Hi, last Monday there was an event by https://www.eco.de titled "IPv6 in Germany - How do we help those who are hesitant?" It was a nice day but unfortunately very few of the hesitant people where there. As I'm also currently working in a rather big IPv6 project IPv6 know how and training is currently a big topic in my daily work. As I was just randomly watching youtube, I had a very strange idea: What if we put together an "advent of IPv6" just like https://adventofcode.com/ or https://tryhackme.com/r/christmas We would need to create 25 tasks for people to solve. From basics to more advanced topics. What we also need is a containerized lab environment, including some virtual networking stuff. And maybe some sponsors for e.g. T-Shirts for people completing all / most of the task. And maybe some nice certificate. People seem to like them. Jens -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Delbrueckstr. 41 | 12051 Berlin, Germany | +49-151-18721264 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Salut Jens, Jens Link <lists@quux.de> writes:
[...] We would need to create 25 tasks for people to solve. From basics to more advanced topics. What we also need is a containerized lab environment, including some virtual networking stuff. And maybe some sponsors for e.g. T-Shirts for people completing all / most of the task. And maybe some nice certificate. People seem to like them. [...]
I like the idea very much. It combines various approaches that I have seen over time and I think a bit of fresh movement into the "motivate and enjoy IPv6 deployments" space is a great idea. I'd be up for participating in such an adventure, in terms of contributing ideas and/or (co-)sponsoring as well. The IPv6 train is moving - ch000ch000! Greetings from Seoul, Nico -- Sustainable and modern Infrastructures by ungleich.ch
Nico Schottelius <nico.schottelius@ungleich.ch> writes: Hi,
I'd be up for participating in such an adventure, in terms of contributing ideas and/or (co-)sponsoring as well.
The IPv6 train is moving - ch000ch000!
I just created a gitlab project. https://gitlab.com/jenslink/advent-of-ipv6 Jens -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Delbrueckstr. 41 | 12051 Berlin, Germany | +49-151-18721264 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jens Link <lists@quux.de> writes:
And yes this is a private repo. Wouldn't want to give away all the fun stuff we may come up with. Jens -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Delbrueckstr. 41 | 12051 Berlin, Germany | +49-151-18721264 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Containerlab might be a great starting point for the containerized lab environment; if you want to pre-configure devices from various vendors, you might want to take a look at https://netlab.tools/ — its use of Graphite GUI would help you run SSH sessions in a browser, and it includes automated validation. I’m doing something similar on the BGP front; you might want to check https://bgplabs.net/ (source @ https://github.com/bgplab/bgplab). If you need some tweaks in netlab to make your ideas work, just let me know (I will stay away from creating the content though, too busy doing other things). All the best, Ivan
On 4 Mar 2024, at 22:03, Jens Link <lists@quux.de> wrote:
Hi,
last Monday there was an event by https://www.eco.de titled "IPv6 in Germany - How do we help those who are hesitant?"
It was a nice day but unfortunately very few of the hesitant people where there. As I'm also currently working in a rather big IPv6 project IPv6 know how and training is currently a big topic in my daily work. As I was just randomly watching youtube, I had a very strange idea:
What if we put together an "advent of IPv6" just like https://adventofcode.com/ or https://tryhackme.com/r/christmas
We would need to create 25 tasks for people to solve. From basics to more advanced topics. What we also need is a containerized lab environment, including some virtual networking stuff. And maybe some sponsors for e.g. T-Shirts for people completing all / most of the task. And maybe some nice certificate. People seem to like them.
Jens -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | Delbrueckstr. 41 | 12051 Berlin, Germany | +49-151-18721264 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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participants (3)
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Ivan Pepelnjak
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Jens Link
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Nico Schottelius