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rfc:rfc6586

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) J. Arkko Request for Comments: 6586 A. Keranen Category: Informational Ericsson ISSN: 2070-1721 April 2012

               Experiences from an IPv6-Only Network

Abstract

 This document discusses our experiences from moving a small number of
 users to an IPv6-only network, with access to the IPv4-only parts of
 the Internet via a NAT64 device.  The document covers practical
 experiences as well as roadblocks and opportunities for this type of
 a network setup.  The document also makes some recommendations about
 where such networks are applicable and what should be taken into
 account in the network design.  The document also discusses further
 work that is needed to make IPv6-only networking applicable in all
 environments.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6586.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 1] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2012 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................3
 2. Technology and Terminology ......................................4
 3. Network Setup ...................................................4
    3.1. The IPv6-Only Network ......................................5
    3.2. DNS Operation ..............................................6
 4. General Experiences .............................................7
 5. Experiences with IPv6-Only Networking ...........................9
    5.1. Operating Systems ..........................................9
    5.2. Programming Languages and APIs ............................10
    5.3. Instant Messaging and VoIP ................................11
    5.4. Gaming ....................................................12
    5.5. Music Services ............................................13
    5.6. Appliances ................................................13
    5.7. Other Differences .........................................13
 6. Experiences with NAT64 .........................................13
    6.1. IPv4 Address Literals .....................................14
    6.2. Comparison of Web Access via NAT64 to Other Methods .......15
 7. Future Work ....................................................15
 8. Conclusions and Recommendations ................................16
 9. Security Considerations ........................................18
 10. References ....................................................19
    10.1. Normative References .....................................19
    10.2. Informative References ...................................19
 Appendix A. Acknowledgments .......................................21

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 2] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

1. Introduction

 This document discusses our experiences from moving a small number of
 users to an IPv6-only network, with access to the IPv4-only parts of
 the Internet via a NAT64 device.  This arrangement has been done with
 a permanent change in mind rather than as a temporary experiment,
 involves both office and home users, heterogeneous computing
 equipment, and varied applications.  We have learned both practical
 details, roadblocks and opportunities, as well as a more general
 understanding of when such a configuration can be recommended and
 what should be taken into account in the network design.  Note that
 this memo documents our experiences primarily from 2010.  As time
 goes by, the situation changes with updated software versions, newer
 products, and so on.
 The networks involved in this setup have been in dual-stack mode for
 a considerable amount of time, in one case, for over ten years.  Our
 IPv6 connectivity is stable and in constant use with no significant
 problems.  Given that the IETF is working on technology such as NAT64
 [RFC6144] and several network providers are discussing the
 possibility of employing IPv6-only networking, we decided to take our
 network beyond the "comfort zone" and make sure that we understand
 the implications of having no IPv4 connectivity at all.  This also
 allowed us to test a NAT64 device that is being developed by
 Ericsson.
 The main conclusion is that it is possible to employ IPv6-only
 networking, though there are a number of issues such as lack of IPv6
 support in some applications and bugs in untested parts of code.  As
 a result, dual-stack [RFC4213] remains as our recommended model for
 general purpose networking at this time, but IPv6-only networking can
 be employed by early adopters or highly controlled networks.  The
 document also suggests actions to make IPv6-only networking
 applicable in all environments.  In particular, resolving problems
 with a few key applications would have a significant impact for
 enabling IPv6-only networking for large classes of users and
 networks.  It is important that the Internet community understands
 these deployment barriers and works to remove them.
 The rest of this document is organized as follows.  Section 2
 introduces some relevant technology and terms, Section 3 describes
 the network setup, Section 4 discusses our general experiences,
 Section 5 discusses experiences related to having only IPv6
 networking available, and Section 6 discusses experiences related to
 NAT64 use.  Finally, Section 7 presents some of our ideas for future
 work, Section 8 draws conclusions and makes recommendations on when
 and how one should employ IPv6-only networks, and Section 9 discusses
 relevant security considerations.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 3] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

2. Technology and Terminology

 In this document, the following terms are used.  "NAT44" refers to
 any IPv4-to-IPv4 network address translation algorithm, both "Basic
 NAT" and "Network Address/Port Translator (NAPT)", as defined by
 [RFC2663].
 "Dual-stack" refers to a technique for providing complete support for
 both Internet protocols -- IPv4 and IPv6 -- in hosts and routers
 [RFC4213].
 "NAT64" refers to a Network Address Translator - Protocol Translator
 defined in [RFC6144], [RFC6145], [RFC6146], [RFC6052], [RFC6147], and
 [RFC6384].

