[AfrIPv6-Discuss] AfrIPv6-Discuss Digest, Vol 146, Issue 12 - migrating to IPv6 (Kolawole Adewale)
kolawole Adewale
harnthny at gmail.com
Thu Mar 14 12:51:18 UTC 2019
More awareness still needs to be done in the areas of benfits. I feel tech
operators in Africa, especially (medium ones)feel reluctant to migrate to
IPv6 because of their lack of awareness the IPv6 brings.
Kudos to AFRINIC on thier efforts.
On 6 Dec 2018 7:48 pm, <afripv6-discuss-request at afrinic.net> wrote:
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> 1. Re: Finding solutions to things that stop people moving to
> IPv6 (Noureddine IDBOUFKER)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2018 18:47:25 +0000 (UTC)
> From: Noureddine IDBOUFKER <n_idboufker at yahoo.fr>
> To: afripv6-discuss at afrinic.net
> Subject: Re: [AfrIPv6-Discuss] Finding solutions to things that stop
> people moving to IPv6
> Message-ID: <152027882.5323643.1544122045102 at mail.yahoo.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> Sure there are many opportunities behind Transition to IPv6 but
unfortunately, for African Operators in each country, there is also a risk.
Every day elapsed before this transition moves them towards a very risky
situation. I talk about Business and also technical risks. Unfortunately,
the majority of operators has an urgency mindset.??I am really convinced
that in order to encourage them to transit to IPv6, African Communities has
to focus on risks and the urgency aspect of the transition. For example
leading studies in order to produce a kind of SWOT Matrix, adapted to the
African context, establishing Strengths, Weaknesses, Threats and
Opportunities.
> Regards-----------------------------------------------
> Noureddine IDBOUFKERhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/idboufkernoureddine/
>
>
> Le jeudi 6 d?cembre 2018 ? 15:51:06 UTC+1, Lee Howard <
lee.howard at retevia.net> a ?crit :
>
>
>
>
> On 12/6/18 5:22 AM, Noureddine IDBOUFKER via AfrIPv6-Discuss wrote:
>
>
> I think that Top management is not enough aware of business
opportunities behind IPv6 migration.? Sure IPv6 will give them the
opportunity to address a high number of objects, equipements,
services,....? but it is not limited to that. Top management has to
encourage their people to be express their innovation capabilities in a
such a way to contribute to the developpement of Value Added Services.?
Providers who will not propose new competitive service catalogue will
simply die in globalized world. Top management has to know hat IPv6 is a
real pillar of IT governance.
>
> I agree with that. I have several presentations on business reasons for
IPv6, which I imagine overlap with AFRINIC's IPv6 for Executives training:
>
> - Not running out of addresses, so you can keep adding customers
> - Faster [1]
>
> - Because it's faster, Google page rank is higher; more customers see
your web site
>
> - Because it's faster, users spend more time on the page; more ad
revenue
>
> - IPv6 is on by default; may present security risks if not secured
> - Use addresses to identify services; easier policy routing, ACLs,
security, troubleshooting, etc.
> - New diagnostic tools PDM [rfc8250] and maybe M-PDM
[draft-fear-ippm-mpdm]
> - Simpler container networking [2]
>
> - Segment Routing with IPv6: no MPLS/LDP/RSVP-TE/NSH, it's all just
IP. [3]
>
>
> The last few are cutting-edge developments that are not widely available
yet, but are examples of innovations enabled by IPv6. I didn't even list
"It's not NAT" because you're likely to use some kind of address sharing to
reach legacy IPv4 sites, but that need declines as others deploy, and it
may be cheaper than NAT44.
>
> IPv6 is cool.
>
>
> Lee
>
>
> [1] https://stats.labs.apnic.net/v6perf/XB
>
>
> [2] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eF50OxZ5u4o
>
> [3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUN68P6UAn0
>
>
>
> Regards?
