World IPv6 Day: Most-watched Tech Event Since Y2K
alphadogg wrote in with a fairly extreme bit of hyperbole saying "The nation's largest telecom carriers, content providers, hardware suppliers and software vendors will be on the edge of their seats today for World IPv6 Day, which is the most-anticipated 24 hours the tech industry has seen since fears of the Y2K bug dominated New Year's Eve in 1999. More than 400 organizations are participating in World IPv6 Day, a large-scale experiment aimed at identifying problems associated with IPv6, an upgrade to the Internet's main communications protocol, IPv4. Sponsored by the Internet Society, World IPv6 Day runs from 8 p.m. EST Tuesday until 7:59 p.m. EST Wednesday. The IT departments in the participating organizations have spent the last five months preparing their websites for an anticipated rise in IPv6-based traffic, more tech support calls and possible hacking attacks prompted by this largest-ever trial of IPv6."
I haven't gotten much use my well-stocked bomb shelter since Y2K. Sure, religious types keep predicting the end of the world, and guessing wrong every time. And bad predictions aren't going to justify the money I've put into this goddamn thing. Did you know that a generator's gaskets will dry-rot over time, even if you don't use it? Well guess what, they will--and that shit is expensive to fix too.
Man, if only we could have one nuclear war. Then the neighbors might finally stop laughing at me.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Big names like Google are:
But one tech website you'd expect to want to dabble in the new and good for some reason isn't:
Well, of course!
You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
This event had been very unpublicized for this to be the most-anticipated 24 hours in tech industry for the last 10 years.
I was happy to see xkcd, Google, Yahoo, Facebook, and Plurk turn on their IPv6 capabilities, but I was quite sad that Slashdot didn't take part in the World IPv6 Day.
The only reason why Y2K /wasn't/ a disaster was because people worked their asses off for it to not happen.
Idiots everywhere...
--
BMO
I had calls getting dropped every 5 minutes or so last night. Then again, Skype's entire network seems to go down on occasion, so perhaps an IPv6 test is an unlikely cause.
But, I'm safely small enough that my ISP is just starting to talk about offering an IPv6 trial in a city far far away. I'm signed up for them to let me know in 4 years that IPv6 is available for testing...
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
to IPv5?
That's my question.
- Spryguy
There are three kinds of people in this world: those that can count and those that can't
I've seen a few already today!
www.facebook.com has IPv6 address 2620:0:1c18:0:face:b00c::
cisco.v6day.akadns.net has IPv6 address 2001:420:80:1:c:15c0:d06:f00d
www.luns.net.uk has IPv6 address 2a01:8900:0:1::b00b:1e5
www.bbc.net.uk has IPv6 address 2001:4b10:bbc::1
Does v6 kick off 'IP addresses as a marketing tool'? :)
I agree a lot of people worked very hard. But another very important factor that I feel is under-appreciated is that problem wasn't really as dire as the mainstream was lead to believe it was.
At the time, I was working for an air carrier. Passengers can book a flight 330 days in advance and past flights are kept for 30 days. The interface with the reservation system uses month and day. This led to my mantra, "You can't have a Y2K problem if you don't have a Y."
This is a boring sig
So all this proves is these sites are capable of running both protocols simultaneously and while there is a DNS record that resolves to an ipv6 address, is anybody able to browse to these sites using ipv6 all the way through?
4,294,967,296 should be enough addresses for any internet
With Google pushing this so hard, why didn't they change the logo? They should have had one for the IPv6 crowd different from the IPv4....
Get your timezone right, it is currently EDT.
I'm pretty sure the PSN outage was way more watched.
Im not sure about this because i havent been keeping tab... but i thought widespread nat'ing pushed ipv6 the way ofnthe dodo
I think arin needs to be a little less lax about their assignments btw.. you can get a /20 with two linksys routers and an ipad these days..
------------
Sase
"It's the opposite of that."
is already started. Look at Facebooks IPV6 address closely...
snark@toluene:~$ host www.facebook.com
www.facebook.com has address 69.171.224.39
www.facebook.com has IPv6 address 2620:0:1c00:0:face:b00c::
I work at a sort of small ISP and we've done testing, implementation, published our website with an AAAA record and put some information on the site for everyone to see.
We've gotten exactly one call (this morning) on IPv6 that I can remember. We published information and started doing some obvious IPv6 things, but no one cares. The group of dual-stack test accounts is pretty small, but they have not even seemed to care or notice. I'd put anyone that asks on a list for testing so they can use IPv6 at home. No one has asked. I guess I could put a big(er) banner on the page.. but really I don't think it would matter much.. and probably scare people.
