ipv6 fundamentals & best practices - enog

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IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices ENOG 6, Kiev Ferenc Csorba RIPE NCC

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Page 1: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices

ENOG 6, Kiev

Ferenc CsorbaRIPE NCC

Page 2: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Schedule

• RIPE NCC: Who are we?

• IPv4 exhaustion

• IPv6 address space

• IPv6 for mobile telephony

• Tips and hints

2

Page 3: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Who are we?

3

RIPE NCCLocated in AmsterdamNot for profit membership organisationOne of five RIRs Distribute IP addresses, ASNs etc

RIPEOpen communityDevelops addressing policiesWorking group mailing lists

Page 4: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

The five RIRs

4

Page 5: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv4 Address Pool Exhaustion

Page 6: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IANA IPv4 Pool

6

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011

Page 7: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv4 Address Distribution

7

Allocation PA Assignment PI Assignment

/0

/22

/8

/25/23 /24 End User

LIR

RIR

IANA

1024 IPs

Page 8: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

RIPE NCC’s last /8

8

• Each LIR gets one /22 (=1024 addresses)

• No PI

2187 /22 have been allocated since September 2012

Page 9: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 Address Space

Page 10: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 Basics

• 128 bits in IPv6

• 32 bits in IPv4

10

Page 11: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Address Notation

2001:0db8:003e:ef11:0000:0000:c100:004d

11

2001: db8: 3e:ef11: 0: c100:0 00 000 000 004d0:

2001:db8:3e:ef11:0:0:c100:4d

1 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1

Page 12: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Number of addresses (rounded off)

• IPv4- 4000000000

• IPv6- 300000000000000000000000000000000000000

12

Page 13: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 Address Distribution

13

Allocation PA Assignment PI Assignment

/3

/32

/12

/48/60 /48 End User

LIR

RIR

IANA

4 billion subnets

(/64s)

Page 14: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 Ripeness

14

• Rating system:– One star if the LIR has an IPv6 allocation

– Additional stars if:

- IPv6 Prefix is announced on router

- A route6 object is in the RIPE Database

- Reverse DNS is set up

– A list of all 4 star LIRs: http://ripeness.ripe.net/

Page 15: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

2013 IPv6 RIPEness: ALL 9579 LIRs

15

4 stars21%

3 stars13%

2 stars8%

1 star23%

No IPv636%

Page 16: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 RIPEness in the region

16

18%

12%

12%

12%

47%

62%

6%

12%

6%

14%

47%

14%

13%

7%

19%

Russia(1101) Ukraine(168) Belarus(17)

Uzbekistan(18)

67%6%

6%

22%

Kazakhstan(50)

34%

31%

10%

8%

18%

0*1*

2*

3*4*

0* 1*

2*

3*4*

0*

1*

2*

3*

4*

0*

1*2*

3*

4*

0*

1*

2*4*

Page 17: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

How to get an IPv6 allocation

• To qualify, an organisation mujst:- Be an LIR - Have a plan for making assignments within two years

• Minimum allocation size /32

• Up to a /29

• Announcement as a single prefix recommended

17

Page 18: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Now what?

Page 19: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Philosophy change

Page 20: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv4 -> IPv6 : What philosophy change?

18.446.744.073.709.551.616 IPv6 addresses

20

How many subnets do I need?

Subnet always = /64

How many IP addresses do I need?

Page 21: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv4 -> IPv6 : Как изменилься подход ?

18.446.744.073.709.551.616 IPv6 addresses

21

Сколько подсетей мне нужно ?

Каждая подсеть = /64

Сколько адресов мне нужно ?

Page 22: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Assignments to customers

• How many subnets do I give my customers?- /64 (1 subnet)- /60 (16 subnets)- /56 (256 subnets)- /52 (4096 subnets)- /48 (65536 subnets)

22

Page 23: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Default Allocation size = /32

• How many assignments can I make ?- 4 billion /64’s- 268 million /60’s- 17 million /56’s- 1million /52’s- 65536 /48’s

23

Page 24: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IP Addresses

1248

163264

1282565121 K2 K4 K8 K

16 K32 K64 K

128 K256 K512 K

1 M2 M4 M8 M

16 M32 M64 M

128 M256 M512 M

1024 M2048 M4096 M

Bits

01234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132

Prefix

/32/31/30/29/28/27/26/25/24/23/22/21/20/19/18/17/16/15/14/13/12/11/10/9/8/7/6/5/4/3/2/1/0

