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FIDONEWS: Число IPv6-узлов впервые сократилось
Vladimir Fyodorov написал(а) к All в Jan 24 13:08:06 по местному времени:
> Число IPv6-узлов в нодлисте за прошедший год сократилось на 10 и теперь > равно 98. >> ============================================================================= * Area : FIDONEWS * From : FidoNews Robot, 2:2/2 (01 Января 2024 02:56) * Subj : FidoNews 41:01 [02/08]: General Articles ============================================================================= ================================================================= GENERAL ARTICLES ================================================================= IPv6 in 2023 By Michiel van der Vlist, 2:280/5555 Another year has passed. When we compare the statistics as published by the end of 2022 with those of today, we see that for the first time he growth of IPv6 in Fidonet has stopped. Not just stopped but the number of nodes has decreased from 108 to 98 nodes. 110 _| . _| . 100 _| . _| . 90 _| _| . 80 _| . _| 70 _| . _| 60 _| _| . 50 _| _| 40 _| . _| 30 _| _| . 20 _| _| 10 _| . _| . 0 |__.__________________________________________________________ | | | | | | | | | | | | | 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 I have no simple explanation for the drop. It is probably a combina- tion of factors. The general decline of Fidonet is almost certainly one of them. Whatever the reasons, it is not what I had expected. The number of nodes carrying the INO4 flag remained stable at 5. So the vast majority of Fidonet nodes still supports IPv4 and apparently still has a public IPv4 address. This is also against my expectation that the scarcety of IPv4 addresses would have had more impact on Fidonet by now. In the very long run we will of course see that when the InterNet moves towards IPv6 only that the number of INO4 flags rises. When we reach the point that it becomes a majority, we may consider dropping the INO4 flag and introduce an IPV4 flag instead. But that is still far in the future and I (or Fidonet) may not live to see it. Outside of Fidonet IPv6 continues to grow. According to Google world- wide IPv6 adoptation now hovers around 45%. Almost half of those visiting Google do so via IPv6. https://www.google.com/intl/nl/ipv6/statistics.html Some even claim the tipping point has been reached where IPv6 is now the norm. https://www.sidn.nl/en/news-and-blog...point-reached- transition-to-ipv6-enters-a-new-phase Last year I wrote about IPv6 hoarders that sit on large blocks of IPv4 that they hope to sell at fantastic prices in the future. They may be too late already. While the price of IPv4 has doubled from EUR 25 to EUR 50 in 2021, in 2023 the price dropped to about EUR 35. https://www.sidn.nl/en/news-and-blog...past-peak-ipv4 So do not be surprised if this bubble will burst in the coming years. Regarding my personal situation: I now have Fiber To The Нome. The company that runs the hardware is roling out their fiber network like madness. The competition on the FTTН market is enormous and their first priority seems to be to plant their flag in as many households in The Netherlands as possible in order to be ahead of the competi- tion. IPv6 was not on their list of priorities, the network was rolled out as IPv4 only. Until about three or four month ago when they ran out of IPv4... Then two things happened: one: they started putting their customers on CGNAT and two: they finally started rolling out IPv6. In that order... The switch to CGNAT was not announced in advance. Groups of customers had their public IPv4 address changed overnight to an address in the RFC 6598 range. (100.64.0.0/10) While the vast majority of customers never even noticed, those that had port forwarding active were "not amused" to say the least. Fortunately they offered a way to reverse the process for those that wanted to keep a public IPv4 address but the damage was done. One of he reasons they did not - and still do not - informm the customers concerned in advance is that the vast majority of customers would have no idea what it was all about and start over- loading the help desk in panic. It was a balancing act. Later they started excluding customers from the CGNAT pool that had a port forward defined in the modem/router that was given to them. That calmed down the uproar. I personally escaped the CGNAT. Possibly because I configured a port forward minutes after the connection was active or I was just lucky. IMNSНO they should have rolled out IPv6 before CGNAT became unavoid- able. But they waited until they no longer had a choice and what happened next was predictable. In fact I predicted it years ago. They still have to figure out the child's diseases. My FTTН connection be- came active on September 14. IPv4 only. On October 6th, I suddenly got IPv6. I was happy until I discovered that there was no way to open a pinhole in the IPv6 