All in all I will say the experience has been pretty anti-climatic. It was not that difficult to implement. There were bugs of course, (Fedora 13+14 blocking DHCPv6 client traffic, and other NetworkManager bugs) the Cisco CMTS and it's weird detection of static IPv4 only clients... duplicate address detection madness, incomplete support of DHCPv6 + SLAAC in routers (D-Link DIR-615..) but it was just me working on it and I did not have that difficult a time getting our network to route, connect and answer to IPv6. Most of the problems I dealt with were incomparable hardware. Routers and DOCSIS 2.0 + IPv6 modems which are pretty much non existent with the exception of one EMTA I've tested. You have to shell out the bucks for a DOCSIS 3.0 modem evidentially.
Of the D-Link routers I've tested the DIR-825 is the star. It was dead easy to configure. DD-WRT and Open-WRT are not easy and probably there is no build for your router if it only has 4Mb of flash.
7 Billion people on the planet... While many today do not have Internet connectivity, that's changing rapidly where some regions are skipping the copper deployment for end users and going directly to deployment of wireless infrastructure. In more established economies, it is not uncommon to have 1 IP address in use at home for broadband, one in the office, one on your mobile device, etc. 4 or 5 IP's per person, 7 Billion people = 40 or 50 Bill IP addresses would be helpful, and this doesn't even count servers in data centers, virtual machines, clouds, etc. 4.3 billion is looking very tight even with just today's applications.
...still have no IPv6 addresses on their main websites.
marvin:~ mbradbury$ host www.ibm.com
www.ibm.com is an alias for www.ibm.com.cs186.net.
www.ibm.com.cs186.net has address 129.42.58.216
marvin:~ mab$ ping6 www.dnsfailover.info
PING6(56=40+8+8 bytes) 2001:44b8:7871:7f0:72cd:60ff:fef2:dd04 --> 2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe93:b4b3
16 bytes from 2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe93:b4b3, icmp_seq=0 hlim=246 time=279.777 ms
16 bytes from 2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe93:b4b3, icmp_seq=1 hlim=246 time=279.627 ms
16 bytes from 2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe93:b4b3, icmp_seq=2 hlim=246 time=279.547 ms
16 bytes from 2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe93:b4b3, icmp_seq=3 hlim=246 time=278.873 ms
^C
--- www.dnsfailover.info ping6 statistics ---
4 packets transmitted, 4 packets received, 0.0% packet loss
round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 278.873/279.456/279.777/0.347 ms
... owing to the test site being accessible only by means of a long and winding tunnel housing an 8ft gauge railway on which massively long engines haul tiny carriages.
Sponsored by the Internet Society, World IPv6 Day runs from 8 p.m. EST Tuesday until 7:59 p.m. EST Wednesday.
Hrm. Why note the start and end times in Eastern Standard Time when the entirety of the eastern time zone is using Eastern Daylight time?
~$ wget www.dnshat.com
--2011-06-08 11:54:17-- http://www.dnshat.com/
Resolving www.dnshat.com... 2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe93:b4b3, 173.230.158.14
Connecting to www.dnshat.com|2600:3c01::f03c:91ff:fe93:b4b3|:80... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Hey NetworkWorld, way to advertise that you're on the east coast of the US. Want to re-state that time-range in GMT now, so it actually makes sense?
I have a host on dyndns.org and up until yesterday, the AAAA record came back, but today it says there is no AAAA record, even though it is still configured in my account on their site.
Anyone else found this problem today?
Have Google modify their page rank algorithm to give any website accessible through IPV6 a slight boost. The power they hold over website revenues is so huge the SEO industry would go nuts over this and you'll see adoption rates explode.
Open Source Time and Attendance, Job Costing a
Some participants need to grow a clue by not activly working to turn IPv6 day into disaster day... Please add more...
1. Microsoft has a patch that demotes IPv6 access for one day only. Not only does this throw a wrench in the worlds ability to gauge problems but it does nothing to solve the end users issue. Paradoxically simply disabling IPv6 is much better at this point as not breaking IPv4 is much more important to the forward progress of IPv6 deployment than a few end-users who can enable IPv6 later when they can get their issues fixed.
2. NIST advertises an AAAA record for www.nist.gov but only the home page is accessable. All other content on the site presents a page not found error. It turns out this was not a mistake... Quoting via cut and paste... "Note: This top level web page has been setup to test IPv6 capabilities and to participate in World IPv6 Day on June 8, 2011. This IPv6 web page will be disabled after the end of World IPv6 Day. Links on this page do not work. This is a copy of the NIST website, www.nist.gov, and is only reachable using the IPv6 network protocol. To access the entire NIST website, you must use the IPv4 network protocol"
So you want to participate in IPv6 day in order to insure its failure. If you want the first page to be IPv6 reachable fine d00d...but don't break your site.. a global search and replace for hyperlinks to the IPv4 URL or simply including a fricking hyperlink to the IPv4 version... A lot of people will not even know they are using IPv6 or how to disable it or what you are even fricking talking about. How a webmaster can be so fricking clueless is beyond anything I'm capable of comprehending. It is the government so there is that.
