Hi all

The issue of IPv6 in africa is very serious. we should not do as all things are moving smoothly ahead. As we all know AINA has allocated two IPv6 addresses blocs (2001:4200::/23 and 2c00::/12) to Afrinic, but only a very few african institutions/organisations have barely requested the sub-blocs To encourage the deployment of IPv6 in Africa, Afrinic has set up many policies and initiatives. Prices were dropped; consciousness-raising lectures and training are being organized in many countries. Indespite of that the tendency is not a good sign! THERE IS A PROBLEM. Our role as a afrinic community is to find the way to solve this problem.

AfrINIC cannot do this alone and thus needs our support.
Who is AfrINIC? It is a community, you and me...

Back to the situation. Even for the little of sub-blocs (/32) allocated in the region, only a part is presented in the internet routing tables, this means that a part of the allocated addresses is not actually in use. One also note that only one or two countries in the continent are active in the deployment of IPv6 networks, as they are using the most of the allocated IPv6 addresses. As we are all aware with, only South Africa, to a least extent Egypt, which is active in the deployment of IPv6 networks in Africa. This show that some think can be make in other countries in the continent.

WHY IT IS NO SO IN OTHER COUNTRIES?



Anyway, many IPv6 tests have been made and proved conclusive. This was done by using some available techniques in connection with local constraints:

- IPv6-over-IPv4, communication with ipv6 sites by using the existent ipv4 infrastructure(RFC4213, RFC4891)

- Tunnel broker, for the isolated IPv6 machines (in ipv4 network) which want to connect to an existent ipv6 network

- Teredo (RFC4380), designed to robustly enable ipv6 traffic through the NAT keeping then the end-to-end principle even in both sides of the NAT.



    > IMO, I think the issues we need to urgently address are as follows:

(a) Deployment




This shows that the techniques are to certain extent knowned in the countinent. WHAT IS MISSING?



(d) Policy
IMO, the current v6 policies for the AfriNIC region will suffice,
I agree, at this stage the problem is not the policy

the resources in the region but the question is how long and thus for future
sustainability are we ready for V6 transition ?
It is not a transition-as this means to left v4 ans switch to v6-rather a deployment of ipv6...

3) Are you aware of any government supported initiatives around the V6
adoption

5) Any suggestions on what we should be doing as a community ??

We all in the community are aware of the obstacles to the deployment of IPv6 in Africa; to refresh they are the following:



a.. The lack of information (many ISPs, privates, policymakers are still unaware of IPv6)
 b.. The cost of the migration and deployment
 c.. The lack of stimulus
 d.. The unaware of commercial advantages and benefits
 a.. The Lack of public sector commitment


Now the problem is WHAT SHOULD BE DONE? WHO SHOULD DO WHAT?

Sorry for being so long.

Regards

Philemon


KISSANGOU Jean Philemon
Directeur Technique DRTVnet (ISP)
BP. 2852 Brazzaville Congo
Tel. 002425360396
www.drtvnet.cg
----- Original Message ----- From: "Vincent Ngundi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "AfriNIC Resource Policy Discussion List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 5:57 PM
Subject: Re: [AfriNIC-rpd] IPV6 Adoption


Hi Badru et al,

IMO, I think the issues we need to urgently address are as follows:

(a) Deployment
Let's all walk the talk and lead by example.

- KENIC has deployed IPv6 (dual stack).

(b) Awareness - who should we target? IMO, the decision makers from the various ICT stakeholders - govt's, private sector, academia, n/w operators).
AfrINIC cannot do this alone and thus needs our support.

- KENIC held an ICT stakeholders IPv6 sensitisation seminar in March that brought together members from the above interest groups. We had over 80 participants 70% of whom had not heard about IPv6 before the seminar!
- We plan to hold another sensitisation seminar in May this year.
- KENIC has made presentations on v6 deployment locally/regionally (latest being AfTLD AGM is SA last week) and welcomes such opportunities.

(c) Capacity Building - who should we target? IMO, the techies and engineers who do the actual deployment
AfrINIC cannot do this alone and thus needs our support.

- We've organised, in conjunction with AfriNIC, a hands-on IPv6 workshop in Nairobi Kenya in June this year that will see 200 local engineers trained on the deployment of v6. Then we'll see how to develop more capacity using local resources.

(d) Policy
IMO, the current v6 policies for the AfriNIC region will suffice, at least for the foreseeable future. However, v6 related policies like the "Global Policy for the Allocation of the Unallocated Address Space" need to be addressed. We should come up with a position on this, as a region, and I suggest we consider this a target milestone for the forthcoming AfriNIC public meeting in Rabat.

PS: IMHO, the fees is not an issue, and I think AfriNIC has been quite proactive/fair on this.

Regards,

-v

On Mar 27, 2008, at 9:46 AM, Badru Ntege wrote:
Members

On a secondary note I'm curious on how many operational IPv6  networks we
have on the continent.  When you look around the continent there are a
number of government and Private backed broadband projects which will spur
demand for existing V4 allocations.  However if as planned the
infrastructure growth stimulates the expected economic activity we will see demand for Ip resources escalate in the short time we might be able to have the resources in the region but the question is how long and thus for future
sustainability are we ready for V6 transition ?

On this I would like to pose a few questions again

1) Are you currently running IPv6 in either test or production mode

2) Are you aware of any Network operators on the continent with either
published or internal V6 plans

3) Are you aware of any government supported initiatives around the V6
adoption

4) If you are not doing anything now is the reason due to lack of awareness
or is it a deliberate action to sit and wait

5) Any suggestions on what we should be doing as a community ??

If anyone can add to or modify the questions above please do so


Regards

Badru


_______________________________________________
rpd mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo.cgi/rpd




_______________________________________________
rpd mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo.cgi/rpd


_______________________________________________
rpd mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo.cgi/rpd

Reply via email to