• @astral_avocado
    link
    English
    9
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    I’ve talked to several network engineers over the years about IPv6, engineers that work as hands on with actual production infrastructure as you can get. And they all said that IPv6 would likely never be fully adopted.

      • @astral_avocado
        link
        English
        010 months ago

        I am not a full network engineer so take my opinion with a grain of salt. From what I understand, NAT with IPv4 works really really well to mitigate IPv4 address exhaustion. Then there’s an issue with the amount of extra processing switches and routers need to do IPv6, we’re going from 32 bits to 128 bits which is a huge increase and for switches and routers that are handling packets as fast as technically possible with a low amount of resources typically, that’s a not insignificant hurdle.

        It’s just easier to do IPv4 in every way, plus that’s what the world’s been using and is used to.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          610 months ago

          You can’t talk about NAT and then mention speed in the same statement…

          The 128-bit IPv6 addresses are just four simple 32-bit integers if you think about it, but with NAT you have juggle around and maintain the (internal IP, internal Port, external IP, external Port, Protocol) tuples all the time. That’s a significant overhead. Also, switches typically deal with the Layer 2 stuffs. IP is Layer 3.

          See the HN discussion for more information.

          It’s just easier to do IPv4 in every way

          Except when you have to NAT transversal. Then you are in a world of hurt.

          • @astral_avocado
            link
            English
            210 months ago

            Well, there’s the actual engineer response I was looking for

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        -210 months ago

        My understanding is it’s no longer that critical. The sky is no longer falling on IPv4