Thanks all, can anyone suggest a netflow tool for v6?

From: Lee Howard <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, 21 August 2018 5:17 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [AfrIPv6-Discuss] references and books


Good question. My answer last year was here: 
http://www.wleecoyote.com/blog/IPv6reading.html

With less than a day of reading, you will understand enough about IPv6 to get 
to work. The rest will be adapting your specific configurations and reading 
documentation. Updated links/notes below:

1. 
draft-ietf-6man-rfc4291bis<https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-6man-rfc4291bis/?include_text=1>,
 "IPv6 Address Architecture." Sure, you could read RFC4291, but this draft is 
pretty close to done, and contains all the current updates.

2. RFC4861<https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4861.txt>, "Neighbor Discovery." It's 
long, at almost 100 pages, but you can probably skip most of the packet format 
stuff. If you understand the stuff in this document, including ND, DAD, RS, RA, 
NS, NA, then you have a solid understanding of IPv6.
3. You need both of these in order to understand how magically hosts get 
provisioned:
·         RFC4862<https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4862.txt>, "IPv6 Stateless 
Address Autoconfiguration" or "SLAAC", and
·         RFC8106<https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc8106.txt>, "The RDNSS Option in 
RA".

4. RFC3315<https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3315.txt>, "DHCPv6". You should know 
IA_NA and IA_PD. You should learn as much about DHCPv6 as you know about DHCP. 
One of the interesting parts is how DHCPv6 options can be used to provision 
transition mechanisms (but that's another post).

5. RFC8201<https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc8201/> "Path MTU Discovery". 
Understanding this will let you troubleshoot the most common IPv6 problem.

For extra credit: RFC8200<https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc8200/>, "IPv6 
Specification". I'm sure it sounds weird to say that the base spec is extra 
credit, but other than packet structure, the important stuff here is Extension 
Headers and flow labels, and there aren't many practical uses for those yet. If 
you want to think of creative uses for IPv6, then you should look into those. 
But if you've read the full list up to this point, you have enough information 
to design, build, and operate an IPv6 network. Advice is included in several 
deployment guidelines, but AfriNIC probably has the best direct support 
anywhere, and you can't beat the price.

Lee

On 08/17/2018 04:08 PM, Abdellah EL MOUDDEN wrote:

Hello,

I want references and books on fast moving to IPv6

cordially
[Image removed by sender.]ᐧ




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