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Internet Engineering Task Force R. Despres
Internet-Draft October 23, 2008
Intended status: Informational
Expires: April 26, 2009
IPv6 Rapid Deployment on IPv4 infrastructures (6rd)
draft-despres-6rd-02
Status of this Memo
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Abstract
IPv6 rapid deployment (6rd) builds upon mechanisms of 6to4 (RFC3056)
to enable a service provider to rapidly deploy IPv6 unicast service
to IPv4 sites to which it provides customer premise equipment. Like
6to4, it utilizes stateless IPv6 in IPv4 encapsulation in order to
transit IPv4-only network infrastructure. Unlike 6to4, a 6rd service
provider uses an IPv6 prefix of its own in place of the fixed 6to4
prefix. A service provider has used this mechanism for its own IPv6
"rapid deployment": five weeks from first exposure to 6rd principles
to more than 1,500,000 residential sites being provided quasi-native
IPv6, under the only condition that they activate it.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Problem statement and purpose of 6rd . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Specification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. Remarks on utilization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.1. 6rd and ISPs that assign private IPv4 addresses . . . . . 7
4.2. Deployment of native IPv6 after having deployed 6rd . . . 7
5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
7. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
8. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
8.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
8.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . . 10
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1. Introduction
After having had a succinct presentation of the 6rd idea, a major
French Internet service provider (ISP), Free of the Iliad group, did
all of the following in an impressively short delay of only five
weeks (November 7th to December 11th 2007):
1. obtain its first IPv6 prefix from its regional Internet Registry
(RIR);
2. add 6rd support to the software of its Freebox home-gateway
(upgrading for this an available 6to4 code);
3. provision PC-compatible platform with a 6to4 gateway software;
4. modify it to support 6rd;
5. test IPv6 operation with several operating systems and
applications;
6. finish operational deployment, by means of new downloadable
software for Freeboxes;
7. announce IPv6 Internet connectivity, at no extra charge, for all
its customers wishing to activate it.
More than 1,500,000 residential customers thus became able to use
IPv6 if they wished to, with the same look and feel as with a purely
native IPv6 solution. The only condition was an activation of IPv6
in their Freeboxes, and of course in their IPv6 capable hosts.
This story is reported to illustrate that ISPs that provide customer
premise equipment to their customers with routing capability (router
CPEs), and that have so far deffered IPv6 deployment can, with the
dramatically reduced investment and operational costs that 6rd make
possible, decide to wait no longer.
To complete the story, Free announced, on March 6th 2008, that
provided two of its customer sites had IPv6 activated, its Telesites
application (Web sites published on TV) could now be used remotely
between them. Also, while IPv6 availability was in december 2007
limited to only one IPv6 link per customer site (/64 site prefixes),
it was upgraded to up to 16 IPv6 links per customer site (/60 site
prefixes) when, a few months later, Free obtained a /28 prefix from
its regional Internet registry. (The /32 obtained initially was the
default value an ISP could be assigned without delay).
Readers are supposed to be familiar with 6to4 [RFC3056].
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2. Problem statement and purpose of 6rd
Having ISPs to rapidly bring IPv6 to customers sites, in addition to
IPv4 and without extra charge, is a way to break the existing vicious
circle that has delayed IPv6 deployment: ISPs wait for customer
demand before deploying IPv6; customers don't demand IPv6 as long as
application vendors announce that their products work on existing
infrastructures (that are IPv4 with NATs); application vendors focus
their investments on NAT traversal compatibility as long as ISPs
don't deploy IPv6.
But most ISPs are not willing to add IPv6 to their current offer, at
no charge, unless incurred investment and operational costs are
extremely limited. For this, ISPs that provide router CPEs to their
customers have the most favorable conditions: they can upgrade their
router CPEs to support IPv6 encapsulation and operate gateways
between these infrastructures and the global IPv6 Internet to also do
IPv6/v4 encapsulation, so that they can keep the routing plan of
their IPv4 infrastructures.
Encapsulation a la 6to4 is very close to be sufficient for this: it
is simple; it is supported on many platforms including PC compatible
appliances; open-source portable code is available; its stateless
nature ensures good scalability.
