IPv6

2001-09-21 Thread Thor Harald Johansen
How can I participate in the IPv6 part of the Internet? And how many computers are currently using the new system? -- Thor _ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com

IPv6

2001-09-22 Thread Thor Harald Johansen
I'm very close to having IPv6 connectivity now. I found out that Microsoft Research has an IPv6 implementation that installs on Windows XP (not without warnings though). I'm currently able to ping6 myself without using the loopback address (like... yippee). I hope to begin experimenting

IPv6

2001-06-27 Thread Don McMorris
Hello.  I am wondering a couple things about IPv6.   1.  Which operating systems currently support it?  I irun RedHat linux, and it does not, to my knowlege. 2.  Are ISP's dynamically assigning IPv6 addresses?  If so, which are they?   I am learning the structure of Domain Names and

Re: IPv6

2001-09-22 Thread Thor Harald Johansen
> see ipv6forum.org and also look for appropriate > working groups of IETF (see www.ietf.org) > I don't know if there is a census of IPv6 capable hosts > but there are probably a modest number in the thousands. > The Japanese WIDE network and the US vBNS+ network have > IP

Re: IPv6

2001-09-22 Thread Petr Baudis
> How can I participate in the IPv6 part of the Internet? And how many > computers are currently using the new system? A lot of them. They are interconnected mainly in project 6bone with homepage at http://www.6bone.net/. A lot of information can be found at http://www.hs247.com/ - you

RE: IPv6

2001-09-24 Thread Christian Huitema
> I'm very close to having IPv6 connectivity now. I found out > that Microsoft > Research has an IPv6 implementation that installs on Windows > XP (not without > warnings though). I'm currently able to ping6 myself without using the > loopback address (like

Re: IPv6

2001-06-27 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Wed, 27 Jun 2001 12:32:02 EDT, Don McMorris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > 1. Which operating systems currently support it? I irun RedHat linux, = > and it does not, to my knowlege. RedHat Linux 7.1 supports it just fine - am running a 2.4.5 kernel with the USAGI IPv6 patches

Re: IPv6

2001-06-27 Thread Pekka Savola
ts it just fine - am running a 2.4.5 kernel with > the USAGI IPv6 patches and it works. Some Assembly Required though. [snip] Funny that this came up now. I just a few minutes ago announced a free Linux host/router "product" based on Red Hat Linux 7.1. No assembly required.

RE: IPv6

2001-06-27 Thread Tony Hain
Don McMorris wrote:   >  2.  Are ISP's dynamically assigning IPv6 addresses?  If so, which >  are they?   Some may be, but a simple way to get started is to tunnel over IPv4. http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3056.txt    

Re: IPv6

2001-06-27 Thread itojun
>1. Which operating systems currently support it? I irun RedHat linux, = >and it does not, to my knowlege. http://playground.sun.com/pub/ipng/html/ipng-main.html#IMPLEMENT http://www.ipv6.org/impl/index.html >2. Are ISP's dynamically assigning IPv6 addresses?

Re: IPv6

2001-06-27 Thread Robert G. Ferrell
>> 1. Which operating systems currently support it? I irun RedHat linux, = >> and it does not, to my knowlege. > >RedHat Linux 7.1 supports it just fine - am running a 2.4.5 kernel with >the USAGI IPv6 patches and it works. Some Assembly Required though. You have the opt

Re: IPv6

2001-06-27 Thread Brian E Carpenter
ust fine - am running a 2.4.5 kernel with > >the USAGI IPv6 patches and it works. Some Assembly Required though. > > You have the option during install to provide IPv6 support in Solaris 8, also. > > RGF > > Robert G. Ferrell

RE: IPv6

2001-06-28 Thread Nicolai Schlenzig (DXD)
Well - I don't know for how long, but FreeBSD has been supporting it for quite some time now. I think since 4.0 (early 2000). That includes tunneling and firewall with ipv6 support afaik. // Nicolai > -Original Message- > From: Brian E Carpenter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECT

IPv6 and IPsec

2001-07-11 Thread Zeber, Steve
I am looking for either commercial products or open source software that currently implement support for IPv6 and IPsec. A preliminary search seems to indicate that there are a lot of IPv6 implementations and a lot of IPsec but not very much with IPv6 AND IPsec (for IPv6) together. The only

Mobility Support in IPv6

2001-07-09 Thread Samantha Naleendra Senaratna
Hello, Does anyone have any idea on what's the status of IETF on mobility support for Ipv6. (namely Mobile IPv6). The IETF draft by David B. Johnson had expired on 17th of May. Is the IETF going to announce this as the standard or are any more work being done on this ? Regards, Sam

Re: IPv6 and IPsec

2001-07-11 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Wed, 11 Jul 2001 11:06:53 EDT, "Zeber, Steve" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > I am looking for either commercial products or open source software that > currently implement support for IPv6 and IPsec. A preliminary search seems > to indicate that there are a lot of IPv6

Re: IPv6 and IPsec

2001-07-11 Thread Angelos D. Keromytis
In message <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "Zebe r, Steve" writes: >I am looking for either commercial products or open source software that >currently implement support for IPv6 and IPsec. A preliminary search seems >to indicate that there are a lot of IPv6 implementations an

Question regarding UDP and IPV6

2001-06-23 Thread Vimal Vikrant Vardhan
Hello, Would be thanxful if I can get an answer to the following question. In IPV6, only the source node fragments the packet, and the assembly happens at the destination. The fragment size is determined by a finding out the MTU on the path - implying that the source now knows the route

Re: Question regarding UDP and IPV6

2001-06-23 Thread itojun
> Would be thanxful if I can get an answer to the following question. > >In IPV6, only the source node fragments the packet, and the assembly >happens at the destination. The fragment size is determined by a >finding out the MTU on the path - implying that the source now knows

Connecting IPv6 Routing Domains Over the IPv4 Internet

2001-06-25 Thread Jim Fleming
http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/759/ipj_3-1/ipj_3-1_routing.html Connecting IPv6 Routing Domains Over the IPv4 Internet by Brian E. Carpenter, IBM & iCAIR Keith Moore, University of Tennessee Bob Fink, Energy Sciences Network --- Was this done &qu

Re: Connecting IPv6 Routing Domains Over the IPv4 Internet

2001-06-25 Thread Ole J. Jacobsen
-8972 GSM: +1 415-370-4628 E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] URL: http://www.cisco.com/ipj On Mon, 25 Jun 2001, Jim Fleming wrote: > http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/759/ipj_3-1/ipj_3-1_routing.html > Connecting IPv6 Routing Domains Over the IPv4 Internet > by Brian E. Carpenter, IBM & iCAIR

Re: Connecting IPv6 Routing Domains Over the IPv4 Internet

2001-06-25 Thread Jim Fleming
Are these the references you mean ? [0] Fink, R., "IPv6-What and Where It Is," The Internet Protocol Journal, Volume 2, No. 1, March 1999. [1] IPng and IPv6 information, including formal specifications, can be found at: http://playground.sun.com/pub/ipng/html [2] "The Cas

Re: Connecting IPv6 Routing Domains Over the IPv4 Internet

2001-06-25 Thread Jim Fleming
ming" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Cc: "ietf@ietf. org" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Monday, June 25, 2001 9:34 PM Subject: Re: Connecting IPv6 Routing Domains Over the IPv4 Internet > Yes it was. See the references at the end of the article you refer to. It > clearly says tha