On 05/14/2011 07:39 PM, Paul Vixie wrote:
Jim Gettys<j...@freedesktop.org> writes:
... we have to get naming squared away. Typing IPv6 addresses is for the
birds, and having everyone have to go fuss with a DNS provider isn't a
viable solution.
perhaps i'm too close to the problem because that solution looks quite
viable to me. dns providers who don't keep up with the market (which means
ipv6 and dnssec in this context) will lose business to those who do.
I don't believe it is currently viable for any but the hackers out
there, given my experience during the Comcast IPv6 trial. Typing V6
addresses (much less remembering them) is a PITA.
You are asking people who don't even know DNS exists, to bother to
establish another business relationship (or maybe DNS services might
someday be provided by their ISP).
If you get past that hurdle they get to type long IPv6 addresses into a
web page they won't remember where it was the year before when they did
this the last time to add a machine to their DNS.
The way this "ought" to work for clueless home users (or cluefull users
too, for that matter) is that, when a new machine appears on a network,
it "just works", by which I mean that a globally routeable IPv6 address
appears in DNS without fussing around using the name that was given to
the machine when it was first booted, and that a home user's names are
accessible via secondaries even if they are off line. And NXDOMAIN
should work the way it was intended, for all the reasons you know better
than I.
This is entirely possible ;-). Just go ask Evan Hunt what he's been up
to with Dave Taht recently....
- Jim
Right now, IPv6 is worse than IPv4 for home users; we need