Hello, I've been lately looking at ripeness.ripe.net data, with special focus on my country's numbers. :-) The recent World IPv6 Day was imho a good thing, some people took some more steps towards having some IPv6 in their networks, and that allowed us to increase the # of IPv6 peerings over the local (and small) IXP from 12 to 15. :-))) Getting an IPv6 block, register the route6 object, the DNS reverse object (domain) and make the block visible will not «automagically» generate more IPv6 packets on the Internet, but i find these steps to be key for future IPv6 deployments. This is basically why i think this should be monitored and promoted, so we know which people (i.e. LIRs) we still need to talk to (and in some cases, offer our help). So i would like to support the idea of making ripeness.ripe.net a production service, maybe linked with IPv6 Act Now (www.ipv6actnow.org). Best Regards, Carlos
W dniu 17.06.2011 12:42, Carlos Friacas pisze:
I've been lately looking at ripeness.ripe.net data, with special focus on my country's numbers. :-) The recent World IPv6 Day was imho a good thing, some people took some more steps towards having some IPv6 in their networks, and that allowed us to increase the # of IPv6 peerings over the local (and small) IXP from 12 to 15. :-)))
Getting an IPv6 block, register the route6 object, the DNS reverse object (domain) and make the block visible will not «automagically» generate more IPv6 packets on the Internet, but i find these steps to be key for future IPv6 deployments.
i think there should be 5th star too - all sites available with both A and AAAA records. And 6 star - when _all_ services for clients are available in dualstack. 4 starts have near all, but often have A only on core routes, not on services, nor for clients.
Hello, Yes, i do agree that more metrics can be evaluated, if they can be automatically evaluated, and of course if public data is available. Regards, Carlos On Fri, 17 Jun 2011, Andrzej Dopiera?a wrote:
W dniu 17.06.2011 12:42, Carlos Friacas pisze:
I've been lately looking at ripeness.ripe.net data, with special focus on my country's numbers. :-) The recent World IPv6 Day was imho a good thing, some people took some more steps towards having some IPv6 in their networks, and that allowed us to increase the # of IPv6 peerings over the local (and small) IXP from 12 to 15. :-)))
Getting an IPv6 block, register the route6 object, the DNS reverse object (domain) and make the block visible will not «automagically» generate more IPv6 packets on the Internet, but i find these steps to be key for future IPv6 deployments.
i think there should be 5th star too - all sites available with both A and AAAA records. And 6 star - when _all_ services for clients are available in dualstack.
4 starts have near all, but often have A only on core routes, not on services, nor for clients.
participants (2)
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Andrzej Dopierała
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Carlos Friacas