Comcast launches IPv6 trials
Network World - Comcast will begin in April a series of public trials of three different mechanisms that are aimed at helping the Philadelphia-based ISP transition its network to IPv6, the next-generation Internet Protocol.
Comcast announced that it is starting IPv6 production-level network trials on its blog on Wednesday. The carrier has been working on IPv6 development for five years.
Comcast is looking towards IPv6 as an enabling technology that will allow the carrier to continue adding new subscribers to its network. The largest cable operator in the United States, Comcast had 46.8 million customers for its video, high-speed Internet and voice services as of Sept. 30, 2009. That represents a 3.4% increase over the third quarter of 2008.
Comcast needs IPv6 because the Internet is running out of address space using its current protocol, which is known as IPv4. IPv4 uses 32-bit addresses and can support around 4 billion IP addresses. More than 90% of IPv4 addresses have been distributed to ISPs and other network operators.
Designed as an upgrade to IPv4, IPv6 uses a 128-bit addressing scheme and can support so many billions of IP addresses that the number is too big for most non-techies to understand. (IPv6 supports 2 to the 128th power of IP addresses.)
IPv6 has been available since the mid-1990s, but deployment of IPv6 began in earnest last year. Among the U.S. ISPs that are leading the charge to IPv6 are Comcast, Hurricane Electric and NTT America.
Comcast plans to complete its transition to IPv6 in 2012, which is when the last IPv4 addresses are expected to be allocated.
Comcast is recruiting corporate and residential customers to participate in the IPv6 trials, which will run for several months during 2010.
Comcast will use the trials to identify the best way to migrate its access network to IPv6.
"We've done all the upgrades to prepare our backbone, our back office and our peering points to be IPv6 compliant, but what remains is our access network," says Jason Livingood, Executive Director of Internet Systems Engineering at Comcast.
Comcast will test three IPv6 transition mechanisms:
* Phase one will use 6rd, a technique developed by French ISP Free that allows for rapid deployment of IPv6 by tunneling IPv6 traffic over IPv4 addresses.
* Phase two will support native IPv4 and IPv6 traffic running side-by-side in an approach dubbed dual-stack. This is Comcast's preferred method of transition to IPv6 and may require the carrier to reclaim unused blocks of IPv4 addresses from other network operators.
* Phase three will test a technique developed by Comcast called Dual-Stack Lite, which uses network-address translation to share one IPv4 address among many customers.



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