For the CPEs you may want to ask your vendors to support this document:

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-v6ops-transition-ipv4aas/

Yesterday night was sent to the IESG for the final review, and hopefully will 
be an RFC in the coming weeks.

In terms of transition, if you have a cellular network, or want to make sure to 
be "compatible" with it in the future, I will suggest using 464XLAT.

You have also this document as guidelines for deploying it:

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-v6ops-nat64-deployment/

Regards,
Jordi
 
 

-----Mensaje original-----
De: Willy MANGA <[email protected]>
Responder a: IPv6 in Africa Discussions <[email protected]>
Fecha: sábado, 1 de diciembre de 2018, 12:52
Para: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Asunto: [AfrIPv6-Discuss] Finding solutions to things that stop people moving 
to IPv6

    Hi,
    I pick it from rpd list [1] because I do not think it's the right place
    to discuss it ... I'll appreciate if people can express share their
    opinions on points below and eventually share their experiences.
    
    1. https://lists.afrinic.net/pipermail/rpd/2018/008662.html
    
    
    Le 01/12/2018 à 07:16, Andrew Alston a écrit :
    > You know,
    > [...]
    > Now let me talk about IPv6 – something I happen to know a fair bit about 
– particularly in terms of ISP deployments.  Let us be completely honest, IPv6 
is necessary – and we all have to get there – it’s not an option – v4 simply 
doesn’t scale to global needs.  But – instead of these meaningless platitudes 
about how everyone should go to IPv6 – how about we start openly and honestly 
talking about the challenges with IPv6 and how we address them – so that we can 
promote its deployment through proper understanding – and instead of everyone 
going “lets all move to ipv6” – let’s start finding solutions to some of the 
things that STOP people moving to IPv6.
    > 
    > 
    >   1.  Lack of legacy support in a fair ton of hardware – how do we deal 
with it
    >   2.  Vastly inconsistent support for transition mechanisms and 
chronically bad support for most of these transition mechanisms in CPE’s
    >   3.  The complete *mess* that MPLS support as concerns IPv6 (to this day 
you cannot do vpnv6 without a v4 underlay, martini is entirely bound to LDP and 
LDPv6 support is near non-existent, and I’ve yet to see Kompella working 
entirely without v4 in some form either)
    >   4.  The security challenges around IPv6 and the bad implementations 
that create issues here – issues which over the years we have learnt to deal 
with in IPv4 – Happy to expound on these off list – and no – they have nothing 
to do with NAT or the lack thereof – because NAT as a security mechanism was 
the biggest lie ever sold to an industry.
    > 
    > For years I have been an IPv6 advocate – and I still am – and I’ve 
actively deployed and run IPv6 in production supplying it to the end user, with 
multiple percentage point changes in country IPv6 penetration statistics as a 
result, but I am fast realizing that if we want IPv6 to grow and thrive – it’s 
time we started being a little more open and honest about the challenges and 
problems with it – instead of sprouting off that everyone should just move to 
it.   Let’s acknowledge that IPv6 is critical, we have no option, but it is 
also deeply flawed, has major problems, and until start dealing with those – we 
will see deployment continue to stutter
    > 
    > Andrew
    
    
    
    -- 
    Willy Manga
    @ongolaboy
    https://ongola.blogspot.com/
    
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