3. Network Setup

 We have tested IPv6-only networking in two different network
 environments: office and home.  In both environments, all hosts had
 normal dual-stack native IPv4 and IPv6 Internet access already in
 place.  The networks were also already employing IPv6 in their
 servers and DNS records.  Similarly, the network was a part of
 whitelisting arrangement to ensure that IPv6-capable content
 providers would be able to serve their content to the network over
 IPv6.
 The office environment has heterogeneous hardware with PCs, laptops,
 and routers running Linux, BSD, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows
 operating systems.  Common uses of the network include email, Secure
 Shell (SSH), web browsing, and various instant messaging and Voice
 over IP (VoIP) applications.  The hardware in the home environment
 consists of PCs, laptops, and a number of server, camera, and sensor
 appliances.  The primary operating systems in this environment are
 Linux and Microsoft Windows operating systems.  Common applications
 include web browsing, streaming, instant messaging and VoIP
 applications, gaming, file storage, and various home control
 applications.  Both environments employ extensive firewalling
 practices, and filtering is applied for both IPv4 and IPv6 traffic.
 However, firewall capabilities, especially with older versions of
 firewall software, dictate some differences between the filtering
 applied for IPv4 and IPv6 since some features commonly supported for
 IPv4 were not yet implemented for IPv6.  In addition, in the home
 environment, the individual devices are directly accessible from the
 Internet on IPv6 (on select protocols such as SSH) but not on IPv4
 due to lack of available public IPv4 addresses.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 4] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 In both environments, volunteers had the possibility to opt-in for
 the IPv6-only network.  The number of users was small: there were
 roughly five permanent users and a dozen users who had been in the
 network at least for some amount of time.  Each user had to connect
 to the IPv6-only wired or wireless network and, depending on their
 software, possibly configure their computer by indicating that there
 is no IPv4 and/or setting DNS server addresses.  The users were also
 asked to report their experiences back to the organizers.

3.1. The IPv6-Only Network

 The IPv6-only network was provided as a parallel network on the side
 of the already existing dual-stack network.  It was important to
 retain the dual-stack network for the benefit of those users who did
 not decide to opt-in and because we knew that there were some IPv4-
 only devices in the network.  A separate wired access network was
 created using Virtual Local Area Networks (VLANs).  This network had
 its own IPv6 prefix.  A separate wireless network, bridged to the
 wired network, was also created.  In our case, the new wireless
 network required additional access point hardware in order to
 accommodate advertising multiple wireless networks.  The simple
 access point model that we employed in these networks did not allow
 this on a single device, although many other access points support
 this.  All the secondary infrastructure resulted in some additional
 management burden and cost, however.  An added complexity was that
 the home network already employed two types of infrastructure, one
 for family members and another one for visitors.  In order to
 duplicate this model for the IPv6-only network, there are now four
 separate networks, with several access points on each.
 A stateful NAT64 [RFC6146] with integrated DNS64 was installed on the
 edge of the IPv6-only networks.  No IPv4 routing or Dynamic Host
 Configuration Protocol (DHCP) was offered on these networks.  The
 NAT64 device sends Router Advertisements (RAs) [RFC4861] from which
 the hosts learn the IPv6 prefix and can automatically configure IPv6
 addresses for them.  Each new IPv6-only network needed one new /64
 prefix to be used in these advertisements.  In addition, each NAT64
 device needed another /64 prefix to be used for the representation of
 IPv4 destinations in the IPv6-only network.  As a result, one IPv6-
 only network requires /63 of address space.  This space was easily
 available in our networks, as IPv6 allocations are purposefully made
 in sufficiently large blocks.  Additional address space needs can be
 accommodated from the existing block without registry involvement.
 Another option would have been to use the Well-Known Prefix [RFC6052]
 for the representation of IPv4 destinations in the IPv6-only network.
 In any case, the prefixes have to be listed in the intra-domain
 routing system so that they can be reached.  In one case, the

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 5] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 increase from one block to multiple also made it necessary to employ
 an improved routing configuration.  In addition to routing, the new
 prefixes have to be listed in the appropriate firewall rules.
 Setting up NAT64 and DNS64 by themselves is easy and can be done
 quickly by an experienced network manager.  However, when duplicate
 infrastructure is needed for dual-stack and IPv6-only networks, the
 additional switches, cables, access points, etc., will take some
 amount of installation effort.  In addition, if whitelisting
 agreements or IPv6 ISP connectivity is needed, setting these up
 requires negotiations with external partners.