Subnet Mask

255.255.255.255255.255.255.254255.255.255.252255.255.255.248255.255.255.240255.255.255.224255.255.255.192255.255.255.128255.255.255.0255.255.254.0255.255.252.0255.255.248.0255.255.240.0255.255.224.0255.255.192.0255.255.128.0255.255.0.0255.254.0.0255.252.0.0255.248.0.0255.240.0.0255.224.0.0255.192.0.0255.128.0.0255.0.0.0254.0.0.0252.0.0.0248.0.0.0240.0.0.0224.0.0.0192.0.0.0128.0.0.00.0.0.0

IPv4 CIDR Chart RIPE NCC

www.ripe.netContact Registration Services:

Prefix

/24/25/26/27/28/29/30/31/32/33/34/35/36/37/38/39/40/41/42/43/44/45/46/47/48/49/50/51/52/53/54/55/56/57/58/59/60/61/62/63/64

Bits

104103102101100999897969594939291908988878685848382818079787776757473727170696867666564

/56s

4G2G1G

512M256M128M64M32M16M8M4M2M1M

512K256K128K64K32K16K8K4K2K1K

5122561286432168421

/64s

1T512G256G128G64G32G16G8G4G2G1G

512M256M128M64M32M16M8M4M2M1M

512K256K128K64K32K16K8K4K2K1K

5122561286432168421

/48s

16M8M4M2M1M

512K256K128K64K32K16K8K4K2K1K

5122561286432168421

RIP

E N

CC

IPv6

Cha

rt

Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR)

24

Page 25: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Why use only multiples of 4?

Page 26: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

If /x is a multiple of 4

26

/48

0 0 1 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0: 0 0 0 0: 0 0 0 0:

48 fixed bits

0 0 0 0

2

12 fixed hex digits

26 hex digits can take any values

80 freely variable bits

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0. . . . .0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 . . . . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

:0 0 1 0 d b 8 : 0 0 0 7 : 0 0 0 0

0 1 1 1

:

0 0 0 0

Page 27: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

If /x is NOT a multiple of 4

27

/50

0 0 1 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0: 0 0 0 0: 0 0 0 0:

50 fixed bits

0 0 0 0

2

12 fixed hex digits

25 hex digits can take any values

78 freely variable bits

0 0 0 0. . . . .0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 . . . . . 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

:0 0 1 0 d b 8 : 0 0 0 7 :

0 1 1 1

:

1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

8 0 0 0

1 hex digit can only take certain values!example: 8, 9, a or b

0 0 0 0

Page 28: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Only certain hex values possible

28

1 0 0 0

fixed bits variable bits

88, 9, a or b only!

1 0 0 0

1 0 0 1

1 0 10

1 0 11

Page 29: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

“Easy” & “complicated” ranges

• 2001:db8:7::/48

29

- 2001:db8:7:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx

• 2001:db8:7:8000::/50

- 2001:db8:7:8xxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx- 2001:db8:7:9xxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx- 2001:db8:7:axxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx- 2001:db8:7:bxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx:xxxx

Page 30: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 Subnetting

30

0000:00002001:0DB8:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000

IPv6 Subnetting

/32 = 65536 /48/48 = 65536 /64

/52 = 4096 /64/56 = 256 /64

64 bits interface ID

/60 = 16 /64/64

Contact Training Services: [email protected] us on Twitter: www.twitter.com/TrainingRIPENCC

www.ripe.net

Page 31: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

31

IPv4 vs IPv6 (rounded off)

4x109 2x1019

2x106 4x109

2048 4x109

in each allocation: in each allocation:

IPv4 IPv6

addresses

addresses

allocationsto members

subnets

subnets

Page 32: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Addressing Plans

Page 33: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Why create an IPv6 addressing plan?

• Easier implementation of security policies

• Efficient addressing plans are scalable

• More efficient route aggregation

33

and most important...

Page 34: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Keep your mental health!

