AARNet Copyright 2007 AARNet IPv6 Update IPv6 Workshop APAN 24, Xi’An 2007 Bruce Morgan.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Status update on IPv6 in Canada Cairns, 6 July 2004 Chief Engineer.
Advertisements

Singapore Open Exchange ( Current Situation Network Layer-3 –STIX in Singapore for more than 5 years –Starhub IX and other commercial.
Transitioning to IPv6 April 15,2005 Presented By: Richard Moore PBS Enterprise Technology.
IPv4 to IPv6 Migration strategies. What is IPv4  Second revision in development of internet protocol  First version to be widely implied.  Connection.
IPv6: Application perspective Zaid Ali Chairman/President SFBAY ISOC
IPv6 in SudREN شبكة البحث العلمي والتعليم السودنية Sudanese Research and Education Network The 4 th annual meeting of ASREN, 10, 11 Dec. 2014, Muscat,
Project by: Palak Baid (pb2358) Gaurav Pandey (gip2103) Guided by: Jong Yul Kim.
IPv6 7/18/ Road map for IPv6 Migration in an Organization.
17/10/031 Summary Peer to peer applications and IPv6 Microsoft Three-Degrees IPv6 transition mechanisms used by Three- Degrees: 6to4 Teredo.
ONE PLANET ONE NETWORK A MILLION POSSIBILITIES Barry Joseph Director, Offer and Product Management.
1 Update Jacqueline Brown Pacific Northwest Gigapop Internet2 Member Meeting Indianapolis October 13-16, 2003.
© Copyright AARNet Pty Ltd AARNet’s Australian Network Positioning Australia in a Global Gigabit Research Network Environment.
TEIN2 Kick-Off WS AARNet. © 2005, AARNet Pty Ltd2 AARNet3 Network Highlights STM-64c (10Gbps) Backbone Dual STM-1 to NT & Tasmania Replacing Procket with.
International infrastructure outsource models Eckart Zollner Safnog 2 April 2015.
Innovating the commodity Internet Update to CENIC 14-Mar-2007.
1 October 20-24, 2014 Georgian Technical University PhD Zaza Tsiramua Head of computer network management center of GTU South-Caucasus Grid.
Copyright © AARNet, 2005 aarnet Australia's Academic and Research Network APAN - Bangkok 2005 AARNet3 update and Uncompressed HD Video experiences Andrew.
WUNCA 19th Tech Meeting UniNet Network Update WUNCA 19th July 3, 2008 By UniNet NOC Team
OCONUS Update June 2013 Jerry Janssen David Hartzell 2.
1 Update Jacqueline Brown University of Washington APAN Meeting Busan, Korea 29 August 2003.
AARNet Copyright 2011 Network Operations AARNet Enterprise Unified Communications Bill Efthimiou APAN SIP-H323 working group 24 August 2011.
Next Generation Peering for Next Generation Networks Jacqueline Brown Executive Director International Partnerships Pacific Northwest Gigapop CANS2004,
KT's IPv6 status and trial service Future Technology Lab Dongjin Kwak, Jaehwa Lee Meeting 2008 at NZ.
© 2004 AARNet Pty Ltd AARNet 3 The Next Generation of AARNet.
© Copyright AARNet Pty Ltd AARNet 3 The Next Generation of AARNet Status Report 27 January 2004.
The Research and Education Network: Platform for Innovation Heather Boyles, Next Generation Network Symposium Malaysia 2007-March-15.
IPv6 at the University of Wisconsin Hopefully 79,228,162,514,264,337,593,543,950,336 IP addresses will be enough for a while. A subset of the UW IPv6 Task.
The Singapore Advanced Research & Education Network.
David Lassner University of Hawaii
APNIC Update The state of IP address distribution and IPv6 deployment status Miwa Fujii Senior IPv6 Program Specialist APNIC.
Peering Policies - When to Peer, When not to Peer Quilt Peering Workshop October 2006 St Louis, Missouri.
