TY - GEN
T1 - Assessing IPv6 through web access a measurement study and its findings
AU - Nikkhah, Mehdi
AU - Guérin, Roch
AU - Lee, Yiu
AU - Woundy, Richard
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Transitioning an infrastructure the size of the Internet is no small feat. We are in the midst of such a transition, i.e., from IPv4 to IPv6. IPv6 was standardized 15 years ago, but until recently there were few incentives to adopt it. The allocation of the last large block of IPv4 addresses changed that, and migrating to an IPv6 Internet has become more urgent. This migration is, however, still rife with uncertainties and challenges. The goal of this paper is to provide insight into this transition, and possibly make it smoother. The focus is on the "network," and the paper reports on extensive measurements that compare and contrast IPv6 and IPv4. Two important hypotheses, denoted as H1 and H2, were identified and validated. H1 argues that the IPv6 and IPv4 data planes now perform by and large comparably. In contrast, H2 points to routing differences as the primary culprit behind occurrences of poorer IPv6 performance. In other words, promoting IPv6 and IPv4 peering parity is probably the single most effective step towards equal IPv6 and IPv4 performance.
AB - Transitioning an infrastructure the size of the Internet is no small feat. We are in the midst of such a transition, i.e., from IPv4 to IPv6. IPv6 was standardized 15 years ago, but until recently there were few incentives to adopt it. The allocation of the last large block of IPv4 addresses changed that, and migrating to an IPv6 Internet has become more urgent. This migration is, however, still rife with uncertainties and challenges. The goal of this paper is to provide insight into this transition, and possibly make it smoother. The focus is on the "network," and the paper reports on extensive measurements that compare and contrast IPv6 and IPv4. Two important hypotheses, denoted as H1 and H2, were identified and validated. H1 argues that the IPv6 and IPv4 data planes now perform by and large comparably. In contrast, H2 points to routing differences as the primary culprit behind occurrences of poorer IPv6 performance. In other words, promoting IPv6 and IPv4 peering parity is probably the single most effective step towards equal IPv6 and IPv4 performance.
KW - adoption
KW - IPv6
KW - measurements
KW - performance
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84862961089
U2 - 10.1145/2079296.2079322
DO - 10.1145/2079296.2079322
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84862961089
SN - 9781450310413
T3 - Proceedings of the 7th Conference on Emerging Networking EXperiments and Technologies, CoNEXT'11
BT - Proceedings of the 7th Conference on Emerging Networking EXperiments and Technologies, CoNEXT'11
T2 - 7th ACM International Conference on Emerging Networking EXperiments and Technologies, CoNEXT'11
Y2 - 6 December 2011 through 9 December 2011
ER -