Image source: http://bit.ly/11YvFVC

Page 35: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Addressing plan example

35

Page 36: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Solution POP1

36

Infrastructure

routerrouter

Page 37: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Solution POP2

37

Page 38: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Make an addressing plan (I)

• Number of hosts is irrelevant

• Multiple /48s per pop can be used- separate blocks for infrastructure and customers- document address needs for allocation criteria

• /64 for all subnets- autoconfiguration works- renumbering easier- less typo errors because of simplicity

38

Page 39: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Make an addressing plan (II)

• Routers:

• Give all routers the same size block

• Minimum: One /64 per interface

• Allow for more interfaces in future

• /56 or /52 typical for a router

39

Page 40: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Make an addressing plan (II)

• Use one /64 block (per site) for loopbacks- One /128 per device

40

One /64 = 18.446.744.073.709.551.616

IPv6 addresses

Page 41: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

More On Addressing Plans for ISPs

• For servers you want manual configuration

• Use port numbers for addresses

41

- pop server 2001:db8:1::110- dns server 2001:db8:1::53- etc...

Page 42: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Point-to-Point Connections

• Reserve a /64, assign a /127

42

Page 43: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Customer assignments

• Give your customers enough addresses- Up to a /48

• For more addresses, send in request form- Alternatively, make a sub-allocation

• Every assignment must be registered in the RIPE database

43

Page 44: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Customers And Their /48

• Customers have no idea how to handle 65536 subnets!

• Give them information

44

http://bit.ly/116HCTg

PREPARING AN IPV6 ADDRESS PLAN

MANUAL

Page 45: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 Address Management

• Your Excel sheet might not scale– There are 65.536 /48s in a /32

– There are 65.536 /64s in a /48

– There are 16.777.216 /56s in a /32

• Find a suitable IPAM solution

45

Page 46: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 &Address Translation for Mobile Telephony

Page 47: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

IPv6 and IPv4 compatibility?

• IPv6 is a different protocol from IPv4

• IPv6 hosts cannot talk to IPv4 hosts directly

• Tools like 6in4 and other transition mechanisms let IPv6 hosts talk to each other

- tunneling- translation

47

Page 48: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

NAT64/DNS64

• Single-stack clients will only have IPv6

• Translator box will strip all headers and replace them with IPv4

• Requires some DNS “magic”– Capture responses and replace A with AAAA

– Response is crafted based on target IPv4 address

• Usually implies address sharing on IPv4

48

Page 49: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

NAT64/DNS64

49

!"#$%&'#(&$ )&*+',(& -./(&.(/

-)+0-)+1

-)+1

!"#

!"#$%

-)+1

-)+1

&!'$%

-)+1

Page 50: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Drawback

• Some applications don’t work on IPv6 only devices

– Spotify, Netflix, Skype

50

• Solution?– 464XLAT

– makes IPv4-only applications work on IPv6-only device

Page 51: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

464XLAT

• NAT64+Stateless IP translation on device

• on IPv6 only mobile devices – Install CLAT demon locally

– 464XLAT gives the mobile dummy IPv4 address

– IPv4 only application can use IPv4 interface

– and works!

– CLAT translates IPv4 to IPv6 locally

– NAT64 for accessing IPv4 networks

51

Page 52: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Deployment?• T-Mobile US, Verizon

• phones– Nexus S, Galaxy Nexus, Galaxy S, Galaxy Note, Verizon LTE

• Android– CLAT open source

• Android 4.3 – CLAT built in

52

Page 53: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Useful links & hints

• 464xlat details:– https://sites.google.com/site/tmoipv6/464xlat

• RFC 6877 (464XLAT)

• RFC 6146 (NAT64-in the core)

• RFC 6145 (IP/ICMP translation on the edge)

• CLAT installation on Android platform– http://dan.drown.org/android/clat/index.html

• Video of live demo at 3rd World IPv6 Congress, Paris– http://www.internetsociety.org/deploy360/blog/2013/04/

video-464xlat-live-demo-at-world-ipv6-congress-in-paris

53

Page 54: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Useful IPv6 info

Page 55: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

Useful information

Websites

• http://www.getipv6.info/

• http://www.ipv6actnow.org

• http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/v6ops/

• http://www.ripe.net/ripe/docs/ripe-554.html

Mailing lists

• http://lists.cluenet.de/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-ops

• http://www.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-wg

55

Page 56: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

56

More Questions?Come to our 1 day free

IPv6 training!Only for RIPE NCC members:

www.ripe.net/training

Page 57: IPv6 Fundamentals & Best Practices - ENOG

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