3.2. DNS Operation

 Router Advertisements are used to carry DNS Configuration options
 [RFC6106], listing the DNS64 as the DNS server the hosts should use.
 In addition, aliases were added to the DNS64 device to allow it to
 receive packets on the well-known DNS server addresses that Windows
 operating systems use (fec0:0:0:ffff::1, fec0:0:0:ffff::2, and fec0:
 0:0:ffff::3).  At a later stage, support for stateless DHCPv6
 [RFC3736] was added.  We do recommend enabling RFC 6106, well-known
 addresses, and stateless DHCPv6 in order to maximize the likelihood
 of different types of IPv6-only hosts being able to use DNS without
 manual configuration.  DNS server discovery was never a problem in
 dual-stack networks, because DNS servers on the IPv4 side can easily
 provide IPv6 information (AAAA records) as well.  With IPv6-only
 networking, it becomes crucial that the local DNS server can also be
 reached via IPv6.  In principle, this is exactly the same as needing
 IPv4-based DNS and DNS discovery in IPv4-only networks.  However, in
 IPv6, the discovery mechanisms are somewhat more complicated because
 there are several alternative techniques.
 When a host served by the DNS64 asks for a domain name that does not
 have a AAAA (IPv6 address) record, but has an A (IPv4 address)
 record, a AAAA record is synthesized from the A record (as defined
 for DNS64 in [RFC6147]) and sent in the DNS response to the host.  IP
 packets sent to this synthesized address are routed via the NAT64,
 translated to IPv4 by the NAT64, and forwarded to the queried host's
 IPv4 address; return traffic is translated back from IPv4 to IPv6 and
 forwarded to the host behind the NAT64 (as described in [RFC6144]).
 This allows the hosts in the IPv6-only network to contact any host in
 the IPv4 Internet as long as the hosts in the IPv4 Internet have DNS
 address records.
 The NAT64 devices have standard dual-stack connectivity and their
 DNS64 function can use both IPv4 and IPv6 when requesting information
 from DNS.  A destination that has both an A and AAAA records is not
 treated in any special manner, because the hosts in the IPv6-only

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 6] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 network can contact the destination over IPv6.  Destinations with
 only an A record will be given a synthesized AAAA record as explained
 above.  However, in one of our open visitor networks that is sharing
 the infrastructure with the home network, we needed a special
 arrangement.  Currently, the home network obtains its IPv6
 connectivity through a tunnel via the office network, and it is
 undesirable to allow outsiders using the visitor network to generate
 traffic through the office network, even if the traffic is just
 passing by and forwarded to the IPv6 Internet.  As a result, in the
 visitor network, there is a special IPv6-only to IPv4-only
 configuration where the DNS64 never asks for AAAA records and always
 generates synthesized records.  Therefore, no traffic from the
 visitor network, even if it is destined to the IPv6 Internet, is
 routed via the office network, but traffic from the home network can
 still use the IPv6 connectivity provided by the office network.
    Note: This configuration may also be useful for other purposes.
    For instance, one drawback of the standard behavior is that if a
    destination publishes AAAA records but has bad IPv6 connectivity,
    the hosts in the IPv6-only network have no fallback.  In the dual-
    stack model, a host can always try IPv4 if the IPv6 connection
    fails.  In the special configuration, IPv6 is only used internally
    at the site but never across the Internet, eliminating this
    problem.  This is not a recommended mode of operation, but it is
    interesting to note that it may solve some issues.
 Note that in NAT64 (unlike in its older variant [RFC4966]) it is
 possible to decouple the packet translation, IPv6 routing, and DNS64
 functions.  Since clients are configured to use a DNS64 as their DNS
 server, there is no need for having an Application Layer Gateway
 (ALG) on the path sniffing and spoofing DNS packets.  This decoupling
 possibility was implemented by one of our users, as he is outside of
 our physical network and wants to communicate directly on IPv6 where
 it is possible without having to go through our central network
 equipment.  His DNS queries go to our DNS64 and to establish
 communications to an IPv4 destination our central NAT64 is used.  If
 there is a need to translate some packets, these packets find the
 translator device through normal IPv6 routing means since the
 synthesized addresses have our NAT64's prefix.  However, for non-
 synthesized IPv6 addresses the packets are routed directly to the
 destination.