> -----------------------------------------------
> Noureddine IDBOUFKER
>
> Le jeudi 6 d?cembre 2018 ? 10:57:24 UTC+1, JORDI PALET MARTINEZ via
AfrIPv6-Discuss <afripv6-discuss at afrinic.net> a ?crit :
>
>
> Operators are informed, if you speak about ?engineers?, the problem is to
inform the CEOs of operator AND the CEOs of important companies in each
country (financial sectors, companies that export or have relevant web
sites, etc.).
>
> ?
>
> I recall ARIN did sent a letter to them (in their region) a few years ago.
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Jordi
>
> ?
>
> ?
>
> ?
>
> De: Pascal ANDRIANISA <pascal at irenala.edu.mg>
> Responder a: IPv6 in Africa Discussions <afripv6-discuss at afrinic.net>
> Fecha: jueves, 6 de diciembre de 2018, 10:47
> Para: IPv6 in Africa Discussions <afripv6-discuss at afrinic.net>
> Asunto: Re: [AfrIPv6-Discuss] Finding solutions to things that stop
people moving to IPv6
>
> ?
> Dear All,
>
> I think there is also another solution which is to inform the operators
in each country of the situation because if only the members who will apply
IPv6 it will not be possible to use it optimally.
> I do not know if a provision to that effect has already been taken but I
think that all the members are aware of the situation.
>
> Best regard, Pascal Heriliva ANDRIANISA
> Webmaster i RENALA
> Research and Education Network for Academic and Learning Activities -
http://www.irenala.edu.mg/
> Porte 201 - Minist?re de l'Enseignement Sup?rieur et de la Recherche
Scientifique - Fiadanana
> GSM :+261 (0) 32 46 680 29 |? +261 (0) 34 30 680 29 ? De: "Mukom
Akong T." <mukom.tamon at gmail.com>
> ?: "IPv6 in Africa" <afripv6-discuss at afrinic.net>
> Envoy?: Jeudi 6 D?cembre 2018 06:41:29
> Objet: Re: [AfrIPv6-Discuss] Finding solutions to things that stop people
moving to IPv6 ?
>
> >
> > Consumers are unaware of IPv6, so it's not part of their buying
decision. If something doesn't make consumer buy boxes, vendors don't do
it. I do not think consumer education about IP is a good idea.
>
>
>
> Neither do I. Consumers don't DIRECTLY care about IP (whether v4 or v6).
But they do care about other features that may be only possible (or easier,
or cheaper) with v6.
>
>
> This is one place where I see the role of governments. In the interest of
national development, just ban importation and sale of legacy equipment.
Similar to what is already done with type approval in telecommunications
today.
>
>
>
> > ISPs buying cheap boxes and not paying anything for support, so they
can't get upgrades.
> > Foreign ISPs dumping volumes of used CPE, which get resold at deep
discounts.
>
>
> I've been screaming about this for years. Even worse, some of it is going
to be "sold" as "next generation Internet aid or technical corporation")
which further cripples IPv6 deployment.
>
> >
> > Something that has worked for some companies is an "ISP Certified"
sticker. CPE vendors could apply to an ISP, and pay the costs of testing.
If the tests complied with the ISP's requirements, which might include MAP,
lw4o6, or 464xlat support, the vendor is allowed to put a sticker on their
box saying, "This device certified for use with $ISP." There might be a
business opportunity for someone who can set up a really good CPE testing
lab, so ISPs could outsource their testing and certification.
>
>
> In addition, I believe that with two days of training (regulators and
customs) and the appropriate infrastructure and a PROCESS, we can help a
government implement type approval for IPv6. Any regulator that wishes to
do this should reach out and join the waiting list by taking the Government
IPv6 Readiness Self Assessment at ?