3. For about half of IPv6 day level 3 was also advertising an AAAA record. Going to www.level3.com resulted in 404 not found. The entire site was down for anyone with IPv6. I can't believe a huge telecom could be so clueless.
[Disclaimer: I am a pfSense developer, so I'm a bit biased. For those of you who don't know what pfSense is, it's a BSD-based firewall distribution.]
pfSense 2.0 won't officially support IPv6, but there is a branch available that does IPv6 which will later become 2.1. I'm running it on my home router with a GIF tunnel to Hurricane Electric ( http://he.net/ http://tunnelbroker.net/) to get IPv6 even though my ISPs do not have any native IPv6 support yet. The IPv6 support is a work in progress but is complete enough that it will do what most people want/need.
Instructions for the setup and more info can be found on the pfSense IPv6 board here: http://forum.pfsense.org/index.php/board,52.0.html
I get a 10/10 on the IPv6 tests from http://test-ipv6.com/ on all my PCs as well as my Droid X running 2.3.3. If you're already using pfSense 2.0, give the IPv6 code a try, setup a tunnel to he.net, and enjoy. Doesn't take too long at all to setup.
Why not leave the IPv6 support on? Is there some reason the IPv6 support developed and enabled for World IPv6 Day needs to be disabled tomorrow?
n/t
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
$ host -t mx gmail.com ...etc
gmail.com mail is handled by 5 gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com.
gmail.com mail is handled by 10 alt1.gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com.
gmail.com mail is handled by 20 alt2.gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com.
gmail.com mail is handled by 30 alt3.gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com.
gmail.com mail is handled by 40 alt4.gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com.
$ host gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com.
gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com has address 72.14.213.27$ host -t mx cisco.com
cisco.com mail is handled by 10 sj-inbound-a.cisco.com.
cisco.com mail is handled by 10 sj-inbound-b.cisco.com.
cisco.com mail is handled by 10 sj-inbound-c.cisco.com.
cisco.com mail is handled by 10 sj-inbound-d.cisco.com.
cisco.com mail is handled by 10 sj-inbound-e.cisco.com.
cisco.com mail is handled by 10 sj-inbound-f.cisco.com.
cisco.com mail is handled by 15 rtp-mx-01.cisco.com.
cisco.com mail is handled by 20 ams-inbound-a.cisco.com.
$ host sj-inbound-a.cisco.com
sj-inbound-a.cisco.com has address 128.107.234.204
$
Google will not make changes to pagerank that are not specifically about improving the quality of search results.
This has been thought of before. :-)
There are relatively few control characters in Unicode. It'd make far more sense to use a blacklist.
For one thing, a new version of Unicode may add more control characters. For another, a lot of characters are more useful for sneaking "ASCII art" (pardon the misnomer) pass the existing lameness filters than for conveying meaning that most readers of Slashdot comments would understand.
If I was an IPV6 only user, I would want IPV6 pages to rank higher than IPV4 pages which I wouldn't be able to access anyway.
Though, Google may already be doing that...
Open Source Time and Attendance, Job Costing a
Y2K was definitely overblown by the mainstream media. I knew many people who were scared their car wouldn't start on Jan. 1, 2000.
Life has many choices. Eternity has two. What's yours?
I reckon if you were an IPv6 only user, what you'd want to see is a list of pages you can access, and not ones you can't. That's a matter of filtering for the user, not sorting for relevance to the search query. And that assumes the existence of an IPv6 only user with *no* access of any kind to the IPv4 internet. We've a long distance to go before we start seeing those in the wild, outside of labs.
I think we need to face it that we can't expect Google to damage their core product by introducing changes like this for even the best of technical intentions. There isn't any "How to get IPv6 adoption in months not years." There's a lot of work to be done in crafting proper plans with realistic costs and benefits that can be understood by the people who are going to approve the money. We can do little things here and there, but we can't short-circut that process on an industry-wide basis.
It sounds daunting, but it's doable if we chew one bite's worth at a time. What's happening today is going to contribute to that for the content providers, by quantifying something that was previously uncertain: just how big is the impact on existing users if you dual stack. If the day turns out to be so successful that some big sites dual stack permanently - as such experiments in the past have done - then that contributes to the case for the rest of us, because finally there will be some real content out there that will use the stuff we're paying for.
The funny thing is that Linux just works - it picks up IPv6 from the DHCP server, and Firefox and Google Chrome just chose the right protocol (although I still think that IPv4 should be the default - at least for now). At home I need to use a tunnel - neither the router nor the ISP provide native support for IPv6, but again it just works.
Windows XP (we skipped Vista, and 7 is still being rolled out) however is unable to deal with IPv6 correctly. In a year that problem should be history for us, but I am sure many many companies have the same issue with Windows. Until Windows XP is truly dead, IPv6 will remain a niche protocol.
