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Date:      Thu, 29 Oct 1998 19:24:34 -0500 (EST)
From:      Brian Feldman <green@zone.syracuse.net>
To:        John Hay <jhay@mikom.csir.co.za>
Cc:        Garrett Wollman <wollman@khavrinen.lcs.mit.edu>, current@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: IPv6 in -current
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.4.05.9810291923220.29446-100000@zone.syracuse.net>
In-Reply-To: <199810291858.UAA26651@zibbi.mikom.csir.co.za>

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It would look Really Good on, say, 3.1-RELEASE release notes to say:
	* Full IPv6 implementation in-kernel and libc!
Just a thought :)

Cheersm
Brian Feldman


On Thu, 29 Oct 1998, John Hay wrote:

> > 
> > > we can get a version of IPv6 standard in FreeBSD. I have been looking at
> > > (and using) the KAME stuff the last few weeks and am quite impressed
> > > with it. One of the advantages (for me) about the KAME stack is that we
> > > also get their IPSEC stuff, while with INRIA being in France, it makes
> > > things a little more complicated.
> > 
> > Don't forget there's also the group of people who worked on the NRL
> > stack....
> 
> I didn't. I explicitly left them about because of two reasons. Because
> I'm not in the USA and I'm not a USA citizen, I can't get hold of it.
> Then also according to their web site they only cater for BSDI, NetBSD
> and Linux, with a promise that they will support FreeBSD in their next
> release.
> 
> But I don't really mind which one we are using. Any one that is part
> of FreeBSD will make my life easier. Most of the stacks available
> only support a specific release, so if you are running stable or
> current you have to constantly merge. (Well actually current is out
> of the question at the moment because none of them support 3.0 let
> alone current and that is actually where it would like it, because
> most of our test boxes run current.)
> 
> > The other question that people have to consider whenever IPv6 comes
> > up: with whom are you going to communicate?  Right now, there is no
> > globally-routed IPv6 infrastructure, and there is unlikely to be any,
> > any time soon (IOS 12, anyone?).  I am prefectly happy with the state
> > of the world where we can advance our technological goals in the
> > context of IPv4, and let other parties provide an IPv6 implementation.
> 
> While it is not native, the 6bone is up and running and people are using
> it to test compatability of the different stacks and other things. Our
> side of the 6bone tunnel is a FreeBSD box running the KAME stack and the
> other side is a Cisco somewhere in the USA.
> 
> I do agree that IPv4 will be the main protocol for while, the other side
> is that IPv6 is coming and we shouldn't wait too long to incorporate it.
> By having a standard stack we can unite the FreeBSD IPv6 users and get
> it better tested than currently where we are split up between the
> different stacks.
> 
> John
> -- 
> John Hay -- John.Hay@mikom.csir.co.za
> 
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