From: Jonathan R. Charles (jrcdehc@ameritech.net)
Date: Sun Sep 26 2004 - 03:34:40 GMT-3
A friend of a friend said he was at Networkers and Cisco said it would only
be a very basic configuration on one link, where you would have to apply the
address and get connectivity going, nothing major, no routing protocols, no
interlacing of IPv4 and IPv6 for all your BGP speakers.
Remember IPv6 implementation is not around the corner, it is not even in
this time zone for the general networking community.
I suspect highly that the configuration will be simple, basic and probably
only worth 2 points or so.
While we are on the topic, what is this whole 'address-family' thing for
mBGP referring to? Would you subconfigure two routing processes inside the
BGP AS, one for IPv4 and the other for IPv6?
Also, what ever happened to IPv5? Was it a complete disaster?
Jonathan
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Sameer@mesiniaga.com.my
Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 00:54
To: Scott Morris
Cc: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: Ipv6? [7:93034]
Hi Scott,
Thnx for your advice...Can you also clarfiy whether IPV6 will be a sub
topic in CCIE LAB JAN 2005 or The entire IP Addressing will be IPV6.
Thnx & Regards
Sameer Tandon
"Scott Morris" <swm@emanon.com>
Sent by: nobody@groupstudy.com
20-09-04 11:22 AM
Please respond to "Scott Morris"
To: "'James'" <james@towardex.com>, "'Joseph D. Phillips'"
<josephdphillips@fastmail.us>
cc: "'group study'" <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Subject: RE: Ipv6? [7:93034]
Saying it's no different is a huge understatement. :)
Many rules change when it comes to how you program the routing
protocols...
However, in the grand scheme of things, just realize that it is not a
"core"
topic....
Learn the general concepts and know how to look things up on the DocCD...
The CD has very good information about dealing with IPv6.
788 pages is nice if you want to implement it. Skimming it, playing with
it
once or twice and knowing where to look it up is nice if you want to not
freak out when it shows up on your CCIE lab exam in January!
HTH,
Scott Morris, CCIE4 (R&S/ISP-Dial/Security/Service Provider) #4713, CISSP,
JNCIP, et al.
IPExpert CCIE Program Manager
IPExpert Sr. Technical Instructor
swm@emanon.com/smorris@ipexpert.net
http://www.ipexpert.net
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
James
Sent: Sunday, September 19, 2004 5:12 PM
To: Joseph D. Phillips
Cc: group study
Subject: Re: Ipv6? [7:93034]
On Sun, Sep 19, 2004 at 01:51:24PM -0700, Joseph D. Phillips wrote:
> We just have to memorize this:
>
> http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios123/123cgc
> r/ipv6_r/ipv6book.pdf
>
> It's only 788 pages. Should be no problem.
>
> Seriously, though, the paucity of discussion on this topic is unusual.
>
> What are we supposed to know by 1/1/2005?
>
> Or whenever...
IPv6 is not any different than IPv4 with exception of few proto related
cosmetic changes such as anycast, etc, etc. As far as inter-routing goes
its
not any different in conceptual thoughts.
You do need to get some idea of how the subnetting and addressing types
work, which there is a good documentation here:
There are lots of IPv6 addresses to spare today and there are few tunnel
brokers / tunnel providers who can provide anyone with a tunnel and live
BGP
session to setup IPv6. You will then need to know how to setup MP-BGP for
ipv6-unicast and do basic ipv6 static routing and stuff -- if you have
multiple routers, learn about v6 isis or ospfv3 as appropriate. One can
easily assign one of the cisco routers in your rack with a live public IP
to
terminate the ipv6-in-ipv4 tunnel and get a /48 v6 delegation to lab it up
with thru the entire rack.
If you have strong conceptual knowledge in ipv4 routing (IGP, BGP), you
should not find problems quickly picking up IPv6 routing.
There are few tunnel brokers who also can throw in a BGP feed for enduser
to
play with, such as hurrican electric tunnelbroker (www.tunnelbroker.net).
I myself also run a relatively large 6bone pTLA network providing free
experimental transit to several ASN's (some tunnels, some native), if
anyone
is also interested.
HTH,
-J
-- James Jun TowardEX Technologies, Inc. Technical Lead Network Design, Consulting, IT Outsourcing james@towardex.com Boston-based Colocation & Bandwidth Services cell: 1(978)-394-2867 web: http://www.towardex.com , noc: www.twdx.net
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