4. General Experiences

 Based on our experiences, it is possible to live (and work) with an
 IPv6-only network.  For instance, at the time of this writing, one of
 the authors has been in an IPv6-only network for about a year and a
 half and has had no major problems.  Most things work well in the new

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 7] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 environment; for example, we have been unable to spot any practical
 difference in the web browsing (HTTP and HTTPS) experience.  Also,
 email, software upgrades, operating system services, many chat
 systems, and media streaming work well.  On certain Symbian mobile
 handsets that we tried, all applications work even on an IPv6-only
 network.  In another case, with the Android operating system, all the
 basic applications worked without problems.  In order to make the
 latter handset architecture support IPv6-only networks, however, a
 small change was needed in the operating system so that it could
 discover IPv6-only DNS servers.
 However, in general, there is some pain involved and thus IPv6-only
 networking is not suitable for everyone just yet.  Switching IPv4 off
 does break many things as well.  Some of the users in our environment
 left due to these issues, as they missed some key feature that they
 needed from their computing environment.  These issues fall in
 several categories:
 Bugs
    We saw many issues that can be classified as bugs, likely related
    to so few people having tried the software in question in an IPv6-
    only network.  For instance, some operating system facilities
    support IPv6 but have annoying problems that are only uncovered in
    IPv6-only networking.
 Lack of IPv6 Support
    We also saw many applications that do not support IPv6 at all.
    These range from minor, old tools (such as the Unix dict(1)
    command) to major applications that are important to our users
    (such as Skype) and even to entire classes of applications (many
    games have issues).  As our experiment continued, we have seen
    improvements in some areas, such as gaming.
 Protocol, Format, and Content Problems
    There are many protocols that carry IP addresses in them, and
    using these protocols through a translator can lead to problems.
    In our current network setup, we did not employ any ALGs except
    for FTP [RFC6384].  However, we have observed a number of protocol
    issues with IPv4 addresses.  For instance, some instant messaging
    services do not work due to this.  Finally, content on some web
    pages may refer to IPv4 address literals (i.e., plain IP addresses
    instead of host and domain names).  This renders some links
    inaccessible in an IPv6-only network.  While this problem is
    easily quantifiable in measurements, the authors have run into it
    only a couple of times during real-life web browsing.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 8] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 Firewall Issues
    We also saw a number of issues related to lack of features in IPv6
    support in firewalls.  In particular, while we did not experience
    any Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) and fragmentation problems in
    our networks, there is potential for generating problems, as the
    support for IPv6 fragment headers is not complete in all firewalls
    and the NAT64 specifications call for use of the fragment header
    (even in situations where fragmentation has not yet occurred,
    e.g., if an IPv4 packet that is not a fragment does not have the
    Don't Fragment (DF) bit set).
 In general, most of the issues relate to poor testing and lack of
 IPv6 support in some applications.  IPv6 itself and NAT64 did not
 cause any major issues for us, once our setup and NAT64 software was
 stable.  In general, the authors feel that with the exception of some
 applications, our experience with translation to reach the IPv4
 Internet has been equal to our past experiences with NAT44-based
 Internet access.  While translation implies loss of end-to-end
 connectivity, in practice, direct connectivity has also not been
 available to the authors in the IPv4 Internet for a number of years.
 It should be noted that the experience with a properly configured set
 of ALGs and workarounds such as proxies may be different.  Some of
 the problems we encountered can be solved through these means.  For
 instance, a problematic application can be configured to use a proxy
 that in turn has both IPv4 and IPv6 access.

5. Experiences with IPv6-Only Networking

 The overall experience was as explained above.  The remainder of this
 section discusses specific issues with different operating systems,
 programming languages, applications, and appliances.

