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Deploying IPv6

IEEE Internet Computing, 2001
Version 4 of the Internet Protocol (IPv4) has been in wide use for the past 25 years, but it has outlasted its effective lifetime and is straining to keep up with the demands of today's Internet. IPv6 is a natural evolution from IPv4 and attempts to address many of the older protocol's shortcomings.
openaire   +2 more sources

A performance comparison of Mobile IPv6, hierarchical Mobile IPv6, and Mobile IPv6 regional registrations

2005 International Conference on Wireless Networks, Communications and Mobile Computing, 2005
IETF proposed mobile IPv6 to address the IP mobility problem in the next generation Internet protocol (IPv6) by which mobile nodes are reachable while roaming in the Internet. Nevertheless, mobile IPv6 is optimized for macro-level mobility. Hence, several micro-mobility (local-area) protocols were proposed for fast moving mobile nodes.
R. Ramadugu   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

A performance comparison of Mobile IPv6, Hierarchical Mobile IPv6, fast handovers for Mobile IPv6 and their combination

ACM SIGMOBILE Mobile Computing and Communications Review, 2003
Mobile IP, the current IETF proposal for IP mobility support, represents a key element for future All-IP wireless networks to provide service continuity while on the move within a multi-access environment. We conducted a performance evaluation of Mobile IPv6 and its proposed enhancements, i.e., Fast Handovers for ...
PĂ©rez-Costa, X.   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

IPv6 security and forensics

2016 Sixth International Conference on Innovative Computing Technology (INTECH), 2016
IPv4 is the historical addressing protocol used for all devices connected worldwide. It has survived for over 30 years and has been an integral part of the Internet revolution. However, due to its limitation, IPv4 is being replacing by IPv6. Today, IPv6 is more and more widely used on the Internet.
Nicolls, Vincent   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

IPv6 and DNS

2013
The Internet requires some fundamental network services to work. These include network connectivity, routing, a shared networking protocol (IPv4 and IPv6), an address allocation process (StateLess Address Auto Configuration, or SLAAC, and Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol, or DHCP), and a name resolution process called Domain Name System (DNS).
openaire   +2 more sources

IPv4 and IPv6 performance comparison in IPv6 LTE network

2015 17th Asia-Pacific Network Operations and Management Symposium (APNOMS), 2015
Mobile network operators are deploying IPv6 to their mobile networks in recent years, to support ever increasing mobile and IoT devices. They also adopt IPv4-IPv6 transition techniques to provide connectivity from their IPv6 networks to IPv4 networks. Since IPv6 deployment to mobile network is still in an early stage, the performance assessment on IPv6
James Won-Ki Hong   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

IPv6 and DHCP

2013
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) is just as much a fundamental service for the Internet to work as DNS (Domain Name System). For IPv6 this means leveraging DHCPv6 to handle IPv6 address allocations. DHCPv6 is the way modern networks allocate IPv6 addresses on a LAN (local area network) and DHCP is what has been traditionally used for IPv4 ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The IPv6 Protocol

2008
This article provides a description of the IPv6 protocol. It briefly covers the reasons that make IPv6 a necessary upgrade, describes the most important methods for transitioning networks, applications, and hosts from IPv4 to IPv6, and the possibilities that IPv6 opens up.
Christos Bouras   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Discovery of the IPv6 Prefix Used for IPv6 Address Synthesis

2013
This document describes a method for detecting the presence of DNS64 and for learning the IPv6 prefix used for protocol translation on an access network. The method depends on the existence of a well-known IPv4-only fully qualified domain name "ipv4only.arpa.".
Teemu Savolainen   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Transition to IPv6 and support for IPv4/IPv6 interoperability in IMS

Bell Labs Technical Journal, 2006
The 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) R5 standards specified the use of Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6) for the IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS). However, early implementations of IMS are being introduced into the service architecture of existing access networks supporting Internet Protocol version 4 (IPv4)-only clients.
Chung-Zin Liu   +5 more
openaire   +1 more source

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