No, not all of them do. But all of the Eastern Time portion of the US does (since 2005, even including Indiana). It's sort of irrelevant to this discussion what Arizona does with respect to daylight time.
Well, Google already alters the sort order depending on where you are. No principal difference to sorting it according to accessibility on your part.
Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
The only reason why Y2K /wasn't/ a disaster was because people worked their asses off for it to not happen.
Where "people" is defined as "Cobol programmers". ;-)
There were any number of analyses (before and after 2000-1-1) that concluded that around 99.5% of the actual Y2K problems were in vintage Cobol code. There were any number of jokes created based on this curious fact. But in other languages, date handling was long-since packaged in library routines, so a single upgrade could fix all their potential problems without the developers even being aware that there had been a problem. I work in several languages, and I was unable to find any Y2K problems in any of the code I was working with.
Cobol, on the other hand ... I recall reading one "study" of one company's code, in which the writer said that when his count of different date formats in the database passed 180, he decided he understood why there was a problem. And he understood why no centralized solution was possible; he and his buddies just had to hunt down every single date manipulation, figure out what sort of hokey calculations it was doing, and in most cases, fix it. In many cases, there weren't enough spare bytes in the fixed-field-width DB records to fix it without finding and rewriting every line of code in every program that accessed such fields.
And many people pointed out that the Cobol language wasn't the problem. The problem was the Cobol programmer community, which has long had such practices that should qualify them for a diagnosis of legal insanity and institutionalization at the expense of their employers that encouraged and rewarded such behavior. Nobody seems to have found any other programming community that did things this insane. There is a conjecture that this is because Cobol was almost strictly a "business" programming language, and in a business setting, dealing with anything that's more than a year in the future is generally considered irresponsible and grounds for firing. But anything that will produce a short-term saving, such as saving a byte of disk space per record by using a compact date/time format is strongly approved. And this is the main thought process that led to Y2K problems.
Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
at least now I won't dial my IP addy instead of my phone number...
Obviously there were a lot of critical systems that had to be fixed and a lot of people that worked very, very hard to fix them. That's not what we're talking about. The point is that so was everything else, every insignificant little auxiliary system had been given the full testing and overhaul. The press was running around like crazy on the 1/1/2000 trying to find stuff that didn't work and practically came up empty.
I've seen bog standard OS upgrades go less smooth than y2k, simply because you hadn't done that much dry-run testing on every weird hardware/software/test case combination out there. It's sorta expected you have tested the 99% critical and no-so-critical things and work out the 1% kinks afterwards, but through the whole "the sky is falling" attitude y2k was tested to 99.99999% or there abouts. Great in ensuring it all went silky smooth, but just maybe quite a bit of overkill. Both in that many spent ungodly amounts on excessive and very expensive y2k compliance and consulting services and that many stuffed the great y2k budgets with other things.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
( Here's an example of lessons learned - this message from Facebook Engineering http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=10150198443513920 )
World IPv6 Day came to an end earlier today. We successfully enabled IPv6 on our site for 24 hours, with great results. We saw over 1 million users reach us over IPv6.
We’re pleased that we did not see any increase in the number of users seeking help from our Help Center. The estimated 0.03% of users who may have been affected would have experienced slow page loads during the test.
Based on the encouraging results, we’ve decided to leave our Developer site dual-stacked, supporting both IPv4 and IPv6. And we will continue to adapt our entire code base and tools to support IPv6.
We are glad to have joined with the Internet Society, major Web companies, and other industry players to enable IPv6 for this test day. It was a great opportunity to test our infrastructure and IPv6 readiness.
IPv6 is vital to the continued growth of the Internet, and World IPv6 Day was a great step in the advancement of the protocol. We hope the overall success of the 24 hour test will encourage others in the industry to establish reliable IPv6 connectivity and develop robust IPv6 products.
Note, I am no expert, but..
Re Wireless routers: They would be treated as any other routers. I.e, either they are brigding, in the which case they just forward to/from some other router, or they are a router unto itself and broadcast a proper (probably /64) network.
Access points: There is no change here, except that they have real, globally routable addresses
Assignment of IPs. I'm not sure I understand the question. Perhaps the answer is that you can have several IP addresses on one network device.
Re rollover: You don't get to keep your address. Just change your DNS entries already -- this will be the big pain. You don't have to remap your internal network, as they will just pick up the new network prefix from the router advertisments.
Phones: That is outside what I know about. Perhaps there is a mobile IPv6 answer somewhere.
There is, I believe, no broadcast address in IPv6, and I never did figure out what the network addresses were about in IPv4. So I guess I am not helping.
Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.
I'd guess public ones, probably one per VM.
You seem to be very fond of private IP addresses. Really, with IPv6, there is little need for such.
Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by rulers as useful.