Showing posts with label World IPv6 Launch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label World IPv6 Launch. Show all posts

Friday, January 17, 2014

World IPv6 Launch Measurements

From the Internet Society's most recent (January 16th 2014) round of IPv6 measurements, here again are the top 100 lists ranked by the two measures of (1) percentage of requests that used IPv6, and (2) total volume of IPv6 requests.

My past articles on this topic:
  * Measurements from December 12th 2013
  * Measurements from  September 17th 2013
  * Measurements from June 6th 2012

ISOC's blog post highlights that Deutsche Telekom, a large German telecommunications carrier, (of which T-Mobile US is a subsidiary*) has been experiencing very substantial IPv6 traffic growth. They've reached a figure of 15.5% of requests composed of IPv6 (to the select set of content providers providing measurement data). In terms of total volume of IPv6 requests, they are in 6th place behind five other large ISPs (See the second ranked list below). Comcast still leads the pack, followed by AT&T, KDDI, Free, and Verizon Wireless.

(*Note: T-Mobile's traffic is counted separately in the measurements from Deutsche Telekom)

Interestingly, while Verizon Wireless has a substantial IPv6 deployment, Verizon FIOS (their fiber-optic landline network) has made no visible progress in IPv6 deployment. Although many people, myself included, have noted this lack of deployment over the years, they were just recently taken sharply to task by folks on the NANOG (North American Network Operators Group) mailing list.

Looking at the rankings by proportion of IPv6 requests from each network, there is a new entry at the top - NYSERNet (a regional R&E network in New York State), coming in at a staggering 99.95%. On the Internet2 IPv6 working group list, I asked Bill Owens of NYSERNet if he wanted to comment. He claims that we shouldn't be too impressed because this is just the small NYSERNet office network and the backbone, with a relatively small population of clients. Regardless, I think it's a noteworthy achievement. As I've mentioned before, a number of universities and other educational organizations still show up prominently in this ranking. Two small american colleges, Gustavus Adolphus in Minnesota at 74.22% and Marist College in upstate New York at 65.77%! And Panamerican University, in Mexico City is at 66.22%.

Penn is slowly inching up at 45%. We'll have IPv6 deployed more extensively on our wireless network pretty soon, at which point I expect our numbers to go up noticeably.


World IPv6 Launch Measurements, by % IPv6 requests:
---------------------------------------------------

   1 NYSERNet 99.95%
   2 SpeedPartner GmbH 95.83%
   3 TOP-IX Consortium 86.99%
   4 Fundacao Parque Tecnologico Itaipu - Brasil 79.92%
   5 DirectVPS 78.63%
   6 interscholz Internet Services GmbH & Co. KG 75.49%
   7 Gustavus Adolphus College 74.22%
   8 Google Fiber 71.87%
   9 Universidad Panamericana 66.22%
  10 Marist College 65.77%
  11 University of Vermont 65.13%
  12 Virginia Tech 65.11%
  13 mur.at - Verein zur Frderung von Netzkwerkkunst 64.97%
  14 Association tetaneutral.net 55.67%
  15 Utility Line Italia srl 53.40%
  16 ThaiSarn 53.23%
  17 DegNet GmbH 52.84%
  18 Trunk Networks Limited 52.60%
  19 Ji?? ?trohalm 52.20%
  20 Alhambra Eidos 52.12%
  21 Louisiana State University 51.93%
  22 Ponto de Presen?a da RNP na Bahia 51.30%
  23 SuperInternet Access Pte Ltd 50.45%
  24 University of New Hampshire 50.44%
  25 Region 7 ESC 50.24%
  26 PREGINET 50.20%
  27 CICA/Junta de Andaluc?a 50.05%
  28 Tanzania Network Information Center 50.00%
  29 Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) 49.03%
  30 Maxiweb Internet Provider 48.76%
  31 Critical Colocation 48.23%
  32 University of Pennsylvania 45.38%
  33 SPAWAR 44.15%
  34 AMS-IX 42.99%
  35 University of Iowa 42.81%
  36 Kasetsart University 41.99%
  37 DreamHost 41.79%
  38 University of Minnesota 40.80%
  39 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 40.74%
  40 Bulgaria NREN 40.57%
  41 Verizon Wireless 40.03%
  42 CZ.NIC 39.02%
  43 guifi.net 37.86%
  44 Hughes Network Systems 35.60%
  45 Sauk Valley Community College 35.52%
  46 Tulane University 34.96%
  47 Free 34.28%
  48 ARNES 33.73%
  49 Greek Research & Technology Network 33.14%
  50 Leibniz Supercomputing Centre 32.71%
  51 Host Virtual, Inc 31.74%
  52 Netwerkvereniging Coloclue 28.41%
  53 Opera Software ASA 27.54%
  54 UNESP 27.26%
  55 UNINETT 27.13%
  56 FCCN 26.00%
  57 VOO 24.12%
  58 RCS & RDS 23.80%
  59 mc.net 23.37%
  60 UFSCar 22.96%
  61 EPT Luxembourg 22.43%
  62 FranTech Solutions 22.03%
  63 AAISP 21.22%
  64 Comcast 20.61%
  65 Chubu Telecommunications 18.90%
  66 Swisscom 18.66%
  67 XS4ALL 17.66%
  68 UFSC - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina - Brazil 17.50%
  69 LENTEL 16.73%
  70 StarHub 16.28%
  71 Deutsche Telekom AG 15.50%
  72 NIIF/Hungarnet 14.56%
  73 LITNET 14.50%
  74 Red Acad?mica de Centros de Investigaci?n y Universidades Nacionales REACCIUN 13.85%
  75 Indiana University 13.68%
  76 ATT 13.53%
  77 SARENET 13.13%
  78 DMZGlobal 12.97%
  79 NetAssist 12.89%
  80 Academia Sinica Network 12.14%
  81 Cisco 11.95%
  82 Solcon 11.46%
  83 CESNET 11.04%
  84 Funet 10.94%
  85 PT. Wifian Solution 10.19%
  86 FidoNet 10.12%
  87 prgmr.com 9.89%
  88 T-Mobile USA 9.58%
  89 Monash University 9.28%
  90 OVH 9.26%
  91 KDDI 8.94%
  92 Spectrum Networks 8.30%
  93 AMRES - Serbian National Research and Education Network 7.84%
  94 Belnet 7.65%
  95 SWITCH 7.62%
  96 Hurricane Electric 7.58%
  97 M1 Limited 7.22%
  98 RedIRIS 6.96%
  99 Init7 6.93%
 100 CJSC Progressive Technologies 6.71%


