Title :
Transition from IPv4 to IPv6: A State-of-the-Art Survey
Author :
Peng Wu ; Yong Cui ; Jianping Wu ; Jiangchuan Liu ; Metz, Coert
Author_Institution :
Nat. Lab. for Inf. Sci. & Technol., Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China
fDate :
Third Quarter 2013
Abstract :
In the process of Internet evolution, the transition from IPv4 to IPv6 has become inevitable and fairly urgent. IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) has finally exhausted the global IPv4 address space, which leaves the community no choice but pushes forward the IPv6 transition process. IPv4 and IPv6 networks both will exist during the transition period, while the two are not compatible in nature. Therefore it is indispensable to maintain the availability, as well as to provide the inter-communication ability of IPv4 and IPv6. Years ago a series of transition techniques were actually proposed. However, because of their technical immatureness, they failed to cover the solution space well. Some of these techniques were even obsoleted by IETF due to their flaws. This paper reconsiders the basic problems and key difficulties in IPv4-IPv6 transition, and introduces the principles of tunneling and translation techniques. Then the paper surveys the mainstream tunneling and translation mechanisms raised since 1998, especially the new mechanisms proposed recently, capturing the aspects of technical principles, pros and cons, scenarios and applicability. Recommendations on mechanism selection for different scenarios are provided. Moreover, the paper looks into the characteristics and transition requirements of practical ISP networks, and proposes the usage and deployment strategy of the transition mechanisms in both backbone and edge networks.
Keywords :
IP networks; Internet; computer network reliability; tunnelling; IANA; IETF; IPv6 transition process; Internet assigned numbers authority; availability; global IPv4 address space; intercommunication ability; practical ISP network; translation technique; tunneling technique; IP networks; Internet; Protocols; Routing; Scalability; Security; Tunneling; IPv6 transition; heterogeneous addressing; heterogeneous network connectivity; translation; tunneling;
Journal_Title :
Communications Surveys & Tutorials, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/SURV.2012.110112.00200