http://www.linuxworld.com.au/index.php/id;881143827;fp;2;fpid;1

Consortium develops Linux-based IPv6 router

Rodney Gedda, Computerworld

27/04/2007 17:07:29

The federal government backed IPv6 for e-Business project
has yielded an Ubuntu-based IPv6 router that is now being
trialled in business.

Since its inception in July last year, the IPv6 for e-
Business project has worked to provide a portal for next-
generation network technology by aggregating information
from a series of national roadshows, infrastructure
assessments, and a "mapping" process to estimate the level
of support among local businesses.

The project is a consortium of the local chapter of the
IPv6Forum, ISOC-AU, AEEMA, Builders.NET, ADIESA, Australian
Domain Authority. The federal government chipped in with a
$200,000 grant from the Department of Communications IT and
the Arts.

Another key part of the project is the enabling activity
which includes business case scenarios, an ROI evaluator, a
transition checklist, and an easy access device (EAD).

This EAD is a prototype to allow IPv6 connectivity with a
tunnel appliance for small businesses and home offices.

The "device" is a modified Ubuntu Linux distribution with
open source IPv6 software loaded and configured with the aim
of allowing straightforward, inexpensive IPv6 connectivity,
without complex site-by-site deployments on an open
standards server.

President of the IPv6Forum in Australia Michael Biber, an
affiliate of the project, said the EAD was developed under
contract and in the process of being made available to the
public, but no timeframe has yet been set.

"Tunnel broker capability is already built into Windows
Vista and Longhorn, and this open source tunnel broker
enables people to experiment with IPv6 tunnels," Biber said.
"If you are sitting in an office and don't have access to
IPv6 you can use a broker to encapsulate Ipv6 traffic."

Biber said five systems have been built and deployed as
gateways on small LANs providing an access gateway to the
IPv6 world. One possible business application of end-to-end
IPv6 connectivity between locations is the ability to do
remote support on individual machines without the need for a
VPN.

To do the integration work the project contracted
independent developer Bart Steanes, who told Computerworld
all GNU GPL software was used and no development required.

"It's low cost, readily available, and has the functionality
required," Steanes said, adding the distribution took a few
weeks and is being used on low-power VIA servers.

"IPv6 gives visibility of all devices as though they are on
a LAN but across the WAN, but you need an appropriately
configured firewall. We use Shorewall. This obsoletes the
need for a VPN which does reduce complexity, but it's also a
learning experience for people as IPv6 is a new addressing
scheme."

Steanes said the system supports native encryption and "does
make life easier", but the usual link bandwidth constraints
still apply.

The IPV6 for e-business project, online at
http://www.ipv6.org.au, which was completed earlier this
month, is now seeking another round of funding in the order
of $150,000 from industry or government to take it through
to the next level.

<snip>

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