World IPv6 Launch Measurements, by volume of IPv6:
--------------------------------------------------


   1 Comcast 20.61%
   2 ATT 13.53%
   3 KDDI 8.94%
   4 Free 34.28%
   5 Verizon Wireless 40.03%
   6 Deutsche Telekom AG 15.50%
   7 Time Warner Cable 3.88%
   8 RCS & RDS 23.80%
   9 Liberty Global 2.43%
  10 Swisscom 18.66%
  11 Telefonica del Peru 4.60%
  12 Hughes Network Systems 35.60%
  13 SoftBank BB 1.46%
  14 Chubu Telecommunications 18.90%
  15 Opera Software ASA 27.54%
  16 VOO 24.12%
  17 XS4ALL 17.66%
  18 StarHub 16.28%
  19 T-Mobile USA 9.58%
  20 Google Fiber 71.87%
  21 China Telecom 0.23%
  22 Forthnet 2.79%
  23 M1 Limited 7.22%
  24 Internode 3.94%
  25 EPT Luxembourg 22.43%
  26 Janet 3.81%
  27 its communications Inc.(iTSCOM) 2.64%
  28 CESNET 11.04%
  29 MediaCat Div./Community Netowork Center Inc. 6.58%
  30 Kasetsart University 41.99%
  31 NTT Communications 4.51%
  32 Belnet 7.65%
  33 ARNES 33.73%
  34 Leibniz Supercomputing Centre 32.71%
  35 LITNET 14.50%
  36 NIIF/Hungarnet 14.56%
  37 OVH 9.26%
  38 Cisco 11.95%
  39 BelWue 5.71%
  40 FCCN 26.00%
  41 UNINETT 27.13%
  42 Altibox AS 0.90%
  43 Monash University 9.28%
  44 SWITCH 7.62%
  45 TUBITAK ULAKBIM / ULAKNET 1.50%
  46 Australian Academic and Research Network (AARNet) 2.00%
  47 Indiana University 13.68%
  48 University of Minnesota 40.80%
  49 AAISP 21.22%
  50 UniNet 3.36%
  51 Xfone 018 0.96%
  52 Ji?? ?trohalm 52.20%
  53 Voxel / Internap 3.51%
  54 GITN Sdn Berhad 2.69%
  55 Louisiana State University 51.93%
  56 University of Pennsylvania 45.38%
  57 SuperCSI 1.69%
  58 JARING Communications Sdn Bhd 0.38%
  59 Solcon 11.46%
  60 CJSC Progressive Technologies 6.71%
  61 Starlink 1.88%
  62 inexio KGaA 2.44%
  63 Virginia Tech 65.11%
  64 green.ch AG 3.26%
  65 Hurricane Electric 7.58%
  66 Dhiraagu 0.60%
  67 Gustavus Adolphus College 74.22%
  68 LENTEL 16.73%
  69 DMZGlobal 12.97%
  70 DegNet GmbH 52.84%
  71 RedIRIS 6.96%
  72 Academia Sinica Network 12.14%
  73 GlobalConnect 1.44%
  74 University of Iowa 42.81%
  75 Funet 10.94%
  76 University of Wisconsin - Madison 6.16%
  77 Storm Internet 3.76%
  78 AMRES - Serbian National Research and Education Network 7.84%
  79 National Informatics Centre 2.32%
  80 SoftLayer Technologies 0.84%
  81 RENATER 4.57%
  82 Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) 49.03%
  83 guifi.net 37.86%
  84 Init7 6.93%
  85 Host Virtual, Inc 31.74%
  86 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 40.74%
  87 Choopa, LLC 0.55%
  88 NetAssist 12.89%
  89 Tulane University 34.96%
  90 DreamHost 41.79%
  91 Bulgaria NREN 40.57%
  92 FranTech Solutions 22.03%
  93 Greek Student Network 0.47%
  94 RESTENA 5.33%
  95 UNESP 27.26%
  96 iway AG 4.06%
  97 FX Networks 0.49%
  98 Tanzania Network Information Center 50.00%
  99 edpnet 1.11%
 100 ADDIX Internet Services 3.05%


Thursday, December 19, 2013

World IPv6 Launch Measurements

The Internet Society has posted their latest IPv6 measurements (December 12th 2013). Read the section titled "Notes on network operator measurements" to understand how the measurements are being made and which content providers (Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, Akamai) are providing the data.