>
> ENGLISH ? https://vox.afrinic.net/465923?lang=en
> FRENCH ? ?https://vox.afrinic.net/465923?lang=fr
>
>
> > For years I have been an IPv6 advocate ? and I still am ? and I?ve
actively deployed and run IPv6 in production supplying it to the end user,
with multiple percentage point changes in country IPv6 penetration
statistics as a result, but I am fast realizing that if we want IPv6 to
grow and thrive ? it?s time we started being a little more open and honest
about the challenges and problems with it ? instead of sprouting off that
everyone should just move to it. ? Let?s acknowledge that IPv6 is critical,
we have no option, but it is also deeply flawed, has major problems, and
until start dealing with those ? we will see deployment continue to stutter
>
>
> I agree with the above. The solution is not just another open
"discussion" where people who have not even started any kind of deployment,
or even have a fair idea of what percentage of equipment might or might not
be v6 ready go on an on about problems they've only heard about.
>
>
> >
> > Should we have a round table discussion at AIS? How can we identify and
make progress on resolving issues with IPv6?
> >
>
>
> Perhaps we can start with a mailing list thread of SPECIFIC issues people
have encountered while attempting a deployment on this mailing list, then
build up to a webinar or discussion at AIS.
>
>
> There are probably about 400million users using IPv6 today and growing,
someone somewhere has solved those problems.
>
>
> > The common theme in my answers above is that more people running IPv6
provides more weight in solving problems. If everyone would take a couple
of hours to do three things, we'd have a very broad base of common
experience to draw from:
> >
> > 1. Write an address plan. Don't worry if it takes several revisions,
that's normal.
> >
> > 2. Apply to Afrinic for IPv6 addresses.
> >
> > 3. Announce the IPv6 addresses and route them on your backbone.
>
>
> These are things that we've helped operators implement in 1 day at our
deployathons (or 6 two hour sessions during helpdesk calls). It's
surprising how many operators need help with their address planning. Which
is why not only do we teach them how to determine how much space they get,
but also how to implement them in an IPAM.? For those interested, a video
of a highly attended and rated AFRINIC webinar can be found at
>
>
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CFIVQ_Z9je8&t=542s
>
> Step by step walk-through of address planning best practices and
implementation in an IPAM ---- no maths!
>
>
> >
> > AFRINIC's training and IPv6 Helpdesk are great resources.
>
>
> The premise behind the helpdesk is this: We can find ONE operator a month
that's committed to deploying IPv6, we keep providing targeted training and
coaching to move them from one deployment milestone to another until we get
stuck with incompatible equipment or internal collaboration issues. All it
takes is about 4 hours investment per week. If you are interested, make a
request at??
>
>
> bit.ly/6deployEN? ?(english)
> bit.ly/6deployFR? ? (french)
>
> As we do this, we're also building an tremendous amount of intel on what
actually HOLDS IPv6 deployment back from real operators attempting to
deploy it and so far with over 45 tickets, the evidence indicates that
incompatible equipment is not in the top 5.? We're also realising that
that argument from big operators about "customers aren't asking for it" is
not true. We know of large operators that within 2 months have received
explicitly written requests to enable IPv6 from large corporate customers.
You don't want to see their response :( ? If you want to host one of our
DEPLOYATHON sessions in your country? ? - 5% teaching, 95% DOing
-?using our Prototype?? Validate ? Develop?? Deploy framework - enables
you hit a measurable deployment milestone within 8 hours ? you can apply
at:??
https://vox.afrinic.net/189828?lang=en?(or?https://vox.afrinic.net/189828?lang=fr
in french) ? And for those who are still wondering how ready or not
their organisations are, take our free Organisational IPv6 Readiness
Assessment at??https://vox.afrinic.net/651525?lang=en? (or?
https://vox.afrinic.net/651525?lang=fr in French)
> The results might provide pointers where to start the process. ? Until
next time ..... be EXCELLENT
>
> --
>
> Mukom Akong T.
>
> LinkedIn:Mukom ?| ?twitter: @perfexcellent ?
>
>
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