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RIPE 48

RIPE Meeting:

48

Working Group:

IPv6

Status:

Final

Revision Number:

1

Draft (v1) IPv6 Working Group Minutes RIPE48

When: 14:00 - 18:00, Wednesday May 5, 2004
Where: Grand Ballroom, Hotel Krasnapolsky, Amsterdam

A. Administrative stuff
- appointment of scribe: Timothy Lowe, RIPE NCC
- agenda bashing

ACTIONS

- Chair, ask the mailing list if this document should
become a RIPE document
http://ip6.de.easynet.net/ipv6-minimum-peering.txt

- Community, provide feedback update on larger then default v6
allocations

- Pim van Pelt (BIT BV) is looking for people who would
like to run public 6to4 relays
e-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]


B. Global IPv6 routing table status
(Gert Doering, SPACENET)
http://www.space.net/~gert/RIPE/R48-v6-table/

The rate of growth in IPv6 allocations is tapering off.

There is public data available on the difference between allocated
IPv4 space and BGP routed IPv4 space here:

http://bgp.potaroo.net/index-ale.html

This site contains a number of reports on the status of the IPv4
address space, together with some observations about its trends in
consumption of this resource.


C. "per country view" about IPv6 allocation on the RIPE/NCC
(Carlos Friacas, FCCN)
http://www.ip6.fccn.pt/v6top.html


D. Report(s) about *actual* v6 traffic volume as compared to v4?
*what's real* out there, not what's on powerpoint?
(input from the audience)

Questions: Pim van Pelt, BIT BV -
6to4 public relays are at 80 Mbs
sustained. We would like people who
want to run public 6to4 relays to

contact us: [email protected] or [email protected]


E. Raising RPSLng Awareness
(Carlos Friacas, Simon Leinen and Joao Damas, ISC)

The RPSLng protocol draft is nearing completion
(http://www.radb.net/rpslng.html)


F. Discussion of:
http://ip6.de.easynet.net/ipv6-minimum-peering.txt

Should this document become a RIPE document?
ACTION on Chair - to take this to the mailing list


H. Latest IPv6 Land Speed Record
(Edoardo Martelli, CERN)

http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-48/presentations/ripe48-ipv6-lsr.pdf -
15:08


G. IETF multi6 update
(Kurtis Erik Lindqvist, Netnod Internet Exchange)

There are two main camps in this discussion:
Dividing the Identifier and addressing functions of the IP by
a.) Using identifier tokens
b.) Lightweight version without ID token distribution


I. What are the deployment plans behind the larger then
default ipv6 allocations
(Jordi Palet Martinez as a liaison for Vodafoon, TeliaSonera and others)

ACTION on Chair - keep this agenda point as an ongoing action.
ACTION on community - send feedback for next RIPE meeting


J. IPv6 home automation
(Palet Jordi, Consulintel)

There is a commercial powerline connectivity service operating in
Spain, and other countries, which started with a big trial (3.000)
in Zaragoza. Currently in IPv4 but possibly in IPv6 in future (some
customers are using IPv6 but on experimental basis for the 6POWER
project).


K. (brief) update from the RIPE NCC on ipv6 enabled services
(Andrei Robachevsky, RIPE NCC)

Verbal: These services are IPv6 enabled: DNS, whois, ttm, plan, new
webserver, K root.


N. Input for the RIPE NCC Activity Plan
(input from the audience)
NONE


M. Developments/initiatives regarding IPv6 in the RIPE region and beyond
(input from the audience)
NONE


L. IPv6 network management - IETF MIBs status, NetFlow v9, SNMPv6, and
monitoring tools
(Bernard Tuy - RENATER)


K. AOB

Skidder ip mapping tool for topology research. Trying to do this in
v6 www.caida.org/~mjl/