I've pulled out some of the data, and put together ranked (top 100) lists of networks by two measures: (1) percentage of requests that used IPv6, and (2) total volume of IPv6 requests. As I've done a few times in the past, I'm going to continue periodically writing these entries to have a snapshots in time of IPv6 deployment progress.

Many networks are posting some pretty impressive numbers for IPv6 usage. For the leading network in the %v6 category (the 1st list below), TOP-IX Consortium, an Italian Internet Exchange point has 86% of their requests to the participating content providers using IPv6! Several universities in the US R&E community are doing well too, Gustavus Adolphus College at 74%, Virginia Tech at 62%, University of New Hampshire at 51% among them. The University of Pennsylvania (my own institution) is posting a respectable 40% - we'll have IPv6 fully deployed on our wireless network in early 2014, at which time our numbers should go up substantially. There's an interesting story about why Penn hasn't had IPv6 on its wireless network for so long - I'm planning to write a separate article on that topic in the near future.

In the total volume category (the 2nd list below) Comcast now leads. John Brzozowski, Comcast's chief IPv6 architect, has written a more detailed article on their leadership position in IPv6 deployment. They are followed by several other ISPs: AT&T (US), KDDI (Japan), Free (France), Verizon Wireless, (US) Deutsche Telekom (Germany), RCS & RDS (Romania), Time Warner Cable (US).


World IPv6 Launch Measurements, by % IPv6 requests:
---------------------------------------------------

   1 TOP-IX Consortium    86.27%
   2 Fundacao Parque Tecnologico Itaipu - Brasil    79.65%
   3 DirectVPS         77.66%
   4 ThaiSarn         76.62%
   5 Gustavus Adolphus College   17234    74.17%
   6 Google Fiber      70.22%
   7 Universidad Panamericana    13679    66.84%
   8 mur.at - Verein zur Frderung von Netzkwerkkunst    66.73%
   9 interscholz Internet Services GmbH & Co. KG     66.20%
  10 Virginia Tech     61.69%
  11 Trunk Networks Limited     56.99%
  12 Association tetaneutral.net    56.41%
  13 DegNet GmbH     51.91%
  14 Ponto de PresenC'a da RNP na Bahia     51.75%
  15 Critical Colocation   51.38%
  16 Jiri strohalm    51.29%
  17 SPAWAR     51.12%
  18 ITsjefen AS     51.08%
  19 SuperInternet Access Pte Ltd     50.88%
  20 University of New Hampshire     50.57%
  21 AIMES Grid Services CIC     50.38%
  22 Region 7 ESC     50.27%
  23 PREGINET 50.24%
  24 Maxiweb Internet Provider    50.20%
  25 CICA/Junta de AndalucC-a    50.04%
  26 DreamHost    49.41%
  27 Alhambra Eidos    49.32%
  28 Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)    48.85%
  29 Sauk Valley Community College     46.13%
  30 University of Minnesota           45.87%
  31 Marist College     45.83%
  32 AMS-IX     44.09%
  33 University of Iowa     42.90%
  34 Kasetsart University     41.31%
  35 Verizon Wireless     40.40%
  36 University of Pennsylvania     40.06%
  37 Bulgaria NREN     38.74%
  38 guifi.net     38.69%
  39 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute    37.91%
  40 Louisiana State University     35.74%
  41 Leibniz Supercomputing Centre     35.17%
  42 Netwerkvereniging Coloclue     32.66%
  43 Free       31.03%
  44 UNESP       30.15%
  45 NetAssist       29.72%
  46 ARNES       28.98%
  47 Tulane University     28.88%
  48 Utility Line Italia srl     28.19%
  49 Host Virtual, Inc     27.79%
  50 Hughes Network Systems     27.28%
  51 FCCN   26.96%
  52 UFSCar     26.36%
  53 VOO     25.94%
  54 Opera Software ASA     25.69%
  55 Greek Research & Technology Network    24.94%
  56 UNINETT        24.58%
  57 LENTEL         23.48%
  58 Chubu Telecommunications    22.76%
  59 RCS & RDS     22.01%
  60 mc.net     20.20%
  61 Comcast    20.15%
  62 Monash University     19.82%
  63 Swisscom     19.64%
  64 UFSC - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina - Brazil    19.25%
  65 XS4ALL 18.52%
  66 AAISP  18.13%
  67 SIDN   17.11%
  68 EPT Luxembourg    16.72%
  69 manitu GmbH    15.88%
  70 VentraIP Group (Australia) Pty Ltd    15.73%
  71 LITNET   15.09%
  72 Hurricane Electric    14.88%
  73 ATT     14.82%
  74 NIIF/Hungarnet    14.43%
  75 Funet        12.60%
  76 CESNET        12.33%
  77 Deutsche Telekom AG    12.28%
  78 Indiana University        12.14%
  79 OVH           11.63%
  80 FranTech Solutions    10.98%
  81 Red Academica de Centros de InvestigaciC3n y Universidades Nacionales REACCIUN    10.95%
  82 UniNet       10.48%
  83 Host.MD      10.35%
  84 Belnet       9.73%
  85 Cisco       9.70%
  86 CJSC Progressive Technologies    9.65%
  87 KDDI     8.87%
  88 Academia Sinica Network     8.22%
  89 SARENET  8.01%
  90 DMZGlobal     7.99%
  91 SWITCH     7.86%
  92 Init7     7.70%
  93 MediaCat Div./Community Netowork Center Inc.    7.52%
  94 AMRES - Serbian National Research and Education Network    7.10%
  95 RedIRIS      6.74%
  96 T-Mobile USA      6.49%
  97 Voxel / Internap     6.48%
  98 Defense Research and Engineering Network    6.41%
  99 prgmr.com      6.35%
 100 M1 Limited      6.29%