There is however a limitation of 6to4 that prevents ISPs to use it to
offer full IPv6 unicast connectivity to their customers. While an
ISP that deploys 6to4 can guarantee that IPv6 packets outgoing from
its customer sites will reach the IPv6 Internet, and also guarantee
that packets coming from other 6to4 sites will reach its customer
sites, it cannot guarantee that packets from native IPv6 sites will
reach them. A packet coming from a native IPv6 address needs to
traverse, somewhere on its way, a 6to4 relay router do the required
IPv6/IPv4 encapsuation. The problem is that there is no guarantee to
have a route toward such a relay from everywhere, nor is there a
guarantee that all such relays do forward packets toward the complete
IPv4 Internet.
An ISP, if it operates one or several 6to4 relay routers and opens
IPv6 routes toward them on the IPv6 Internet for the 6to4 prefix
2002::/16, may receive in these relays packets destined to an unknown
number of other 6to4 ISPs. If it doesn't forward them, it creates a
black hole in which packets may be systematically lost, breaking some
of the IPv6 connectivity. If it does forward them, it can no longer
dimension its 6to4 relay routers in proportion to the traffic of its
own customers. Quality of service, at least for customers of other
6to4 ISPs, will then hardly be guaranteed.
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The purpose of 6rd is to slightly modify 6to4 so that:
1. Packets that, coming from the global Internet, enter 6rd gateways
of an ISP are only packets destined to customer sites of this
ISP.
2. All IPv6 packets destined to 6rd customer sites of an ISP, and
coming from anywhere else on the IPv6 Internet, traverse a 6rd
gateway of this ISP.
3. Specification
The principle of 6rd is that, to build on 6to4 and suppress its
limitation, it is sufficient that:
1. 6to4 functions are modified to replace the standard prefix
2002::/16 by an IPv6 prefix that belongs to the ISP assigned
address space, and to replace the 6to4 anycast address by another
anycast address chosen by the ISP.
2. The ISP operates one or several 6rd gateways (upgraded 6to4
routers) at its border between its IPv4 infrastructure and the
IPv6 Internet.
3. CPE routers are IPv6 on their customer-site side and support 6rd
(upgraded 6to4 function).
Figure 1 shows how the IPv6 prefix of a customer site is derived from
its IPv4 address.
+---------------//-------.------------------------------+
| 6rd-relays IPv6 prefix | IPv4 address |
| of the ISP | of the customer site |
+---------------//-------'------------------------------+
<-- less or equal to 32 -><------------ 32 ------------->
<-------------------------- less or equal to 64 ------->
FORMAT OF THE IPV6 PREFIX ASSIGNED TO A 6RD CUSTOMER SITE
Figure 1
Figure 2 shows which nodes have to be upgraded from 6to4 to 6rd, and
which addresses or prefixes have to be routed to them.
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IPv4 AND IPv6 customer site
|
| 6rd CPEs 6rd relays
| (modified 6to4) (modified 6to4)
| | |
| | __________________________ |
| | | | |
| | | ISP IPV4 INFRASTRUCTURE | V GLOBAL
V V | | ___ IPV6
___ | | | | INTERNET
| | | | .-----------------|--| |---
|--| |--|-. / | |___|
| |___| | \ / |
| \ / IPv4 | IPv6 Prefix
| O anycast address => | <= of 6rd relays
| ___ | / \ of 6rd relays | of the ISP
| | | | / \ | ___
|--| |--|-' \ | | |
| |___| | '-----------------|--| |---
| | | |___|
| IPv4 addresses |
| <= of customer sites |
|__________________________|
ISP ARCHITECTURE TO DEPLOY IPV6 WITH 6RD
Figure 2
Like with 6to4, IPv6 communication between customer sites is direct
across the ISP IPv4 infrastructure. It doesn't need to go through
6rd relays.
The IPv4 anycast address of 6rd relays may be chosen independently by
each ISP. The only constraint is that routes toward the ISP that are
advertised must not include this address. For example, Free took a
192.88.99.k address, routed with the same /24 prefix as 6to4 but with
k different from 1 to avoid confusion with the 6to4 address of
[RFC3068]. Another possibility is to use the anycast address of 6to4
and to add, in relays, a test on the IPv6 prefix of the ISP side
address. If it is 2002::/16, the packet is 6to4, not 6rd.
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4. Remarks on utilization
4.1. 6rd and ISPs that assign private IPv4 addresses
If an ISP has assigned addresses of an IPv4 private space RFC 1918 to
some customer sites (and operates IPv4 NATs in its infrastructure),
it can also use 6rd to bring IPv6 to these sites.
