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More on China's IPv6 Network Buildout

photojournaliste writes "China has developed and demonstrated its first high-performance network core router based on the next-generation Internet standard known as IPv6, which the country officially inaugurated earlier this week." There's also a CNet story, which has a bit more information than our earlier story.

5 of 163 comments (clear)

  1. Billions? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    From the news.com article
    By increasing this to 128 bits, IPv6 provides billions more IP addresses

    Billions? Try 3.4 dodecillion

  2. Re:Any more high-profile rollouts of IPv6? by Xeo+024 · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the article:

    China is not the only Asian country with a strong interest in IPv6. Japan has already implemented an IPv6 production network, which is used by every service provider in the country. South Korea is working with the EU to develop applications and services using IPv6.

    Also, check out this article: Japan, China, S. Korea developing next Net.

  3. Re:I wonder how thay tested it? by networkBoy · · Score: 4, Informative

    No they rely on things like this:
    http://www.spirentcom.com/analysis/product_line.cf m?pl=33&wt=2
    and this:
    http://www.ixiacom.com/products/chassis/ch_display .php?skey=ch_1600t_400t_100

    I used one of these to demonstrate to the IT department of my megacorp exactally why my networking lab needed it's own isolated subnet on its own Cat6K, and its own servers.
    Once I started pumping out thousands of frames per second of random IP and MAC addresses their routers started dying under the loads.
    I got everything I asked for :-)
    -nB

    --
    whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
  4. The CNET article itself is terrible. by James+Youngman · · Score: 5, Informative
    I cannot believe there were so many errors in an article which is only 358 words long. What a bad piece of journalism. Only 81 words are devoted to the China new item, the rest ss background on IPv6. The IPv6 information is riddled with errors.

    There is a rather better article on the subject of IPV6 adoption at InternetWeek, but that article is now four years old.

    As for the specific information in the article,
    "IPv6 provides billions more IP addresses" - I think the reporter is a bit confused about all these large numbers. IPv6 provides billions of TIMES more addresses. More even than that in fact; 2 to the power 128 is 79228162514264337593543950336 times greater than 2 to the power 32. (This calculation was brought to you by GNU bc)

    "It was created and deployed in response to ... especially as Web use in Asia rises sharply." - The author has fallen for the post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy. In any case, the beginning of the development of IPv6 occurred significantly before the extensive takeup of Internet technologies in Asia.

    As other people have already mentioned (including in the reader comments below the article - I would have contributed but see no point in "registering" with CNET), goodness knows where the journalist got their figure of "257 nodes". They should perhaps take the time to either check their notes or cross-check the information their sources are giving them.

    Something the author failed to point out is that it is not only Asian countries that have been working with IPV6. There has been significant piloting in most countries that make use of the Internet. This means that there are IPV6 over IPv4 tunneling facilities that work therse days, meaning that it is not necessary for countries up upgrade everything to IPv6 in order for their businesses to trade with China, no matter what the article implies.

  5. Re:I wonder how thay tested it? by PornMaster · · Score: 3, Informative

    Apparently, YOU HAVE NO IDEA WHAT YOU'RE TALKING ABOUT.

    The "Internet2 speed record" had Dell boxes running NetBSD pushing 4Gbps for an hour with no packet loss.

    ...and you call yourself networkBoy.