World IPv6 Launch Measurements, by volume of IPv6:
--------------------------------------------------

   1 Comcast    20.15%
   2 ATT    14.82%
   3 KDDI    8.87%
   4 Free     31.03%
   5 Verizon Wireless     40.40%
   6 Deutsche Telekom AG    12.28%
   7 RCS & RDS          22.01%
   8 Time Warner Cable     4.07%
   9 Liberty Global    2.52%
  10 Telefonica del Peru    5.14%
  11 Swisscom    19.64%
  12 SoftBank BB     1.65%
  13 Hughes Network Systems     27.28%
  14 Chubu Telecommunications     22.76%
  15 Opera Software ASA     25.69%
  16 VOO   25.94%
  17 XS4ALL     18.52%
  18 China Telecom    0.18%
  19 Janet         4.29%
  20 T-Mobile USA    6.49%
  21 Forthnet         3.35%
  22 StarHub        4.81%
  23 University of Minnesota     45.87%
  24 Indiana University        12.14%
  25 CESNET  12.33%
  26 Google Fiber     70.22%
  27 M1 Limited     6.29%
  28 Virginia Tech    61.69%
  29 Internode        4.53%
  30 FCCN        26.96%
  31 EPT Luxembourg     16.72%
  32 Cisco        9.70%
  33 Belnet        9.73%
  34 Louisiana State University     35.74%
  35 RedIRIS   6.74%
  36 UNINETT   24.58%
  37 Leibniz Supercomputing Centre    35.17%
  38 its communications Inc.(iTSCOM)     3.14%
  39 SWITCH     7.86%
  40 NIIF/Hungarnet     14.43%
  41 ARNES     28.98%
  42 MediaCat Div./Community Netowork Center Inc.    7.52%
  43 BelWue     5.87%
  44 LITNET     15.09%
  45 University of Pennsylvania    40.06%
  46 NTT Communications     4.38%
  47 RENATER     4.10%
  48 Kasetsart University     41.31%
  49 University of Iowa     42.90%
  50 TUBITAK ULAKBIM / ULAKNET     1.29%
  51 OVH     11.63%
  52 Tulane University    28.88%
  53 Monash University     19.82%
  54 UNESP  53166     30.15%
  55 AMRES - Serbian National Research and Education Network    7.10%
  56 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute  37.91%
  57 UFSC - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina - Brazil    19.25%
  58 University of Wisconsin - Madison      4.84%
  59 Gustavus Adolphus College 74.17%
  60 Funet       12.60%
  61 GARR       1.25%
  62 Marist College     45.83%
  63 SPAWAR     51.12%
  64 SURFnet     1.36%
  65 SuperCSI     2.71%
  66 Altibox AS     0.70%
  67 AAISP       18.13%
  68 Australian Academic and Research Network (AARNet)    2.32%
  69 Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)  48.85%
  70 Xfone 018       1.11%
  71 UFSCar       26.36%
  72 Voxel / Internap    6.48%
  73 Solcon         5.12%
  74 UniNet         10.48%
  75 CJSC Progressive Technologies    9.65%
  76 CICA/Junta de AndalucC-a     50.04%
  77 Starlink    1.47%
  78 Hurricane Electric     14.88%
  79 Greek Research & Technology Network     24.94%
  80 Jiri strohalm  51.29%
  81 JARING Communications Sdn Bhd    0.27%
  82 Defense Research and Engineering Network    6.41%
  83 GITN Sdn Berhad  3.11%
  84 Dhiraagu         0.85%
  85 Academia Sinica Network    8.22%
  86 green.ch AG         2.83%
  87 Louisiana Optical Network Initiative    5.04%
  88 LENTEL    23.48%
  89 Fundacao Parque Tecnologico Itaipu - Brasil    79.65%
  90 DegNet GmbH         51.91%
  91 National Informatics Centre    2.19%
  92 guifi.net     38.69%
  93 GlobalConnect     1.54%
  94 The Tertiary Education and Research Network of South Africa (TENET)    1.53%
  95 DMZGlobal      7.99%
  96 Init7      7.70%
  97 SoftLayer Technologies    1.40%
  98 Ponto de PresenC'a da RNP na Bahia    51.75%
  99 Storm Internet    5.40%
 100 inexio KGaA    1.15%


Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Latest World IPv6 Launch Measurements

The Internet Society recently published results of their latest round (September 17th 2013) of IPv6 measurements. The measurement data is provided by Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, and Akamai. From the description on the website: "We present measurements of network operator participants in World IPv6 Launch, based on data received from major website participants, as described in more detail below. We present a simple average of the data received, and list all networks with measurements from at least two sources, with a simple average above 0.1%."

I find it instructive to sort the results by the percentage of requests from each participating network that are composed of IPv6. This is a pretty good indicator of how extensively these networks have deployed IPv6 to their end users.

Note: the measurements are only done for networks that have signed up as participants in World IPv6 Launch. If you've deployed IPv6 to your users, you should consider registering your network to take part in these measurements.

