[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-users] IPV4 is nearly depleted, are you ready for IPV6?
My point wasn't that its not a problem, simply that it wasn't as serious of a problem 10 years ago as it is becoming now. HE has a neat tool that tracks it: http://ipv6.he.net/statistics/ On Sun, Dec 5, 2010 at 6:09 PM, Nathan Eisenberg <nathan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> I've been hearing this for about 10 years and during that 10 years >> have never had a single issue getting ipv4 addresses. While I agree >> that it will run out at some point and that ipv6 probably has >> advantages over ipv4 I think there is just the appearance of a >> shortage due to the allocation of large blocks of ips very early on >> which are very under utilized. I don't think its really anything to >> worry about especially with ipv6inipv4 working just fine. >> >> you see this story posted on various "tech" sites every year for a long >> time > > This is a fallacy. The fact that the depletion rate has been common > knowledge for quite some time doesn't mean, as you would have us believe, > that there is no issue. > > IANA depletion day is in 2 months and 5 days. The first RIR depletion is 335 > days out. Provider depletions will happen very quickly afterwards. You seem > to be under the impression that people have been crying wolf. You're wrong. > The wolf is at a known distance, and travels at a known (and increasing) > rate of speed. Just because you can't see the wolf doesn't mean everyone has > been wrong this whole time. > > And no, there aren't 'large blocks of IPs which are very underutilized'. > There are /8's that can't be broken up for practical reasons, but we're > burning through those in 30-40 days now, so it doesn't matter if they were > returned to the pool. > > This is a very real problem. Please stop spreading FUD. > > Nathan > > _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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