1 Second ATLAS-South Caucasus Software / Computing Workshop & Tutorial October 24, 2012 Georgian Technical University PhD Zaza Tsiramua Head of computer.
IPv6 for ISP Industry Sify Technologies Ltd Somasundaram Padmanabhan Network Engineering IPv6 Awareness Workshop.
1 TWNIC Update Sheng Wei Kuo, TWNIC NIR SIG, 28 th APNIC OPM.
Copyright AARNet th eVLBI Workshop: International Infrastructure George McLaughlin Director, International Developments AARNet.
Commercial in confidence
AARNet Update or what are those crazy aussies up to? Winter Joint Techs, Albuquerque 2006.
GrangeNet Dr. Greg Wickham APAN NOC 25 August 2005.
© 2004 AARNet Pty Ltd Measurement in aarnet3 4 July 2004.
IPv6 transition strategies IPv6 forum OSAKA 12/19/2000 1/29.
© Copyright AARNet Pty Ltd TEIN APII Koren Symposium Australia and the Pacific Region Infrastructure to support global e-science George McLaughlin Director,
© Copyright AARNet Pty Ltd Regional Networking Australia and the Pacific Region George McLaughlin Director, International Developments.
I nternational C onnectivity U pdated S tatus for T aiwan 2004 / 01 / 28 Fay Sheu APAN, Honolulu Hsinchu Science Park, Taiwan.
NICI IPv6 Infrastructure Development Status IPv6 Summit in Taiwan 2005 Aug. 23 rd, 2005 Jing-Jou Yen National Center for High-Performance Computing.
APAN Multicast Testbed Plan Aug. 26, 2003 Kyungran Kang, ICU 16th APAN meetings / ANC.
GigaPort NG Network SURFnet6 and NetherLight Erik-Jan Bos Director of Network Services, SURFnet GDB Meeting, SARA&NIKHEF, Amsterdam October 13, 2004.
AARNet Update plus the Taiwan Earthquake Winter 2007 Joint Techs Minneapolis.
Update on Advanced Networking in Singapore APAN Meeting Busan, Aug 2003.
IPv6 and the US higher education and research networking community Doug Van Houweling President and CEO, Internet2
IPv6 Inactivity in Australia IPv6 Task Force Meeting APAN 21, Tokyo.
APAN 24, August 28, 2007, Xi’an IPv6Deployment in European Academic Networks Tim Chown School of Electronics and Computer Science University of Southampton.
Post IPv4 “completion” Making IPv6 incrementally deployable by making it backward compatible with IPv4. Alain Durand.
Dynamic Network Services In Internet2 John Vollbrecht /Dec. 4, 2006 Fall Members Meeting.
INDIANAUNIVERSITYINDIANAUNIVERSITY HOPI: Hybrid Packet and Optical Infrastructure Chris Robb and Jim Williams Indiana University 7 July 2004 Cairns, AU.
APNIC IPv6 Allocation Update IPv6 SIG APNIC 14, Kitakyushu, Japan 4 September 2002.
17/10/031 Euronetlab – Implementation of Teredo
IPv6 Workshop APAN Aug John Barlow Advanced Communication Services Coordinator, GrangeNet.
Connecting to the new Internet2 Network What to Expect… Steve Cotter Rick Summerhill FMM 2006 / Chicago.
WELCOME ALL.
AARNet Network Update IPv6 Workshop APAN 23, Manilla 2007 AARNet.
AARNet Update plus the Taiwan Earthquake
GÉANT LHCONE Update Mian Usman Network Architect
IPv6 Deployment: Business Cases and Development Options
An Australian Broadband Provider's Perspective on IPv6
Glen Turner AARNet staff meeting
Introducing Novell IPv6 Stack
IPv6 in Internet2 Rick Summerhill
AARNet Network Update IPv6 Workshop APAN 23, Manilla 2007 AARNet.
Matt Zekauskas, APAN IPv6 Task Force 2006-Jan-24
IPv6 in Internet2 This is a general overview presentation about Internet2. Internet2 is a consortium, led by US universities, which is recreating the partnership.
Presentation transcript:

AARNet Copyright 2007 AARNet IPv6 Update IPv6 Workshop APAN 24, Xi’An 2007 Bruce Morgan

AARNet Copyright The AARNet Network AARNet owns and operates a resilient and redundant multi- Gbps network across Australia. In the Eastern Australia we have deployed DWDM equipment which currently has up to 320 Gbps capacity. Dual STM-64c (10 Gbps) links connect major capital cities with routing being done by Juniper M320 routers

AARNet Copyright University connections Universities are encouraged to have diverse connections to the Juniper M320 routers at each PoP. Institutions typically connect at 1 Gbps and we have deployed Cisco 7304 routers at each site (edge routers), and also edge servers. This allows close monitoring of each tail circuit. So far about 85 edge routers have been deployed.

AARNet Copyright AARNet3 National Network

AARNet Copyright Regional Optical Network

AARNet Copyright AARNet International Network

AARNet Copyright The international footprint AARNet has a very large international footprint from the PoP in Frankfurt, Germany to Palo Alto in the US - it covers a timezone difference of 17 hours from +1 to -8 Peering at : –Hawai’I, Seattle (Pacific Wave), PAIX, Telehouse (LA), Any2 (LA) –Singapore, Frankfurt (DE-CIX), Amsterdam (AMS-IX), London (LINX) Currently 622 Mbps to Singapore and then on to Frankfurt The 622 Mbps link to Singapore connects to the TEIN2 nework

AARNet Copyright G Trans Pacific Partnership with Southern Cross Cable Networks AUP - Research and Education only Dual STM-64c (OC192) Northern path to Seattle –Layer 3 routed Southern path to Los Angeles –Layer 1/2 Catalyse Global Astronomy Initiative –Mauna Kea, Big Island

AARNet Copyright TEIN2 Connectivity  There are four STM-1 circuits linking Perth to Singapore.  Two of these go via APCN, and the other two via SMW3 to provide diversity and fault tolerance  AARNet Singapore PoP establish at the Kim Chuan data centre from where we peer with TEIN2, Singaren and ASNet

AARNet Copyright Commodity and R&E AARNet offers both commodity (commercial) internet and research networking Two 10 Gbps circuits for R&E connectivity to the US. The northern link is IP and routed - the southern link will be presented as light paths (ethernet L2 circuits) 6 x STM-4 (3.6 Gbps) circuits to the US - terminating at Palo Alto and Los Angeles 2 x STM-1 (310 Mbps) circuits to Seattle via Hawai’i and Fiji 4 x STM-1 (622 Mbps) circuits to Singapore and Frankfurt – also two 100 Mbps circuits to LINX and AMS-IX

AARNet Copyright AARNet support for IPv6 AARNet3 core and edge is dual stack since 2003 Dual stack deployed across M320 core using OSPF3 and BGP as routing protocols IPv6 is used within AARNet – IPv6 enabledwww.aarnet.edu.au –Infrastructure is IPv6 enabled IPv6 Multicast is enabled –SSM supported –Currently use a static RP for ASM

AARNet Copyright Addressing Addressing Plan –Currently use / :388::/32 allocated by APNIC Allocate a /40 to a PoP or a /48 to a customer A /39 is allocated to the Tunnel broker networks Some customers have their own allocations

AARNet Copyright AARNet Migration Broker Hexago appliance Same as Freenet6 Tunnel Setup Protocol NAT Traversal support Open to anyone who can reach it via a domestic Australian path

AARNet Copyright Peering and Transit International transit and peering available for IPv6 Encouraging both IPv4 and IPv6 peering –But still many IPv4 only peers –Haven’t yet fully deployed RPSLng so IPv6 prefix filtering not as strong in the IPv4 world

AARNet Copyright The customer edge All customers can connect natively –But the customer edge is configured only on request –CPE router dual stack but customer’s router/firewall may not be

AARNet Copyright Still work to be done… DNS about to be implemented Mail issues – 3 rd parties? Still need to deploy IPv6 measurement –IPv6 monitoring is still in its infancy within our infrastructure –IPv4 Netflow is heavily deployed – IPv6 isn’t at the moment

AARNet Copyright AARNet3 is ready… A few institutions are using IPv6 natively in a limited fashion –Many are worried about deploying a dual stack at the edge Stability/complexity concerns –Existing infrastructure may not support IPv6 Firewalls Web services Some institutions and researchers use static tunnels or broker

AARNet Copyright Some progress… Fiji is now advertising IPv6 routes More customers are deploying IPv6 –But still a snail’s pace Uptake of IPv6 has been slow –Lack of IPv6 specific spplications –Not a huge amount of IPv6 services available –No shortage of IPv4 address space within institutions –Legacy and non-IPv6 compliant equipment –Security –Management

AARNet Copyright IPv4 address depletion 2009? 2012? 2015? When will it kick in? Will it effect our customers/institutions immediately? Will it be a painful process?

AARNet Copyright Where to from here? Ensure as many services as possible are IPv6 enabled Encourage customer connections Look for more peering opportunities Encourage IPv6 activities –Education on setting up IPv6 to institutions

AARNet Copyright Thank You!