A new look on IPv6 adoption data was recently presented at the SIGCOMM conference in Chicago. The research, which was a collaboration between multiple groups, looks at over a decade of IPv6 data and notes that some measurements have seen a 400% increase in IPv6 traffic between 2012 and 2013. The data also shows a significant shift in the type of data toward HTTP & HTTPS content by end-users rather than server to server communication which was observed in earlier in the deployment timeline. Links to the blog article and full paper below…
Monthly Archives: August 2014
Routing table growth causes some hiccups
News reports have been circulating over the past couple of days that various service providers have hit the 512k route mark in their BGP tables on their routers and switches causing outages and other problems. A number of hardware platforms, notably older Cisco hardware, have default limits in their configurations which limit route tables sizes to 512k routes. When these limits are breached the older hardware slows down or otherwise stop functioning as expected. Cisco issued a bulletin in May to providers with workaround procedures for some platforms.
The growth in the global route table has been fairly stable over the past couple of years and this is growth has been expected for a long time and yet still Internet service providers were not prepared in time for this event.
Internet Touches Half Million Routes: Outages Possible Next Week
Internet routers hitting 512K limit, some become unreliable
The end of the internet predicted, news at 11
Echoes of Y2K: Engineers Buzz That Internet Is Outgrowing Its Gear