[Discuss] Comcast's IPv6 deployment
Tom Metro
tmetro+blu at gmail.com
Mon May 13 16:09:44 EDT 2013
Daniel Hagerty wrote:
> just skip that and go to the source matter at
> http://www.nanog.org/meetings/nanog37/presentations/alain-durand.pdf.
Ah, perfect, those sides from Comcast's IPv6 Architect explains how the
move to IPv6 was driven by their internal needs...
Simplistic View of Comcast IP problem
20 Million video customer
2.5 set-top box per customer
2 IP addresses per set-top box
----------------------------------------
Total: 100 Millions IP address
And we have not yet talked about High Speed Data...
nor Comcast Digital Voice...
nor merger/acquisition..
-Until recently, Comcast was using Net 10 (RFC1918) for managing the
cable modems.
-That space has been exhausted in 2005.
-In the control plane, all devices need to be remotely managed, so NAT
isn't going to help us...
-IPv6 is the clear solution for us
[...]
IPv6 Strategy
-Start early; Deployment plans have started back in 2005
[...]
-Be ready to offer our customers new services that
take advantage of IPv6
(Why do their set-top-boxes need 2 IP addresses?)
It sounds like if the business guys really wanted them to stick with
IPv4, they could have partitioned the network, but ended up with a
messier design and costlier management system. The slides make no
mention of a retail product that necessitated IPv6. It would seem that
it was a mostly engineering driven decision.
Will similar internal pressures apply to other national ISPs, or will
the business people chose to avoid new equipment expenditures, and use
IPv4 as a toll bridge as Huston suggests?
This paper is another reminder that Comcast's engineering group seems to
be in a different universe from Comcast's business people, who are
responsible for its public reputation.
-Tom
--
Tom Metro
Venture Logic, Newton, MA, USA
"Enterprise solutions through open source."
Professional Profile: http://tmetro.venturelogic.com/
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