Here's a ranked list of these networks sorted by percentage of IPv6 requests of the total from each.

     1    interscholz Internet Services GmbH & Co. KG    81.22%
     2    Sauk Valley Community College                  71.23%
     3    ThaiSarn                                       69.41%
     4    Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute               61.25%
     5    Virginia Tech                                  59.54%
     6    Universidad de Carabobo                        58.50%
     7    Sistemas Fratec S.A.                           58.19%
     8    Universidad Panamericana                       57.89%
     9    Bayu Krisnawan                                 56.64%
    10    Dedicated Zone Inc                             56.55%
    11    Google Fiber                                   55.64%
    12    REACCIUN                                       52.41%
    13    NETIS TELECOM                                  52.17%
    14    Gustavus Adolphus College                      46.64%
    15    DreamHost                                      46.32%
    16    Alhambra Eidos                                 45.37%
    17    VOO                                            45.32%
    18    SPAWAR                                         45.28%
    19    Greek Research & Technology Network            43.96%
    20    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)        43.51%
    21    AIMES Grid Services CIC                        42.37%
    22    Host Virtual, Inc                              42.24%
    23    ARNES                                          41.90%
    24    FCCN                                           40.95%
    25    Marist College                                 40.89%
    26    guifi.net                                      39.97%
    27    University of Pennsylvania                     38.94%
    28    Zimcom Internet Solutions, Inc                 35.75%
    29    Verizon Wireless                               35.73%
    30    NIIF/Hungarnet                                 29.92%
    31    LITNET                                         29.07%
    32    DirectVPS                                      29.05%
    33    Jiri strohalm                                  28.56%
    34    Hughes Network Systems                         28.00%
    35    DegNet GmbH                                    26.76%
    36    Louisiana State University                     26.61%
    37    University of Minnesota                        26.44%
    38    iway AG                                        25.73%
    39    RedIRIS                                        25.39%
    40    University of Iowa                             22.56%
    41    Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil 22.26%
    42    Cisco                                          22.14%
    43    Monash University                              21.82%
    44    Hurricane Electric                             21.80%
    45    RENATER                                        21.55%
    46    TUBITAK ULAKBIM / ULAKNET                      21.46%
    47    Aristotle University of Thessaloniki           20.89%
    48    DataChambers                                   20.28%
    49    UNESP                                          19.85%
    50    Chubu Telecommunications                       19.06%
    51    Swisscom                                       18.83%
    52    Indiana University                             18.08%
    53    Free                                           18.04%
    54    FranTech Solutions                             17.69%
    55    Tulane University                              17.55%
    56    University of New Hampshire                    17.45%
    57    Leibniz Supercomputing Centre                  16.60%
    58    HEAnet                                         16.59%
    59    US Dept of Transportation                      16.55%
    60    GARR                                           16.27%
    61    XS4ALL                                         16.14%
    62    Defense Research and Engineering Network       15.24%
    63    DMZGlobal                                      14.26%
    64    PCextreme B.V.                                 13.80%
    65    RCS & RDS                                      13.25%
    66    PowerTech Information Systems AS               12.24%
    67    SURFnet                                        12.07%
    68    BIT BV                                         11.93%
    69    ATT                                            11.52%
    70    Academia Sinica Network                        11.34%
    71    Honesty Net Solutions (I) Pvt Ltd               9.85%
    72    UNINETT                                         9.48%
    73    Storm Internet                                  9.25%
    74    CESNET                                          9.18%
    75    University Of Lampung                           9.12%
    76    AAISP                                           8.88%
    77    prgmr.com                                       8.61%
    78    KDDI                                            8.49%
    79    Voxel / Internap                                8.29%
    80    Init7                                           8.19%
    81    AMRES - Serbian National R&E Network            8.06%
    82    Comcast                                         7.95%
    83    CJSC Progressive Technologies                   7.92%
    84    MediaCat Div./Community Network Center Inc.     7.17%
    85    green.ch AG                                     7.02%
    86    StarHub                                         6.68%
    87    OVH                                             6.30%
    88    UniNet                                          6.26%
    89    CORPORACION NACIONAL DE TELECOMUNICACIONES      6.02%
    90    National Technical University of Athens         5.91%
    91    Forthnet                                        5.81%
    92    Deutsche Telekom AG                             5.18%
    93    EPT Luxembourg                                  5.11%
    94    Energy Group Networks                           4.62%
    95    M1 Limited                                      4.56%
    96    Internode                                       4.33%
    97    BelWue                                          4.32%
    98    Quonix Networks                                 4.26%
    99    SMELLY BLACK DOG                                4.22%
   100    LENTEL                                          4.15%

Monday, November 19, 2012

Internet2 IPv6 Panel recap

A few notes from last month's IPv6 deployment panel at the Fall Internet2 Member Meeting in Philadelphia, which I moderated (October 2nd 2012). Watch the entire video of the session (1 hour 15 minutes) for full details.

I opened the session with a brief review of World IPv6 Launch and some its measurement data, and a mention of other IPv6 deployment measurement projects, including the NIST survey of universities.

