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Google Engineers Say IPv6 Is Easy, Not Expensive

alphadogg writes "Google engineers say it was not expensive and required only a small team of developers to enable all of the company's applications to support IPv6, a long-anticipated upgrade to the Internet's main communications protocol. 'We can provide all Google services over IPv6,' said Google network engineer Lorenzo Colitti during a panel discussion held in San Francisco Tuesday at a meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Colitti said a 'small, core team' spent 18 months enabling IPv6, from the initial network architecture and software engineering work, through a pilot phase, until Google over IPv6 was made publicly available. Google engineers worked on the IPv6 effort as a 20% project — meaning it was in addition to their regular work — from July 2007 until January 2009."

12 of 233 comments (clear)

  1. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  2. easy? by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I wouldn't call something that take 18 months to do "easy".
    Maybe that's why I don't work at google :-|

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:easy? by Aladrin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In a company of 10,000+ employees, it took a 'small team' only 18 months to convert and test what took 11 years to build? I think that's pretty good.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    2. Re:easy? by holophrastic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It may be "pretty good", hey it may be great. But if they're saying that it's easy enough for anyone to do, that's jsut not the case. At 20% of 18 months, that's almost 4 months of solid labour. If you told me that my business needed to take 4 months to do something, I'd tell you it had better be revenue-generating.

    3. Re:easy? by VPeric · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On the other hand, it's 4 months for the whole of Google. And Google is huge. So it's a fair assumption that it'd be much less than 12 months for something a fraction of Google's size.

    4. Re:easy? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Spoken like someone without a PhD. What you say is true only where the value of 'everything' is defined as 'procrastination'.

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      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    5. Re:easy? by holophrastic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's a big falacy. Google has all of it's stuff in one place, and with the scale and redundancy to maintain it all without taknig things down. I'm a small web company. I have more "products" than google, and more distinct clients than google. For me to upgrade some software, I need to talk to every client that uses it, I need to convince them to buy new hardware or adjust their existing hardware. I need to teach them how. I need to convince them that it's beneficial in the first place. Then I need to change dozens of projects being used by nearly one hundred clients without taking anything down.

      Every one of my clients says the same thing: "I'm running a business here. I don't have time to redo things that work.".

      So when ipv4 stops working, then I'll be able to convince them. Same goes for me, by the way. I have nothing to gain by switching to a new protocol. The old one works fine.

    6. Re:easy? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you're Google, you have a very small market share in China, and are desperately trying to increase it. Consumer connections in China are going to be IPv6 or double-NAT'd IPv4 (so most things that punch holes in NAT won't work) very soon due to the way in which v4 addresses are allocated. Being the first service to work on China's v6 network is going to give them a big advantage in a rapidly-growing market.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    7. Re:easy? by generica1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That's BS. They CAN be replaced but people are simply inflexible and corporations in particular get very scared of change when it comes to IS/IT. Software in 2009 can do anything software in 1979 could do, only better. Your analog modems are legacy equipment and they are there to support the PEOPLE who insist upon them - there ARE better solutions than merely kludging legacy support into every possible corporate upgrade. Ditch the old, get better stuff!

      For example, a fully functional legacy PC system with analog serial ports etc. could be implemented entirely in software including an analog modem that handles DSP via the host, and the phone line via VoIP, and then virtualized on a server somewhere, and the physical legacy analog crap could be tossed out. But humans (i.e. workers familiar with the legacy system, as well as upper management) will NOT just jump on board to ideas like this without a lot of resistance. That doesn't mean they aren't do-able. The above example is still implementing the legacy solution, but not using legacy hardware. There is probably a much more elegant (albeit completely hypothetical as per this discussion) solution that ignores the legacy equipment, and if the corporation as a whole switched over to the new solution en masse, there would be no need for the legacy system.

      The block is ALWAYS people when it comes to implementing technological upgrades within corporations. It's rarely the technology. Technology is easy to replace/toss out and re-implement. People are much harder to organize and manage than technology.

      Oh... and is Google not a "real corporation" now? I am surprised by that statement. They are definitely young relative to corporations from the 18th century that may still exist, but they are not new kids on the block in their field. In addition, I would suspect their network and their tech footprint greatly exceeds that of the average "real corporation", and encompasses a lot more than what a company who doesn't specialize in online information indexing / data mining would need.

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    8. Re:easy? by TheLink · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem doesn't go away for FOSS.

      Once you have a big system, it's YOUR SYSTEM itself that is the biggest "problem" for you. Not whether it's on OSS.

      For example, say some years ago someone built a huge complex system that somehow was reliant on MySQL 3.x (because it appeared to be the least bad choice at that time - e.g. postgres95 was too slow, Oracle = $$$$$, etc).

      Now the system works, with known bugs and known workarounds, and worse, with lots of stuff that's custom made to deal with the deficiencies and bugs of MySQL 3.

      As a result, it is going to cost a lot to migrate the system to a more recent version of MySQL, or some other DB. Development, testing, extra hardware, time, lost productivity.

      Analogy: if you only build a small hut on top of FOSS, moving it to something else is a small problem. That changes once you build a big factory on it.

      If the company hasn't budgeted for the cost of upgrading, then it's stuck with the old software.

      There's plenty of FOSS out there that has a poor record for backward compatibility, and poor support for old versions.

      Yes the upgrades might be free, but you can't use them till you figure out what you have to change in your million-lines-of-code system.

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  3. Not easy, and not the core problem by mgkimsal2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Define 'small team' - 5 people? 200? What's a 'small team' at Google?

    The fact that Google makes such a big deal about only hiring the best and brightest and PhDs and such also indicates this isn't 'easy'. If it took a team of people who are regarded to be the best and brightest in their industry, with numerous PhDs on the team (or at least at their disposal on campus) *18 months* to do something (even part time) that still means that this is going to be a bigger issue for most companies.

    Consider that the bulk of Google's apps that would need to be 'converted' have been written in the past 3-4 years (docs, maps, earth, etc.), and likely were written by people who put modularity and efficiency much higher than the average developer does (or is allowed to, in many cases) and you'll conclude that average developers who've inherited undocumented legacy code from previous average developers will have a much harder time than expected.

    The core problem (as someone else pointed out) is consumer-level adoption - ISPs, routers, etc. It's somewhat chicken and egg, and perhaps having Google announce 100% support for it, this will give other players in the field the encouragement to put more effort in to transitioning over.

    Lastly, why didn't Google (of all companies) bake IPv6 in to these main apps when they were first written?

  4. Re:Yep.. by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect that having a comparatively short history, and thus not much legacy software(and little of that from third parties) probably makes life very much easier.