Back in the 1970s someone numbered networks with four 8-bit numbers: IPv4.
yes, the man in my avatar with the tin-can - vint cerf and his colleague robert khan. the dotted decimal format has served us well for several decades. they are the recognized as the "fathers" of the Internet Protocol and the and it's subsets; Transmission Control Protocol, User Datagram Protocol, Internet Control Messages Protocols. before the days of DNS they all exchanged a thing called a hosts file. it was a name to address map of the all the known hosts so that email (SMTP) running on a UNIX system running IP would work. stanford was the repository for the "current" hosts file and it served the IP world well for about a decade. at some point however, the file grew to large and the downloads too long, and the file was error prone. enter john postel et-al and BIND circa 1983 and DNS was born.
thanks for the novell flashbacks. now i'll have recurring nightmares of crashing NLMs on netware 2.11 and IPX/SPX SAP storms... like my tired old DACS, may your bytes dribble bits for that one... ;)
ARIN/RIPE/etc, will allocate a up to /32 for provider independent (end user) space - most colleges and universities, corporations, state govt', and larger local govt's qualify for /48 allocation. at some point there was discussion of /56 allocations for smaller end-user systems that wanted to multi-home (2 or more ISP connections) but did not warrant a /48 allocation. i don't follow ARIN policy as much as i should, as we have others in my org. that are the ARIN liaisons. my job is hook stuff up, configure the protocols, and move the porn and email through the net as fast as possible - and that includes viruses.
IPv6 has six 8-bit numbers. Plenty for every person in the world.
no sir, IPv6 is 16 bytes or 128 bits of address. v4 is 4 bytes or 32 bits of address. the link global mask boundary for LAN addressing and proper function of auto-configuration is 64 bits. a /64 mask is accepted standard LAN mask with v6. link local addressing. for point2point links it is accepted practice to set the mask at 126 or 127 bits. i prefer 126 bits to allow for sniffers, analyzers, SPAN ports, etc...
xxxx:xxxx:beef:babe::/64 is reserved for my P2P links.
xxxx:xxxx:babe:cafe::/64 is reserved the router loopback interfaces.
xxxx:xxxx:face:cafe::/64 is reserved for multicast nets.
x = any hexadecimal value of 0-f
IP numbers change, and some change constantly. Under IPv6 the "IP number" is not just longer, it is likely to change a lot. It is made for connectivity, not tracking.
and the fed don't like that - neither do sysadmins who need to track who went where when and how. enter DHCPv6 since autoconfig doesn't hand off DNS servers, only a link global addy and router.
no, not excited about it at all... it's just a fu@#$ng job and i happen to be good at it. i'd rather run a profitable bait shop, donut shop, or music store.
Been there, done that, had the T-shirt
i'd like to burn mine... come on retirement...