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IP Version 6 ITL
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IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

Jan 04, 2016

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Page 1: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

IP Version 6

ITL

Page 2: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2

Information Sources

• www.ipv6.org• Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet

Protocol”, Prentice Hall PTR, 1996.• Lots of RFCs, 3513 describes the current

address format• Many others, see the web site

Page 3: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 3

Why change IP

• Number of addresses

• Routing Table Size

• Client configuration

• Other stuff that could be done in IPv4 (but not as well)

Page 4: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 4

New IP Header +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |Version| Traffic Class | Flow Label | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Payload Length | Next Header | Hop Limit | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | | + + | | + Source Address + | | + + | | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | | + + | | + Destination Address + | | + + | | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Page 5: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 5

Changes

• No fragmentation

• No options– Replaced by a chain of headers

• No checksum

• Hop count limit is still 255

• Packet size limit is still 64K

Page 6: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 6

Address Notation• 128 bits = 16 8-bit numbers; cumbersome!• new notation uses 8 16-bit numbers, written

in hexadecimal• Example:

– fedc:ba98:7654:3210:f5d9:1106:65fc:66d3– Omitt leading zeroes, compress one zero run– fddc:8::78:f =

fddc:0008:0000:0000:0000:0000:0078:000f– Zone ID: fe80::ab:cd%3

Page 7: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 7

Address Allocation Design

• Revisit the routing table issue– Address hierarchy– Geographic allocation?– Provider allocation

• Client Configuration– IPv6 includes auto/zero configuration

• self-assigned addresses• router-based distribution of network information

Page 8: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 8

Some Details

• Use the resources on the web to read up on this information

• “Classes” of addresses• Configuration of hosts• Transition from IPv4 to IPv6

Page 9: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 9

Address allocation

Address type Binary prefix IPv6 notation

------------ ------------- ------------Unspecified 00...0 (128 bits) ::/128

Loopback 00...1 (128 bits) ::1/128

Multicast 11111111 FF00::/8

Link-local unicast 1111111010 FE80::/10

Site-local unicast 1111111011 FEC0::/10 note 1Local Addresses 1111110 FC00::/7 note 2

Global unicast (everything else)

• Currently global addresses start with 001, i.e. 2000::/3 (1/8 of the available space), about 70 billion usable addresses

• Note 1: Site Locals are being removed from the standard• Note 2: These addresses are being standardized now

Page 10: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 10

Global Address

The Interface ID should follow “modified EUI-64” format, it may be constructed to be globally unique, or created randomly for privacy reasons.EUI = Extended Unique Identifier; IEEE Trademark

sitetopology(16 bits)

interfaceidentifier(64 bits)

publictopology(45 bits)

interface IDsubnetNLA*TLA001

Note that this precise structure is being deleted and assignments will be left to the RIRs.

From Steve Deerings “IPv6 Master Class”

Page 11: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 11

Example - OU

• 2001:468:b02::/48– 0010 0000 0000 0001 – 0000 0100 0110 1000 – 0000 1011 0000 0010

• TLA: “Generic TLA”• Sub-TLA: “Temporary Allocation to OARNet”• NLA: OARNet Assignment to OU

Page 12: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 12

“Link Local” Address

Prefix FE80::/64

Page 13: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 13

Other Addresses

• ::a.b.c.d = “Compatibility Address”– Where a.b.c.d is the IPv4 address of the interface

• :: = unassigned address– Equivalent to 0.0.0.0

• ::1 = loopback– Equivalent to 127.0.0.1

Page 14: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 14

A Note on Multiple Addresses

• Hosts have– Loopback– Link-Local– Site-Local (optional)– Global (optional, 1 or more)

Page 15: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 15

Hosts also listen to

The node-local scope all-nodes multicast address (FF01::1)

The link-local scope all-nodes multicast address (FF02::1)

The solicited-node address for each unicast address

The multicast addresses of joined groups

Page 16: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 16

Routers Have:

