Tag Archive for Networking

IPv4 Doomsday Pushed Back

IPv4 Doomsday Pushed BackThe American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) announced (10-20-2010) that Interop returned its unneeded Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4) address space. The ARIN Press Release explains that Interop was originally allocated a /8 before ARIN’s existence and the availability of smaller address blocks.

Another press release indicates that Interop founder Dan Lynch acquired the addresses block to allow for unfettered Interoperability Testing between TCP/IP equipment vendors in the formative years of the Internet. Interop will continue to use a small part of the original grant to continue Interop’s 25-year mission to foster industry-wide interoperability while returning the rest of the address block to ARIN for the greater good of the Internet community. The organization recently realized it was only using a small part of its address block and that returning the rest to ARIN would be for the greater good of the Internet community.

ARIN will accept the returned space and not reissue it for a short period, per existing operational procedure. After the hold period, ARIN will follow global policy at that time and return it to the global free pool or distribute the space to those organizations in the ARIN region with documented need, as appropriate.

With less than 5% of the IPv4 address space left in the global free pool, ARIN warns that Interop’s return will not significantly extend the life of IPv4. ARIN continues to emphasize the need for all Internet stakeholders to adopt the next generation of Internet Protocol, IPv6.

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As the original poster at Slashdot points out, if any of the other IPv4 /8 address holders return their unused addresses, the IPv4 exhaustion date would be pushed back even further. I wonder what some of these companies plan on doing with all of these IP addresses?

  • HP has 32 million publicly routable addresses (16 million of its own and 16 million from DEC which HP acquired when it ingested Compaq) most of which seem to be used to handle VoIP calls to India for sales and support calls.
  • Is Ford going to install a IPv4/IPv6 gateway on all the cars with My Ford Touch, an upgrade of Sync, its in-car Internet service with Microsoft?
  • How is the USPS using it 16 million IP addresses?

Some IPv4 /8 Address Holders

PrefixDesignationDate
003/8General Electric Company 1994-05
004/8 Level 3 Communications, Inc.1992-12
008/8 Level 3 Communications, Inc.1992-12
009/8IBM 1992-08
012/8 AT&T Bell Laboratories 1995-06
013/8Xerox Corporation 1991-09
015/8Hewlett-Packard Company 1994-07
016/8 Digital Equipment Corporation 1994-11
017/8Apple Computer Inc. 1992-07
018/8MIT 1994-01
019/8Ford Motor Company 1995-05
034/8 Halliburton Company 1993-03
035/8MERIT Computer Network 1994-04
040/8Eli Lily & Company 1994-06
048/8Prudential Securities Inc. 1995-05
054/8Merck and Co., Inc. 1992-03
056/8 US Postal Service 1994-06
The allocation of IPv4 address space to various registries is listed at www.iana.org/assignments/ipv4-address-space/ipv4-address-space.xml.

This gadget was developed by Takashi Arano, Intec NetCore

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

D-Link Raises Net Security Bar

D-Link Raises Net Security Bar Help Net Security reports that D-Link (TSEC dlink) has upgraded its products to rival some of the “enterprise-level” devices I see at client sites. The vendor has enhanced its router security to a higher level of protection to guard against hacking, worms, viruses, and other malicious Web attacks. by incorporating DNSSEC, IPv6, and CAPTCHA.

DNSSEC is a suite of Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) specifications (Core DNSSEC RFCs are RFC 4033, RFC 4034, and RFC 4035) that adds security to the DNS to offer assurance that the information received from a Domain Name Server is authentic according to the article. The security extensions are designed to protect the DNS from man-in-the-middle and cache poisoning attacks, which can occur when hackers corrupt DNS data stored on recursive name servers to redirect queries to malicious sites.

DNSSEC applies digital signatures to DNS data to authenticate the data’s origin and verify its integrity as it moves across the Internet and can give users an effective means of verification that their applications, such as Web or email, are using the correct addresses for servers they want to reach.

D-Link is also providing additional security and future-proofing its routers, by migrating to IPv6 certification according to Help Net Security. With the growing number of Internet-capable devices on the market, the pool of IPv4 addresses has dropped to six percent and is expected to run out sometime in 2011. While this is a major motivation for IPv6, other improvements are also realized.

The IPv6 specification now specifies certain security measures that were not defined in IPv4, such as IPSec. IPSec is a method of authenticating and encrypting data transferred between pairs of hosts. Although it was possible to implement IPSec with IPv4, it was not part of the specification. IPSec is now a requirement, not an option, in the IPv6 specification.

CAPTCHAD-Link has previously implemented a Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart (CAPTCHA) to improve security. CAPTCHA is a challenge-response test that ensures that a response during a user login is not computer-generated but instead is truly entered by a human hand, by requiring a user to manually enter a small amount of text displayed in an image to help prevent automated registration and fraud.

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I looked at a production switch today that was still running only CatOS 9.0 (EOL 2009), they might be better protected with a new D-Link.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

The Internet as a Subway Map

The good folks over at Simply Zesty released this cool map of the inner-web tube thing.

The Internet Super Subway map

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Check out their site and give them a thumbs-up. A good network diagram is always a helpful tool.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Intel Shows TBps Connections

Intel Shows TBps ConnectionsThe EETimes reports that researchers at Intel Corp. (INTC) have demonstrated optical chips can transmit up to terabit-per-second of data transmission. The new silicon photonic chips will replace copper connections in everything from supercomputers to servers to PCs chips predicts Intel. The new chips can currently transmit data at 50 Gigabits per second (Gbps). 50 Gbps equates to transferring an HD movie a second.