ARIN - Mark Kosters, CTO

Mark began his presentation by talking about the current state of IPv4 address depletion. ARIN has 2.87 /8 equivalent address blocks left (note: it's down to 2.79 as of Nov 18th). RIPE and APNIC are almost out, below the one /8 threshold at which a real address rationing stage has already begun - they will give out a maximum of only /20 or /22 sized blocks regardless of how much IPv4 address space you really need. With current projections, ARIN is scheduled to exhaust in August 2013, but events could dramatically change the timeline. For example there are some ISPs in the ARIN region that could easily qualify for /9 allocations. ARIN is in phase 2 of a 4-phase runout plan - details can be seen at https://www.arin.net/resources/request/ipv4_countdown.html. Today, 58% of ARIN's membership has only IPv4 address space, 6% has only IPv6, and 36% have both IPv4 and IPv6 space. Legacy address blocks (ie. allocated to organizations prior to ARIN's existence - this is quite common in the US higher ed community) comprise 45% of the ARIN address space.

The second part of Mark's talk was about IPv6 deployment activites at ARIN itself. He went through a short history of their IPv6 implementation, which dates back to 2003, at which time they had a somewhat creaky, segregated (ie. non dualstack) implementation. By 2008 they migrated to a robust dualstack implementation. All ARIN services today are native, dualstack. Meeting networks are a bit more challenging, where they often have to rely on tunnels (due to hotel carrier limitations).

Comcast - John Brzozowski, Chief IPv6 Architect

Comcast now has IPv6 enabled on 50% of their broadband network footprint. However only 2.5% of the customer base is currently dualstack - of these dualstack users about 65% are using a computer directly connected to the cable modem, and 35% have an IPv6 enabled home router to which devices are attached. Comcast expects this ratio will eventually flip over to 80/20 in favor of home routers as it is in IPv4. To date, their focus has been on residential broadband, but they have pilots for business and commercial service. The Comcast metro ethernet service is IPv6 ready and they'd love to have more customers using it. In terms of traffic, Comcast has seen a 375% increase in IPv6 compared to World IPv6 day (June, 2011), with the majority of the increase occurring between January and June 2012, in the run up to World IPv6 Launch. The majority of the traffic is composed of services like Youtube and Netflix. The 2012 Olympics (streamed by Comcast/NBC in the US) had a noticeable impact - about 6% of this traffic to Comcast customers used IPv6. Comcast continues to work on content and services. Xfinity and comcast.net are IPv6 enabled and they use Akamai as a content delivery network.

They've put in place an extensive measurement and metrics platform to proactively detect any adverse affects on customer experience and take action if needed. Comcast sees advantages to IPv6 beyond the usual address space depletion concerns. An example cited was the fact that once they've allocated an IPv6 subnet, they don't have to be concerned about resizing it again, in marked contrast to their IPv4 deployment - this adds up over time to a significant operational benefit.

Marist College - Eric Kenny

Marist College is located in upstate network with 5,500 students on a 180-acre campus with 50 buildings. They started IPv6 deployment in 2010, and by June 2012 the wired network was mostly done. They plan to deploy IPv6 to the wireless network in the winter of 2012. One big item for them was getting provider independent address space from ARIN (mostly internal process issues). They started with a provider allocated block from NySERNET, but eventually got a /48 from ARIN, and are now wondering if they should have applied for a larger block. They also have a native IPv6 BGP peering with their commercial ISP, Lightower, which was described as an interesting experience, since they were their first IPv6 customer. They use stateless address autoconfiguration, and most devices on their network support IPv6. They haven't yet made much progress with IPv6 enabled network services, apart from DNS. At the current time about 4% of the traffic crossing their border is IPv6 - they expect this number to go up considerably after wireless deployment. One of their biggest concerns has been address tracking and accountability. They've developed their own application to track IPv6 address and MAC address associations.

Louisiana State University - Allie Hopkins

Allie focussed more on the application and process side of things. As part of their rollout process, LSU has had a great dialog with the user community, with extensive outreach and communications via message boards and e-mail lists, and close contact with application developers and deployers. And despite a set of issues (described later), they rate their deployment a success and as can be seen from World IPv6 Launch measurements, they generate a substantial amount of traffic. One of the issues they've had is with their DNS based network registration system which was incapable of working properly with IPv6 enabled hosts. Another issue they encountered was connectivity issues between tagged and untagged VLANs on interfaces, due to the Cisco routers using the same IPv6 link local addresses on them - this was fixed by manually configuring unique addresses on the VLAN interfaces. They've also had ongoing issues with being put on Google's AAAA blacklist.They are aware that they have some pockets of poor IPv6 connectivity within their campus network, but so far they've gotten no help from Google about measurement data that could help them more easily track down these cases.

I was scheduled to do a short presentation about IPv6 at Penn, but I decided to skip it (I'll post the slides later) in the interests of providing more time for audience discussion and questions.

Q&A Portion

Richard Machida (U of Alaska) asked if anyone was looking into deploying IPv6-only networks for any purpose. I answered that we've deployed them only in the lab for testing purposes (longer term, we would investigate whether it's possible to run specific applications that may not need IPv4, like VoIP on them). John says Comcast has no IPv6-only networks, but they do have plenty of IPv6-only devices that sit on dual-stack networks.

There was a question about more details of LSU's network registration system (from what I gathered it's a Netreg or Netreg like system), and whether 802.1x based network access control would be a solution (802.1x authentication happens at the link layer and is IP protocol independent). It probably would, but LSU was not quite prepared to deploy it yet.

