Dear members,

Here are the draft minutes from the IPv6 Working Group from RIPE 90

If you have any comments or concerns, please let us know as soon as possible. 
Thank you!

IPv6 Working Group Draft Minutes - RIPE 90
Date: Thursday, 15 May 09:00 - 10:30 (UTC+1)
Chairs: Christian Seitz, Nico Schottelius, Raymond Jetten
Scribe: Virgile Uytterhaegen
Status: Draft
View the recordings<https://ripe90.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/ipv6-wg/>
View the stenography transcript<https://ripe90.ripe.net/archives/steno/37/>
View the chat logs<https://ripe90.ripe.net/archives/chat/37/>

  1.  Welcome
The presentation is available at https://ripe90.ripe.net/archives/video/1635
Co-chair Raymond Jetten opened the session with a reminder of the Working Group 
etiquette and Code of Conduct, minutes of the Working Group sessions at RIPE89 
were approved with no comment.
2.                                      Amplification through IPv6 routing 
loops: A call to fix router configurations
Maynard Koch, TU Dresden
The presentation is available at https://ripe90.ripe.net/archives/video/1637
Maynard presented his research on how a single ICMP echo request to an IPv6 
address could trigger a routing loop and generate more than 250,000 replies. 
With his team, they used public Internet measurements to identify IPv6 routing 
loops and conducted an email campaign to notify network administrators that 
they had a misconfiguration in their routers.
Jen Linkova, Google, suspected that broken CPE (Customer Premises Equipment) 
were the cause of the issue because they didn't install null routes for 
delegated prefixes. She asked if Maynard looked into interface IDs of 
responding routers to see if there was a pattern. Maynard responded they didn't 
and that they will take this into consideration for future work.
Brian Candler, NSRC, asked for the exact reasons why the packet duplication 
happened and if it was applicable only to ICMP echo requests.
Maynard answered that the cause of the duplication was most likely a hardware 
issue and they confirmed that with Juniper. He said this could also affect UDP 
and TCP packets.
Alexander Zubkov, Qrator Labs, asked if they tried to identify unique loops 
because multiple loops could be caused by a single misconfiguration.
Maynard said that they found that 60,000 IP routes were affected.
Ondřej Caletka, RIPE NCC, pointed out that TTL was part of IPv4 terminology and 
that Hop Limit Exceeded was the appropriate term for IPv6.
3.                                      IPv6 Support for Multiple Routers, 
Multiple Interfaces, and Multiple Prefixes
Fernando Gont, SI6 Networks, IETF
The presentation is available at https://ripe90.ripe.net/archives/video/1642
Fernando talked about the difficulty to run multi-IPv6 scenarios in practice 
and presented two examples of multi-IPv6 deployments.
David Lamparter, NetDEF, Inc., asked how much complexity was needed to support 
those deployments. He made a point whether it was relevant to support these 
scenarios for small networks that only have a couple of routers. He encouraged 
network operators to take part in the IETF discussions on this topic.
Jan Žorž, 6Connect, asked how the issue could be solved if network operators 
update their prefixes every 24 hours.
Warren Kumari, speaking for himself, asked if this could be solved using 
virtual sub-interfaces. Fernando said that from his perspective he didn't see 
it working in practice.
Jen Linkova, Google, said that having two routers meant having two implicit 
Provisioning Domains and that could be an issue if one of the routers sends 
RDNSS separately. She asked Fernando which operating system he was using 
because she was having problems herself with using two different ISPs for an 
IPv6 prefix.
Fernando said he checked all of them and that the information ends up getting 
mixed and that one of the ISPs would get forgotten.
4.                                      Challenges of Running IPv6-Only 
Internal Services
Ondřej Caletka, RIPE NCC
The presentation is available at https://ripe90.ripe.net/archives/video/1639
Ondřej talked about the history of running internal services at the RIPE NCC 
and the complexity of moving to IPv6 only. He mentioned a specific issue with 
the stub resolver on macOS for IPv6 only networks.
Jen Linkova, Google, asked about using the VPN to push the DNS configuration to 
the clients to solve the issue. Ondřej said that this was too complicated and 
should be handled by the internal resolver for internal domains. Jen suggested 
other solutions using the VPN resolver and Ondřej said he would consider it.
Kostas Zorbadelos, NTT DATA, asked if they had tried a different VPN software 
because this could be causing the issue if the same happened on Windows and 
Linux.
Ondřej said it was most likely that the RIPE NCC's current VPN tool was causing 
an issue with macOS but it was chosen ten years ago and was one of the only 
ones with IPv6 support. He said there was a fix implemented by some VPN 
providers to make scutil work with AAAA records.
Because the session was running late, some questions on the chat could not be 
answered.
5.                                      IPv6-mostly Experiences at Industry 
Events
Éric Vyncke, CISCO and Warren Kumari, Google
The presentation is available at https://ripe90.ripe.net/archives/video/1643
Éric and Warren presented their experience of running IPv6-mostly networks at 
two major events; CISCO Live in Amsterdam and the IETF in Bangkok. Their 
conclusion was mostly positive, highlighting the efforts made by their 
networking teams and the lessons they learned along the way.
David Lamparter, NetDEF, Inc., said he deployed IPv6 at a hacker's event and to 
check beforehand that routers implement RFC 9047 because usage of IPv4 
addresses dropped to 25% and 75% of devices did not request IPv4 anymore.
Jen Linkova, Google, thanked the presenters for their amazing story of fixing 
SSH on MacOS.
Brian Candler, NSRC, asked if DNS64 was still needed for IPv6-mostly 
deployments because it caused issues with VPN clients. Jen said that it 
depended on the operating system used.
6.                                      Thanks, Wrap Up and Rate the Talks
Raymond Jetten thanked participants and concluded the session.





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