Search /
Docfinder:
Advanced search  |  Help  |  Site map
RESEARCH CENTERS
SITE RESOURCES
Click for Layer 8! No, really, click NOW!
Networking for Small Business
TODAY'S NEWS
Ex-Bay Networks CEO: Nortel's enterprise group could do well on its own
Net neutrality advocates score big win with broadband stimulus rules
Security guard charged with hacking hospital systems
Cisco looks to accelerate virtualization deployments
Apple patching serious SMS vulnerability on iPhone
Could Cisco take on Microsoft with office app service?
Nortel enterprise data chief wants to bring back Bay Networks
Government releases $4 billion in broadband stimulus funds
Why the iPhone can't be 'killed'
IBM bundles x86 servers with VMware, offers special financing
Users note virtualization foot-dragging among app vendors
Five slick search engines you should know about
FTC opens all out assault on economic cyber-scammers
Happy birthday! The Walkman turns 30
Cisco won't take on Amazon in cloud
Service Provider Networks / IP Services /

Cisco to release IPv6 features throughout products

Three years and many downloads later, the new protocol is ready to roll.

Related linksToday's breaking news
Send to a friendFeedback

SAN JOSE - In a move that may catalyze the industry to begin migrating to the new protocol, Cisco last week announced availability of IPv6 features across products that run the company's IOS operating system software.

After three years and an extensive beta-testing program that involved several hundred unique downloads of the software by its customers, Cisco will ship the "first phase" of IPv6 on virtually all its IOS-based devices at the end of this month. Cisco's high-end routers - namely the Catalyst 6500, 7600 OSR and 12000 series GSR -use ASICs to forward data and will get IPv6 in six to 12 months, says Martin McNealis, director of product management at Cisco's IOS Technologies Division.


Sign up for Jim Duffy's "View from The Edge" newsletter and get this column sent to your inbox each week.

IPv6 offers expanded IP addresses, integrated autoconfiguration for ease of installation, quality of service, and enhanced mobility and security. It is expected that IPv6 will solve the IP address shortage pending with today's IPv4.

To date, users and service providers have not embraced IPv6 because they can work around IPv4's address shortage issue using network address translators. But McNealis says many factors will exhaust this workaround and in essence force the adoption of IPv6. Those factors include:

  • the continued proliferation of Internet devices, such as personal computers, PDAs, wireless devices, and new Internet appliances;
  • emerging populations around the globe;
  • the phenomenon of "always-on" Internet access;
  • new Internet applications such as multiuser gaming and Internet telephony.

Issues such as a security flaw in Mobile IPv6 still need to be worked out, McNealis admits. The discovery of security flaws in the proposed Mobile IPv6 protocol means the Internet Engineering Task Force will have to develop a new method for authenticating roaming devices that use IPv6 addresses.

This development means months of delays for Mobile IPv6, which was conceived a decade ago and thought to be in its final form.

"This mobility registration process . . . is nontrivial but understood," McNealis says. "We don't view it as insurmountable."

Another negating factor is the lack of IPv6 clients in the network.

"The technololgy and functionality are there," McNealis says. "We need clients to smooth the migration."

Cisco's IPv6 code will ship in IOS software release 12.2(1)T. Platforms to be supported at this time include: Cisco's 800, 1400, 1600, 1700, 2500, 2600, 3600, 4500 and 4700 series routers; AS5300 and AS5400 Universal Access Servers; and 7100, 7200 and 7500 series routers.

RELATED LINKS

IP incoming
IPv6 is coming, are you ready? Check out our IPv6 research page and listen to an audio primer on how the technology works and improves on IPv4.

Contact Edge Managing Editor Jim Duffy

Other recent articles by Duffy


NWFusion offers more than 40 FREE technology-specific email newsletters in key network technology areas such as NSM, VPNs, Convergence, Security and more.
Click here to sign up!
New Event - WANs: Optimizing Your Network Now.
Hear from the experts about the innovations that are already starting to shake up the WAN world. Free Network World Technology Tour and Expo in Dallas, San Francisco, Washington DC, and New York.
Attend FREE
Your FREE Network World subscription will also include breaking news and information on wireless, storage, infrastructure, carriers and SPs, enterprise applications, videoconferencing, plus product reviews, technology insiders, management surveys and technology updates - GET IT NOW.
* HOME    * RESEARCH CENTERS     * NEWS     * EVENTS

Contact us | Terms of Service/Privacy | How to Advertise
Reprints and links | Partnerships | Subscribe to NW
About Network World, Inc.

Copyright, 1994-2006 Network World, Inc. All rights reserved.