In reply to a post by Ignitionnet:Trust me there is a lot of forward planning going on. Where i work now ( very large global company) all IT equipment has to support IPV6, but its all turned off. We are waiting for that trigger, and its a massive change as well. not just a home router upgrade, These roll out project costs many millions. Until there is a business case there will be no migration to IPV6 by the vast majority of companies.
Also a quick read of the article you posted shows just what i have said, its not happening....... be prepared but don't enable is a general concept being followed by a large number of companies
This. Most kit in the large enterprise networks I work within supports IPv6 but there's no drive to pull the trigger. IPv4 and RFC1918 are working okay for now. It'll be something done because it has to be as there's so much potential for disturbance.
Is ipv6 that hard to add to networking configurations?
I recognise staff training issues. I recognise old equipment may not suppport ipv6. However adding ipv6 routing to an existing network is one of the easier things I have done, and for safety ipv4 can be set as preference.
The problem of waiting for "when it has to be done" means it will never get done. its one of those thngs where everyone is saying "you first".
For this reason its not impossible ipv6 gets abandoned as already mentioned, it may be the case companies instead just use things like cg-nat instead as its more conveniant, although I think cg-nat is way more complex than adding ipv6 dual stacking.
I think also is a big difference between a company that uses connectvity for its business and one that sells connectivity for its business rolling out ipv6. You guys may consider configuring but not activting ipv6 as the norm for isp's yet I am seeing differently, I use many datacentres and most provide ipv6 connectivity.
BT Infinity 2 Since Dec 2012 - BQM
Edited by Chrysalis (Mon 09-Dec-13 01:51:23)



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