There was discussion about what folks were doing about measuring IPv4 vs IPv6 traffic. Comcast went into some more detail about their work. I showed some data from Penn, where over the summer we were approaching 11% inbound and 4% outbound traffic composed of IPv6. We've since dropped down substantially, because we had to take IPv6 off the wireless network (I'm planning to write another blog article detailing why, but the quick summary is that deploying v6 broke IP address mobility, and we're working with our wireless equipment vendor on some possible solutions).

Dan Magorian (Johns Hopkins) asked what cable modem data specifications support IPv6 and what is the state of IPv6 support in the currently deployed field. John's answer is that DOCSIS 3, the current spec supports it pretty completely, almost all current equipment implements it, but there are ways to support IPv6 on older specs too.

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Addendum: John B was one of the recipients of the Internet Society's Itojun Service Award recently, and presented at IETF'85, for his "for his tireless efforts in providing IPv6 connectivity to cable broadband users across North America and evangelizing the importance of IPv6 deployment globally". Congratulations John!

Shumon Huque

Sunday, September 16, 2012

IPv6 panel at Internet2 meeting

Penn is co-hosting the Fall 2012 Internet2 Member meeting in Philadelphia, Oct 1st through the 4th. I'm moderating an IPv6 Deployment Panel at the conference (October 2nd, 1:15pm-2:30pm). Joining me will be John Brzozowski from Comcast, Allie Hopkins from Tulane University, Eric Kenny from Marist College, and Mark Kosters from the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN).

The description says: "Several panelists will provide an update on IPv6 deployment activity and plans at their respective organizations, including both network infrastructure and application services. Other topics might include IPv6 security issues, network monitoring, technical support and training, etc"

John Brzozowski is Comcast's chief IPv6 architect. Comcast is one of the industry's leading adopters of IPv6, and I hope that John will share the latest news about IPv6 developments at Comcast. Mark Kosters is the Chief Technology Officer for ARIN. Allie Hopkins is an IT director at Tulane, but was formerly at Louisiana State University. I expect that Allie will be able to talk about the state of IPv6 deployment at LSU. As you may recall, LSU was on the list of the top IPv6 traffic generating sites during World IPv6 Launch. Eric Kenny is a network engineer from Marist College, which also made that list. I'll meet Eric for the first time at the conference. I've known the other panelists for a while.

In addition to deployment details, some combination of us will try to do a little bit of IPv6 evangelism. I'll also be asking Mark to do the usual ARIN update on the state of IPv4 address depletion.

I hope to see some of you at the conference. The panel session will also be netcast (and most likely archived video will be available to view later). If anyone has suggestions on specific IPv6 related topics the panel should discuss or comment on, feel free to let me know.

References:
* IPv6 at Penn
* IPv6 at LSU
* Comcast IPv6 Information Center
* ARIN: IPv4/IPv6 the bottom line
* ARIN: IPv6 Wiki

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

IPv6 at Penn

World IPv6 Launch (June 6th 2012) is fast approaching, so I thought I'd share some details about IPv6 deployment at the University of Pennsylvania and what we've recently done to prepare for this event.

 

A quick history

Penn runs a regional network called MAGPI, which connects Research & Education (R&E) institutions in our area (eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware) to national R&E backbone networks like Internet2. We first deployed IPv6 in the MAGPI network in mid 2002 and soon after, established an external peering with Internet2. At that time, a small number of engineers in the networking department (including myself) typically had our computers directly wired into MAGPI infrastructure to get IPv6 connectivity at desktops and test servers.

IPv6 was introduced more gradually into the Penn campus network infrastructure, starting in 2005. Initially it was enabled only at the border  and core routers, and extended out to only selected IT departmental subnets. In September 2005, Penn hosted the Fall Internet2 member meeting in Philadelphia, where we operated the conference network at the Wyndham Franklin Plaza hotel - this network was fully IPv6 enabled, including support for IPv6 multicast routing. (Incidentally, we are hosting the Fall 2012 Internet2 meeting this October again, so I hope to see some of you there.)

Over the course of the years since, we've been gradually extending IPv6 network connectivity to the rest of the campus, and turning up IPv6 enabled application services where feasible. Needless to say, it is still early days in IPv6 deployment and a huge amount of work remains to be done.

Network Infrastructure

Unlike other IT services at Penn, many of which are highly decentralized, the campus network is mostly run by the central IT organization - this gave us the ability, when needed, to roll out IPv6 to large portions of the network fairly rapidly. Due to many competing priorities and projects, we have mostly not taken advantage of this ability, until quite recently. IPv6 had been deployed on departmental subnets only where it had explicitly been asked for. One of the more interesting cases was the Annenberg School for Communication - they approached the central IT group a few years ago with a need for IPv6 in order to facilitate some collaboration with partners in China who had asked if they'd be able to conduct video conferencing over IPv6. This was the first time we encountered direct external pressure to deploy IPv6. I'm sure it won't be the last.

The one subdivision within the university that does run their own network infrastructure, the School of Engineering & Applied Science, has been an early adopter, and has been running IPv6 in their part of the network since 2007.

In the summer of 2011, we took advantage of the increased interest generated by last year's World IPv6 Day event to extend the deployment of IPv6 to most of the rest of the campus wired network. The one area that was significantly lagging was the wireless network. This was a bit more challenging because of known bugs in our wireless controller vendor's gear (Aruba Networks) which necessitated a code upgrade. That code upgrade did not happen until earlier this year, so we're still in the midst of IPv6 deployment on wireless. As of this writing, 70 wireless subnets (out of roughly 200) have IPv6 available, and we should have the entire wireless network done sometime later this summer.

