Telecoms17.07.2007

All Systems Go for IPv6 in SA

At the end of June AfriNIC ratified a long-discussed policy that allows the allocation of ‘Provider Independent’ address blocks of the next-generation Internet Protocol (IPv6) to certain end-user organisations, most notably our registry in South Africa, Uniforum, which manages co.za domain names.

Enterasys says that now that local domain names can be resolved to IPv6 addresses ­ IPv6 is a public reality in SA.
 
“This is big news for South Africa ­ very big news, but few will know or care what it means. Both corporates and Internet Service Providers in this country have been very slow to look at IPv6, and partly this is understandable ­ without domain name resolution, the application of the technology would be mostly experimental,” says Martin May, regional director of Enterasys.
 
IPv6 brings several benefits, including simpler and faster routing (meaning less processing power and memory needed by network devices), much better security, and more support for mobile devices, an increasingly important issue as we move to wireless networking technologies.

Most importantly, IPv6 has a vastly bigger address space ­ experts estimate that the current pool of the current version of the Internet Protocol (IPv4) will run out of addresses by the latest in 2011, possibly sooner.
 
“There is a chicken and egg situation,” says Enterasys’ May, “Because ISPs are not offering IPv6 services, corporates cannot implement the technology, and because corporates are not asking for IPv6 services, ISPs are not investing in the technology.  Unless this situation changes soon, we’re going to end up with a crashing urgency to build skills and local services in two to three years.”
 
The main threat to South African business is that there is not just a requirement to implement IPv6 network infrastructure ­ many core business applications will need to be reworked to support IPv6.

“LAN administrators need to start to get to grips with IPv6 ­ and so do application development teams,” says May.
 
South Africa is lagging badly in IPv6 technology, outpaced by countries such as Egypt, Morocco and Senegal. While the US is also lagging, Europe and Asia is streaking ahead with commercial implementation.
 
“For businesses looking at high performance, highly secure networks, it is critical that they start to put together a project team to look at IPv6 migration. It’s not just a matter of updating some software on a couple of routers ­ applications, security systems and the data services you get from your ISP all need to be evaluated,” he concludes.

Comments

 

Show comments

Latest news

More news

Trending news

Poll

Which device do you use most often?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
Sign up to the MyBroadband newsletter