This milestone marks the beginning of silicon photonics in the high-volume marketplace, in applications from [high-performance computing] all the way down to the client PC,” said Mario Paniccia, director of Intel’s Photonics Technology Lab. “We see a clear development path from 50 Gbps today to a terabit in the future,” Mr. Paniccia told EETimes.

Intel says that optical connections could eventually replace the copper connections between systems and even between boards in the same system and down to cores on the same board. intel’s Paniccia estimated that the first commercial applications of silicon photonics will begin appearing in as little as five years in data centers and supercomputer facilities.

The modulators required to encode optical information using signal waveguides and photodiodes are cast in silicon on custom chips designed by Intel. The transmitter chip uses Intel’s hybrid silicon laser technology that bonds a small indium phosphide die to on-chip silicon waveguides, four of which are patterned into a connected optical laser.  “We combined our silicon manufacturing techniques with our hybrid laser and demonstrated an integrated transmitter using four lasers each operating at a different wavelengths and four silicon modulators each operating at 12.5 Gbps, then combined them together into an aggregate 50 Gbps into the optical fiber,” said Paniccia.

The optical fiber output on the receiver chip is then filtered into separate colors and diverted by waveguides into four separate photodiodes, each of which receives one of the four separate 12.5-Gbps channels. In the future, Intel plans to add more lasers per chip and increase the number of channels. Intel believes that it can put 25 lasers on a single chip to produce the 1 Tbps capabilities. It then hopes to commercialize the optical connection technology.  Intel has been developing the technology since 2004.

Intel already has a 10-Gbps Light Peak chip that uses conventional optical technologies that are aimed at reducing the number of port connections on a computer. The Silicon Photonics Link is different from Light Peak technology. Intel’s Light Peak technology – an optical cable that is aimed at reducing the number of port connections on a computer. said it used traditional optical devices and scaling it beyond 10 Gbps speeds would be difficult.

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For some perspective, the 1 terabit per second link could transfer the entire printed collection of the Library of Congress in 1.5 minutes.

Intel is preaching high bandwidth and low cost with these chips. If Intel can deliver, it could change the nature of system design. Theoretically, these chips could allow system components to the spaced further apart without the performance hit. With these chips, data center expansion could be down the hall instead of a full re-design. Now it may be cheaper to take the new gear to the available electrical panel rather than adding a new panel to the server room.

Intel’s Paniccia told VentureBeat that the accuracy of the data transfer is superb. So far, it has been proven to be able to transfer data with no errors for 27 hours straight, which means it can transfer more than a petabyte of data without an error.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Facebook Adds IPv6

Facebook Adds IPv6NetworkWold is reporting that Facebook began offering “experimental, non-production” support for IPv6 on June 10,2010. With more than 350 million active users. 65 million of them accessing the site through mobile devices, Facebook is planning its deployment of native IPv6 to its network backbone. The social network says it wants to support both IPv4 and IPv6-aware clients. In a presentation at the Google IPv6 Implementors Conference, Facebook’s network engineers said it was “easy to make [the] site available on v6.”

FacebookFacebook said it deployed dual-stack IPv4 and IPv6 support on its routers, and that it made no changes to its hosts to support IPv6. FB also said it was supporting an emerging encapsulation mechanism known as Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP), which separates Internet addresses from endpoint identifiers to improve the scalability of IPv6 deployments. “Facebook was the first major Web site on LISP (v4 and v6),” Facebook engineers said during their presentation. They also said that using LISP allowed them to deploy IPv6 services quickly with no extra cost. Facebook’s IPv6 services are available at www.v6.facebook.com, m.v6.facebook.com, www.lisp6.facebook.com, and m.lisp6.facebook.com.

John Curran, president, and CEO of the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) has been urging Web site operators to deploy IPv6. Curran set a deadline of Jan. 1, 2012, when all public-facing Web sites must support IPv6 or risk providing visitors with lower-grade connectivity. The remaining pool of unallocated IPv4 addresses could be depleted as early as December due to unprecedented levels of broadband and wireless adoption in the Asia-Pacific region, experts say.

ARIN logoRichard Jimmerson, CIO at the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN), told NetworkWorld, “It’s moving so fast now that it’s hard for us to be current on it any longer,” ARIN provides IPv4 addresses to carriers in North America. “We’ve gone through 10 /8s since the beginning of this year,” Jimmerson says. “To put that in perspective, in all of 2009, we only went through eight /8s. It’s very possible that the IANA free pool will deplete in December or January at the earliest.”

The article reports that demand for IPv4 addresses remains flat in North America, there has been a huge surge in the Asia-Pacific region this year that is likely to stay strong. “The Asia-Pacific region has very large economies that are underserved by IP addresses such as India, China, and other places,” Jimmerson told NetworkWorld. “They are really seeing a big surge in broadband deployment and wireless data handset deployment, and that translates into having to have unique IP address space. That trend is likely to continue.”

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Just last week, I was speaking with a potential client about getting ready for IPv6 on their network. They had not even talked yet with their ISP about getting IPv6 traffic to them, let alone how they were going to deal with IPv6 in and out of the network.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.