.net to get that setup. We've been setting up more native IPv6 sessions at Telehouse in New York and at PAIX in Palo Alto (soon Equinix Ashburn and Equinix San Jose as well). We are now tagging routes we hear via tunnels with a community so that people that hear them from us can preference based on that (native vs tunnelled) if they wish. Mike. On Sat, 15 Feb 2003, fingers wrote:
Jeffrey Wheat said: "so brokers are no an option for us".
last I checked a tunnel+bgp worked from he.net worked on a cisco
not sure if i'd call it peering tho
+----------------- H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C -----------------+ | Mike Leber Direct Internet Connections Voice 510 580 4100 | | Hurricane Electric Web Hosting Colocation Fax 510 580 4151 | | mleber@he.net http://www.he.net | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
All the IPv6 routers in our network are cisco. We host about 1500 IPv6 over IPv4 tunnels via our tunnel broker. Many of the tunnel broker users are running cisco routers. Yes I was going too fast and missed his comment (it didn't parse) otherwise I would have pointed out that if he is running a cisco with an IOS that supports IPv6 he can run IPv6 in tunnels over IPv4. For example: interface Tunnel1 description An IPv6 tunnel peer no ip address ipv6 address <IPv6-address-for-your-side>/127 ipv6 enable tunnel source <IPv4-address-on-your-router> tunnel destination <IPv4-address-on-peer's-router> tunnel mode ipv6ip Mike. On 15 Feb 2003, Nicolas DEFFAYET wrote:
On Sat, 2003-02-15 at 02:39, Mike Leber wrote:
We operate a free IPv6 tunnel broker at http://tunnelbroker.com
Jeffrey Wheat said: "so brokers are no an option for us".
On Fri, 14 Feb 2003, Jeffrey Wheat wrote:
Is there anyone that would be interested in providing a tunnel to the 6bone for us? We are in Charlotte, NC and would prefer to establish a tunnel with someone close by. We'd be doing this via a cisco router so brokers are no an option for us. We are AS8175.
-- Nicolas DEFFAYET, NDSoftware NDSoftware NOC: http://noc.ndsoftwarenet.com/ FNIX6: http://www.fnix6.net/ EuroNOG: http://www.euronog.org/
+----------------- H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C -----------------+ | Mike Leber Direct Internet Connections Voice 510 580 4100 | | Hurricane Electric Web Hosting Colocation Fax 510 580 4151 | | mleber@he.net http://www.he.net | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
Can someone give me a good pointer as to places to start learning more about ipv6? ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mike Leber" <mleber@he.net> To: "Nicolas DEFFAYET" <nicolas.deffayet@ndsoftware.net> Cc: "Jeffrey Wheat" <jeff@cetlink.net>; <nanog@merit.edu> Sent: Saturday, February 15, 2003 2:47 PM Subject: Re: IPv6 Peering Request
All the IPv6 routers in our network are cisco.
We host about 1500 IPv6 over IPv4 tunnels via our tunnel broker.
Many of the tunnel broker users are running cisco routers.
Yes I was going too fast and missed his comment (it didn't parse) otherwise I would have pointed out that if he is running a cisco with an IOS that supports IPv6 he can run IPv6 in tunnels over IPv4.
For example:
interface Tunnel1 description An IPv6 tunnel peer no ip address ipv6 address <IPv6-address-for-your-side>/127 ipv6 enable tunnel source <IPv4-address-on-your-router> tunnel destination <IPv4-address-on-peer's-router> tunnel mode ipv6ip
Mike.
On 15 Feb 2003, Nicolas DEFFAYET wrote:
On Sat, 2003-02-15 at 02:39, Mike Leber wrote:
We operate a free IPv6 tunnel broker at http://tunnelbroker.com
Jeffrey Wheat said: "so brokers are no an option for us".
On Fri, 14 Feb 2003, Jeffrey Wheat wrote:
Is there anyone that would be interested in providing a tunnel to the 6bone for us? We are in Charlotte, NC and would prefer to establish a tunnel with someone close by. We'd be doing this via a cisco router so brokers are no an option for us. We are AS8175.
-- Nicolas DEFFAYET, NDSoftware NDSoftware NOC: http://noc.ndsoftwarenet.com/ FNIX6: http://www.fnix6.net/ EuroNOG: http://www.euronog.org/
+----------------- H U R R I C A N E - E L E C T R I C -----------------+ | Mike Leber Direct Internet Connections Voice 510 580 4100 | | Hurricane Electric Web Hosting Colocation Fax 510 580 4151 | | mleber@he.net http://www.he.net | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
On Sun, 2003-02-16 at 22:37, Scott Granados wrote:
Can someone give me a good pointer as to places to start learning more about ipv6?
You can visit this websites: http://www.6bone.net/ http://www.hs247.com/ -- Nicolas DEFFAYET, NDSoftware NDSoftware NOC: http://noc.ndsoftwarenet.com/ FNIX6: http://www.fnix6.net/ EuroNOG: http://www.euronog.org/
On Sun, 16 Feb 2003, Scott Granados wrote:
Can someone give me a good pointer as to places to start learning more about ipv6?
You could try a book or two. Or if you're not afraid of RFCs: reading 2460, 2373, 2374, 2461 and 2462 should give you a good start. After that you're ready to start experimenting. Keep in mind that packet forwarding and routing protocols are nearly identical to IPv4, but the ways addresses are used and neighbor discovery are very different. And then there is all the multicasting...
participants (6)
-
fingers
-
Iljitsch van Beijnum
-
Jeffrey Wheat
-
Mike Leber
-
Nicolas DEFFAYET
-
Scott Granados