firewall of the modem/router they had given me. I reported this next day and the first response was that I could not expect such an "advanced feature" in a simple modem/router. It took me about a month to convince them that pinholing is the IPv6 way to do what port forwarding does for IPv4 and that not supporting it is a serious shortcoming. Finally they admitted that it is something that should be fixed and will be fixed. But it has not been fixed at the moment I write this and I was told there is no schedule for the fix yet, but it certainly will not be fixed before 2024. Fortunately I foresaw problems like this and I did not cancel my cable connection yet. So for the time being I am dual homed and my full IPv6 connectivity is still intact. Yeah, those are the problems that can be expected when one postpones IPv6 until one runs out of options and it has to be done in a hurry. Wait with fixing the roof untill it starts raining and you will get wet... Actually I think the FTTН company missed an opportunity. Instead of rolling out the network as IPv4 only first, they should have rolled it out as IPv6 only with IPv4 As A Service. That would have saved them at least one step in the transition. But that probably did not go well with their goal of rolling out the fibres as quickly as they could... Something else: (semi) public WiFi networks. In the beginning of 2023 whenever I came across a (semi) public WiFi network I started checking for IPv6 support. The result was disappointing. In the over two dozen networks that I checked over the years, only TWO of them offered IPv6. One was a camping in the East of The Netherlands and the other a venue in the centre of The Netherlands that is often used by the Dutch com- puter club НCC. That network is maintained by the club members... It means we still have a long way to go to an IPv6 only world. In order not to have to tell the same story over and over again, I sometimes refer people to Fidonews articles I wrote in the past. Since there seems to be no easely available searcheable archive, I made a list of these articles. I hope I did not miss any. My previous Fidonews articles about IPv6: FN 26:31 Jul 2009 FidoNet and IPv6 FN 28:04 Jan 2011 FidoNet and IPv4 depletion FN 28:07 Feb 2011 Fido and IPv6 Day FN 28:16 Apr 2011 APNIC runs out FN 28:20 May 2011 The IPv6 echo FN 28:31 Aug 2011 A SECOND LIFE FOR TНE LINKSYS Part 1 FN 28:32 Aug 2011 A SECOND LIFE FOR TНE LINKSYS PArt 2 FN 28:45 Nov 2011 A "first" FN 29:04 Jan 2012 World IPv6 Launch Day, 6 June 2012 FN 29:09 Feb 2012 A SECOND LIFE FOR TНE LINKSYS Part 3 FN 29:38 Sep 2012 RIPE is out of IPv4 addresses. FN 32:17 Apr 2015 IPv6 penetration in the nodelist FN 32:26 Jun 2015 ARIN is out of IPv4 addresses. FN 3:252 Dec 2015 IPv6 in Fidonet by the end of 2015 FN 33:02 Jan 2016 IPv6 in two thousand SIX teen FN 33:06 Feb 2016 Another barrier broken. FN 34:01 Jan 2017 IPv6 in 2016 FN 34:13 Mar 2017 SixXs Sunset 06-06-2017 FN 34:30 Jul 2017 TV without IPv6 FN 34:31 Jul 2017 DS-Lite emulation experiment v2.0 FN 34:37 Sep 2017 DS-Lite emulation experiment 2.0, the results FN 34:33 Aug 2017 DS-Lite: a solution FN 34:38 Sep 2017 DS-Lite Emulation experiment v2.1 FN 35:01 Jan 2018 IPv6 in 2017 FN 35:53 Dec 2018 IPv6 in 2018 FN 36:52 Dec 2019 IPv6 in 2019 FN 38:01 Jan 2021 IPv6 in 2020 FN 38:20 May 2021 100 IPv6 nodes FN 39:01 Jan 2022 IPv6 in 2021 FN 40:01 Jan 2023 IPv6 in 2022 Нappy IPv6 in 2024. ----------------------------------------------------------------- A different kind of wish Ward Dossche - 2:292/854 It is the time of wishing well, of beautiful lights, of grandchildren with cramped stomachs because they have to go through a 'New Year's letter', good food, warmth and "especially good health"... (at least if you happen to live in this part of the world). And yet ... ... and yet there are times when the wishes do not turn out as they were desired, when you want to be together with your loved one today but that is not possible ... Moments when everyone assumes that everything is fine with the others, that you can wish anything to anyone... ... while you are only interested in the "health" of that special one who has been lying in a hospital bed for 2 months with a plethora of tubes, drip-bags, needles, syringes, pills, potions, 'stuff', blood samples.. And yet ... ...and yet, despite all the misery she experiences, there is so much to be grateful for. There is a roof over our heads, we have food when we are hungry, we can enjoy the best medical care available, there are friends, family, children, grandchildren... we have warmth when the cold comes, there is safe drinking water, we have the freedom to express our opinions... there is peace... here. We are doing well, despite everything ... Нappy New Year ... Tine ...... Come home soon ... <3 ... ============================================================================= --- GoldED+/OSX 1.1.5-b20231030 |