A link-local address for each interfaceUnicast addresses for each interface

(which could be a site-local address and one or multiple aggregatable global unicast addresses)

A Subnet-Router anycast addressAdditional anycast addresses (optional)A loopback address (::1)

Page 17: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 17

Routers also listen toThe node-local scope all-nodes multicast address

(FF01::1)The node-local scope all-routers multicast address

(FF01::2)The link-local scope all-nodes multicast address

(FF02::1)The link-local scope all-routers multicast address

(FF02::2)The site-local scope all-routers multicast address

(FF05::2)The solicited-node address for each unicast addressThe multicast addresses of joined groups

Page 18: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 18

Configuration

• Based on ICMP6– Automatic selection of link local address by the

host, using the hardware address or another unique ID

– Listen for router announcements (neighbor discovery) for site local and global prefixes

Page 19: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 19

Address Types

• Unicast• Multicast• Anycast

– IPv6 makes use of this for service discovery

Page 20: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 20

Transition Issues

• Clients need– Operating system changes– Application changes– ISP support

• ISPs need– $$$ for upgrades to the core infrastructure

• “Flashcut” is not possible• How do IPv4 and IPv6 coexist?

Page 21: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 21

Coexistence

• Dual protocol stacks• “tunnels”

– Carry IPv6 packets in IPv4 packets– Allows traversal of non-IPv6 capable infrastructure– Allows many IPv6-only devices to reach IPv6

destinations using a single IPv4 address– Useful mainly if all points of interest have IPv6

addresses

Page 22: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 22

6to4 Tunnel

• One machine on a network must have an IPv4 address and becomes the gateway

• The local IPv6 network is– 2002:xxxx:yyyy::/48– xxxx:yyyy is the IPv4 address, e.g– 132.235.1.2 creates 2002:84EB:0102::/48

• IPv6 in IPv4 packets go to a tunnel end-point that has direct access to the IPv6 network

Page 23: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 23

Solaris

• IPv6 support native since version 8• ifconfig used to configure IPv6• Utilities like ping and traceroute have been

updated• Some applications have been updated (web

browser)

Page 24: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 24

BSD

• KAME project (www.kame.net) in Japan provides add-on protocol stacks for many BSD-based systems

• Incorporated into most recent FreeBSD and Linux releases

• Use ifconfig to configure• new IPv6 tools ping6 and traceroute6 are

supplied

Page 25: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 25

Windows

• Microsoft started a developers preview of the integrated IPv6 stack in Win2000 – Command line configuration utilities– ping6 and tracert6– Updated Internet Explorer

• Same code ships (disabled) with WinXP• IPv6 enabled by default in Win 2003• netsh utility used for configuration

Page 26: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 26

Domain Name Service

• IPv4 uses– A records to translate names to addresses– PTR records to translate addresses to names

• star.csm.ohiou.edu = 132.235.67.50• 50.67.235.132.in-addr.arpa =

star.csm.ohiou.edu

Page 27: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 27

DNS continued

• IPv6 support– AAAA records translate names to IPv6 addresses– PTR records are used as before, but in a different

“domain”– To find a name for

fedc:ba98:7654:3210:f5d9:1106:65fc:66d3, look at the PTR record for

– 3.d.6.6.c.f.5.6.6.0.1.1.9.d.5.f.0.1.2.3.4.5.6.7.8.9.a.b.c.d.e.f.ip6.int

– Another record type, A6, is no longer supported

Page 28: IP Version 6 ITL. © 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 2 Information Sources  Christian Huitema, “IPv6, The New Internet Protocol”,

© 2003 Hans Kruse & Shawn Ostermann, Ohio University 28

Example

> www.kame.net

Server: boss.cs.ohiou.edu

Address: 132.235.1.1

www.kame.net canonical name = apple.kame.net

apple.kame.net canonical name = kame220.kame.net

kame220.kame.net IPv6 address = 2001:200:0:4819:280:adff:fe71:81fc

kame220.kame.net IPv6 address = 3ffe:501:4819:2000:280:adff:fe71:81fc