For the more technically inclined, we run Integrated IS-IS as our interior routing protocol for IPv6, whereas we continue to run OSPF for IPv4. At the time when we were initially testing IPv6, that was clearly the best choice since OSPF version 3 (the new version of OSPF that supports IPv6) was still in a relatively fledgling state of implementation maturity. Also confining IPv6 to a separate routing protocol seemed like a good additional safety measure. We run a single flat Level-2 area for the entire campus. For exterior routing, we have separate BGP peerings over IPv6 transport established with our external peers that carry IPv6 routes only. Our initial deployment used a provider allocated /48 IPv6 block delegated to us by MAGPI. In 2008, we obtained a Provider Independent ("portable") /32 sized IPv6 address block (2607:F470::/32) from the regional registry ARIN, and have mostly renumbered into it.

Currently, Penn's only connection to the IPv6 Internet is via MAGPI and Internet2. But we're planning to turn up IPv6 peering on our direct commercial ISP links (Level3 and Cogent) in the very near future. At least one of them might happen before World IPv6 Launch.

IPv6 enabled servers use statically configured addresses. Clients on campus almost exclusively use stateless address autoconfiguration (including the privacy/temporary address extensions). DHCPv6 has not been an option for us until recently, since we're a 40% Mac campus, and Apple didn't support DHCPv6 until Mac OS X version 10.7 (late summer 2011).  We are developing plans for a possible DHCPv6 service in the future, which I'll elaborate on at a later time.

Application Services


Penn's authoritative DNS service has been IPv6 enabled for many years. The campus DNS resolvers also support DNS queries over IPv6 but since we don't yet run DHCPv6, we don't have a convenient way to hand out their IPv6 addresses. Our homegrown DNS content management system has supported the ability to create AAAA and IPv6 PTR records for a long time also.

A number of departmental web servers, including the School of Engineering & Applied Science, are IPv6 enabled. The Penn central jabber server, jabber.upenn.edu, was one of our earlier IPv6 equipped services, and actually sees a high proportion of IPv6 activity. Work is proceeding on many other services.

Some of the most challenging services have been those where components of the service have been outsourced to commercial third parties. The central Penn webserver, www.upenn.edu is located on the Akamai content delivery network, and Akamai has been slow to deploy IPv6. We successfully worked with Akamai to put the website on IPv6 for last year's world IPv6 day (June 8th 2011), but they were not then prepared to offer it on an ongoing production basis. In April 2012, Akamai finally announced production IPv6 support. As of May 9th, the Penn website is now available over IPv6, hopefully permanently this time.

Akamai uses DNS resolver client addresses to direct users to content servers geographically close to them (although a few other factors including load are also considered by the server selection algorithm). I collected some data with the help of colleagues about where the www.upenn.edu AAAA record resolves to from various locations. Since we host a cluster of IPv6-enabled Akamai content  servers on our campus network, most of the time, on-campus users of www.upenn.edu will be directed to these local servers.

One issue we overlooked, is that there is a version of the main Penn website optimized for small form-factor mobile devices ("m.upenn.edu") which is not on the Akamai CDN, and run by another unit within the IT organization that has not yet deployed IPv6. So, more work remains to get the Penn web presence completely IPv6 ready.

The other challenging service is central e-mail. Penn uses Message Labs (now Symantec Cloud) to scan e-mail for viruses and spam scoring. As a result both inbound and outbound e-mail has to go through Symantec Cloud's servers. We've inquired about IPv6 support for a number of years, but even today, they appear to have no plans to support it. Our latest communication from them (early May 2012) indicates that they have no plans for any IPv6 support for FY13 (their fiscal year starts in April), and that this may change as priorities shift. At some point, we too might be compelled to shift our priorities and end our relationship with Message Labs, and either seek another provider (does Google/Postini do IPv6 yet?) or bring back virus & spam filtering in-house.

For a comparative view of externally visible IPv6 enabled application services deployed at various US universities and other organizations, Mark Prior's IPv6 survey website is a good resource. Of the five services measured there (Web, DNS, Mail, NTP, and Jabber), Penn gets a green box for four - Mail is the missing one because of Symantec Cloud.

Other Projects


From time to time, we've worked with Penn researchers and outside companies on IPv6 related projects. In the fall of 2009, we worked with Alain Durand (then at Comcast) and Roch Guerin (Penn engineering school faculty) on a small trial deployment of Dual Stack Lite; see RFC 6333 for details of this protocol - this was mostly to help Comcast out. It's unlikely that Penn will deploy DSLite in our own production network. We've also worked with Roch and Comcast on an ongoing IPv6 adoption measurement project. Details of this project are available at: http://mnlab-ipv6.seas.upenn.edu/

Facilitating Regional Connectivity


As mentioned earlier, Penn enables IPv6 connectivity for regional institutions via the MAGPI GigaPoP and Internet2. Currently, we provide IPv6 connectivity to the following institutions: Princeton University, New Jersey Edge (the state education network for NJ), Lafayette College, and Rutgers University. Of them, Princeton came up first in 2005.


Traffic Measurements


Looking at some recent data, IPv6 traffic traversing the campus border is roughly 3% of the total inbound and about 1% of the total outbound traffic. Internal traffic is probably a slightly higher percentage. We're just starting to deploy better measurement infrastructure for IPv6, so we'll have more comprehensive data in the future. But I'll be writing another article sharing what we have so far next.


Links