World IPv6 Day

World IPv6 Day was an event sponsored and organized by the Internet Society and several large content providers to test public IPv6 deployment.[1] It was announced on January 12, 2011 with five anchoring companies: Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Akamai Technologies, and Limelight Networks.[2] The event started at 00:00 UTC on June 8, 2011 and ended 23:59 the same day.[3] The main motivation for the event was to evaluate the real world effects of the IPv6 brokenness as seen by various synthetic tests. To this end, during World IPv6 Day major web companies and other industry players enabled IPv6 on their main websites for 24 hours. An additional goal was to motivate organizations across the industry – Internet service providers, hardware makers, operating system vendors and web companies – to prepare their services for IPv6, so as to ensure a successful transition from IPv4 as address space runs out.[4]

The test primarily consisted of websites publishing AAAA records, which allow IPv6 capable hosts to connect using IPv6. Although Internet service providers (ISP) have been encouraged to participate, they were not expected to deploy anything active on that day, just increase their readiness to handle support issues.

Many companies and organizations participated in the experiment, including the largest search engines, social networking websites and internet backbone & content distribution networks.[5]

Contents

Participants

There were more than 400 participants[6] included some of the most heavily accessed destinations on the Internet, content distribution networks,[7] as well as various Internet service and infrastructure providers including:[8] Comcast; Google; Yahoo; Facebook; Youtube; Akamai Technologies; Limelight Networks; Microsoft; Vonage; AOL; Mapquest; T-Online; Cisco; Juniper Networks; Huawei; US Department of Commerce; Mastercard; BBC; and Telmex.

Results

Major carriers measured the percentage of IPv6 traffic of all Internet traffic as increasing from 0.024 to 0.041 with respect to native and tunneled stacks combined.[9] The largest increase in traffic in consumer access networks was to Google sites, driven by Android devices.[10] Demonstrating the need for content sites to adopt IPv6 for success, the biggest increase was actually in 6to4 transitional technologies.[10] Early results indicated that the day passed according to plan and without significant problems for the participants.[11]

Cisco and Google reported no significant issues during the test.[12][13] Facebook called the results encouraging, and decided to leave their developer site IPv6-enabled as a result.[14] But the consensus was that more work needed to be done before IPv6 could consistently be applied.[15][16]

The participants will continue to perform detailed analyses of the data. Because most of the Internet infrastructure is already dual stacked,[16] i.e. one for each IPv4 and IPv6, it is not surprising that many participants continue to maintain dual-stacks.[17]

References

  1. ^ "About World IPv6 Day". Internet Society. June 2011. http://www.worldipv6day.org/. ; archived on 23 June 2011 here by Webcite®
  2. ^ "Major Websites Commit to 24-Hour Test Flight for IPv6". Internet Society. 12 January 2011. http://isoc.org/wp/newsletter/?p=2902. ; archived on 23 August 2011 here by Webcite®
  3. ^ "World IPv6 Day - How to Participate". Internet Society. http://www.worldipv6day.org/how-to-join/. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  4. ^ "Corporate reasons to move to IPv6". http://test-ipv6.com/ipv6day.html. 
  5. ^ "World IPv6 Day - List of Participants". Internet Society. http://www.worldipv6day.org/participants/. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  6. ^ Colitti, Lorenzo (6 June 2011) "World IPv6 Day begins 24 hours from now. Websites, start your engines" Official Google Blog archived 23 June 2011 here by WebCite®
  7. ^ http://isoc.org/wp/newsletter/?p=3861
  8. ^ http://www.worldipv6day.org/participants/index.html
  9. ^ http://asert.arbornetworks.com/2011/06/world-ipv6-day-final-look-and-wagons-ho/
  10. ^ a b http://www.sandvine.com/downloads/documents/Sandvine%20Global%20Internet%20Phenomena%20Spotlight%20-%20World%20IPv6%20Day.pdf
  11. ^ Doyle, Eric (2011-06-09). "IPv6 Day Is Hailed As A Qualified Success". eWEEK Europe. http://www.eweekeurope.co.uk/news/ipv6-day-is-hailed-as-a-qualified-success-31300. Retrieved 2011-06-09. 
  12. ^ Townsley, Mark (2011-06-08). "World IPv6 Day: A Watershed Moment Towards a New Internet Protocol". The Platform. Cisco Systems. http://blogs.cisco.com/news/world-ipv6-day-a-watershed-moment-towards-a-new-internet-protocol/. Retrieved 2011-06-09. 
  13. ^ Colitti, Lorenzo (2011-06-06). "World IPv6 Day begins 24 hours from now. Websites, start your engines.". Official Google Blog. http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/06/world-ipv6-day-begins-24-hours-from-now.html. Retrieved 2011-06-09. 
  14. ^ Lee, Donn (2011-06-08). "Exciting Results from World IPv6 Day". Facebook Engineering's Notes. http://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=10150198443513920. Retrieved 2011-06-09. 
  15. ^ Dornan, Andy (16 June 2011) "What Did IPv6 Day Teach Us?" Information Week; archived on 20 June 2011 here by Webcite®
  16. ^ a b MacVittie, Lori (11 June 2011) "IPv4 to IPv6 switch: When protocols collide" ZD Net; archived 20 June 2011 here by WebCite®
  17. ^ "Dual Stack Connectivity Chart" RIPE Network Coordination Centre; the version on 23 June 2011 was archived here by WebCite®

External links