IPv4 packets that contain IPv6 packets don't go to NATs: they go
directly to 6rd relays because of their destination being the 6rd
relay anycast address.
4.2. Deployment of native IPv6 after having deployed 6rd
If an ISP has taken its only assigned IPv6 prefix as its 6rd relay
prefix, it can still add native IPv6 routing to its infrastructure
without conflict with 6rd addresses.
For this, it is sufficient that all native IPv6 prefixes have 1110 as
the 4 bits next to the IPv6 6rd relay prefix. The reason is that:
o IPv4 addresses that are included in 6rd IPv6 addresses are, like
in 6to4, only unicast addresses.
o 1110 (i.e. 240.0.0.0/4) is, in IPv4, the prefix of multicast
addresses [IPv4 addresses].
Once native IPv6 has thus been brought to all its customer sites, the
ISP can abandon all its support of 6rd. After that, no restriction
holds any longer on native IPv6 prefixes that may be assigned.
5. Security Considerations
Security considerations for 6to4 are documented in [RFC3964]. With
the restriction imposed by 6rd that relays of an ISP deal only with
traffic that belongs to that ISP, checks that have to be done become
the following:
o CPE PACKETS TOWARD THE INTERNET: The IPv6 source must be, and the
IPv6 destination must no be, a 6rd address of the site.
o RELAY PACKETS TOWARD THE INTERNET: The IPv6 source must be a 6rd
address that matches the IPv4 source. The IPv6 destination must
not start with the ISP 6rd prefix.
o CPE PACKETS FROM THE INTERNET: If the IPv4 source is the 6rd-
relays anycast address of the local ISP, the IPv6 source must not
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be a 6rd address of this ISP. Otherwise, the IPv6 source must be
the 6rd address that matches the IPv4 source.
o RELAY PACKETS FROM THE INTERNET: The IPv6 source must not be a 6rd
address of the ISP. The IPv4 destination must not be multicast,
i.e. must not star with 224/3. (Notes: The fact that the IPv6
destination starts with the IPv6 prefix of the ISP 6rd relays is
ensured by the routing configuration, but may be double-checked.
If the IPv4 address extracted from the IPv6 destination doesn't
belong to the ISP, the destination CPE should detect that the IPv6
destination contains neither its ISP 6rd prefix, if it has one,
nor the 6to4 prefix, and should discard the packet.)
These precautions being taken, it remains that, where IPv4 address
spoofing is possible (IPv4 sites placing unauthorized source
addresses in some packets they send), IPv6 address spoofing is also
possible. Higher layers are then left, like with IPv4, with the
responsibility to limit consequences.
6. IANA Considerations
6rd can be deployed by ISPs without needing any new assignment by
IANA.
7. Acknowledgements
The author warmly acknowledges the major contribution of Rani Assaf
to 6rd's proven credibility. He readily appreciated 6rd's potential,
and made the daring decision to rapidly implement it and deploy it on
Free's operational network. Mark Townsley, Brian Carpenter and
Patrick Grossetete have to be thanked for their encouragements and
suggestions as to how to proceed in IETF.
Acknowledgments are also due to some IPv6 old timers, in particular
Laurent Toutain, Francis Dupont and Alain Durand, who, when the
author came as a late novice on IPV6, taught him a few subtleties of
the subject. Without them, designing 6rd would probably not have
been possible.
8. References
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8.1. Normative References
[RFC3056] Carpenter, B. and K. Moore, "Connection of IPv6 Domains
via IPv4 Clouds", RFC 3056, February 2001.
[RFC4291] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
8.2. Informative References
[IPv4 addresses]
Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, "Internet Protocol v4
Address Space - http://www.iana.org/assignments/
ipv4-address-space/ipv4-address-space.xhtml",
February 2008.
[RFC1918] Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and
E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",
BCP 5, RFC 1918, February 1996.
[RFC3068] Huitema, C., "An Anycast Prefix for 6to4 Relay Routers",
RFC 3068, June 2001.
[RFC3964] Savola, P. and C. Patel, "Security Considerations for
6to4", RFC 3964, December 2004.
Author's Address
Remi Despres
3 rue du President Wilson
Levallois,
France
Phone: +33 6 72 74 94 88
Email: remi.despres@free.fr
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