Results 181 to 190 of about 3,326 (213)

IPv4+6

2011 IEEE 10th International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications, 2011
The routing scalability and IP address exhaustion are two significant issues the current Internet faces. The "locator/identifier (Loc/ID) split" has become a well recognized design principle for future Internet architectures that make Internet routing more scalable.
Yongmao Ren   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Transición IPV4 a IPV6

South Florida Journal of Development, 2022
En la actualidad se manejan redes de IPv4, sin embargo, es muy importante aclarar que las direcciones IPv4 se están agotando por lo que las empresas e instituciones que manejan IPV4 deberán actualizarse lo más pronto posible para evitar la limitación de crecimiento de la red.
Miguel Ángel Ruiz Jaimes   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

IPV4 to IPV6 transition

Proceedings of the International Conference & Workshop on Emerging Trends in Technology - ICWET '11, 2011
The concept of transiting from IPv4 network to IPv6 network is being processed vigorously. Extensive study is being done presently on this subject as transition from IPv4 to IPv6 requires a high level compatibility and clear procedure for easy and independent deployment of IPv6.
Kunal Meher, Shilpa Verma
openaire   +1 more source

Performance evaluation of IPv4/IPv6 transition mechanisms: IPv4-in-IPv6 tunneling techniques

The International Conference on Information Networking 2014 (ICOIN2014), 2014
Exhaustion of IPv4 address space is highly aware for most internet players, not only Internet Service Providers (ISPs), but also Telco and Content Providers. A number of IPv4/IPv6 migration/transition tools and mechanisms have been proposed, deployed/implemented world-wide.
N. Chuangchunsong   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Who Squats IPv4 Addresses?

ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, 2023
To mitigate IPv4 exhaustion, IPv6 provides expanded address space, and NAT allows a single public IPv4 address to suffice for many devices assigned private IPv4 address space. Even though NAT has greatly extended the shelf-life of IPv4, some networks need more private IPv4 space than what is officially allocated by IANA due to their size ...
Loqman Salamatian   +6 more
openaire   +1 more source

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