5.1. Operating Systems

 Even operating systems have some minor problems with IPv6.  For
 example, in Linux, Router Advertisement (RA) information is not
 automatically updated when the network changes while the computer is
 on, and this requires an unnecessary suspend/resume cycle to restore
 its proper state.  We have also had issues with the rdnssd daemon,
 which first does not come as a default feature in Ubuntu and does not
 always appear to work reliably.  To resolve these issues, we had to
 configure the network manager to use a specific server address.
 Later, a new version of the Linux distribution that we used solved
 these problems, even if some problems still remained.  For instance,
 in the latest Ubuntu Long-Term Support release (10.04), we have
 experienced that the network manager by default returns to an

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 9] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 available IPv4 wireless network even if there is a previously used
 IPv6-only network available and the IPv4 network has no global
 connectivity before a web-based login is completed.
 In Mac OS X (Snow Leopard), the network manager needed to be
 explicitly told not to expect IPv4.  A more annoying issue was that
 in order to switch between an IPv6-only and IPv4-only network, these
 settings had to be manually changed, making it undesirable for Mac OS
 X users to employ IPv6-only networks.
 Also, on Microsoft Windows 7, we experienced problems when relying on
 default, well-known DNS server addresses: without manual
 configuration, the host was unable to use the DNS addresses, even
 though the system displays them as current DNS server addresses.
 Latest versions of the Android operating system support IPv6 on its
 wireless LAN interface, but due to lack of DNS discovery mechanisms,
 this does not work in IPv6-only networks.  We corrected this,
 however, and prototype phones in our networks work well now, even in
 an IPv6-only environment.  This change, DNS Discovery Daemon (DDD)
 now exists as open source software.  Interestingly, all applications
 that we have tried so far seem to work without problems with IPv6-
 only connectivity, though no exhaustive testing was done, nor did we
 try known troublesome applications.
 While all these operating systems (or their predecessors) have
 already supported IPv6 for a number of years, these kinds of small
 glitches seem to imply that they have not been thoroughly tested in
 networks lacking IPv4 connectivity.  At the very least, their
 usability leaves something to be desired.

5.2. Programming Languages and APIs

 For applications to be able to support IPv6, they need access to the
 necessary APIs.  Luckily, IPv6 seems to be well supported by a
 majority of the commonly used APIs.  The Perl programming language
 used to be an exception with only partial IPv6 support up to the
 version 5.14 (released May 14, 2011).  This version finally includes
 full IPv6 support, with that in the core libraries and older modules
 being updated as well.  With previous versions of Perl, while IPv6
 socket support is available as an extension module, it may not be
 possible to install this module without administrative rights.  This
 has also resulted in other networking core libraries (such as FTP and
 SMTP) not being able to fully support IPv6; thus, many existing Perl
 programs using network functionality may not work properly in an
 IPv6-only environment.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 10] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

5.3. Instant Messaging and VoIP

 By far, the biggest complaint from our group of users was that Skype
 stopped working.  In some environments, even Skype can be made to
 work through a proxy configuration, and this was verified in our
 setting but not used as a permanent solution.  More generally, we
 tested a number of instant messaging applications in an IPv6-only
 network with NAT64; the test results can be found in Table 1.  The
 versions used in the tests were the latest versions available in the
 summer of 2010.
   SYSTEM                                 STATUS
   Facebook on the web (http)               OK
   Facebook via a client (xmpp)             OK
   Jabber.org chat service (xmpp)           OK
   Gmail chat on the web (http)             OK
   Gmail chat via a client (xmpp)           OK
   Google Talk client                     NOT OK
   AIM (AOL)                              NOT OK
   ICQ (AOL)                              NOT OK
   Skype                                  NOT OK
   MSN                                    NOT OK
   Webex                                  NOT OK
   Sametime                              OK (NOW)
 Table 1. Instant Messaging Applications in an IPv6-Only Network
 Packet tracing revealed that the issues in AIM, ICQ, and MSN appear
 to be related to passing literal IPv4 addresses in the protocol.  It
 remains to be determined whether this can be solved through
 configuration, proxies, or ALGs.  The problem with the Google Talk
 client is that the software does not support IPv6 connections at this
 time.  We are continuing our tests with additional applications, and
 we have also seen changes over time.  For instance, a new version of
 Sametime suddenly started working with IPv6-only networks, presumably
 due to the new version being more careful with the use of DNS names
 as opposed to IPv4 addresses.  One problem in running these tests is
 to ensure that we can distinguish IPv6 and NAT64 issues from other
 issues, such as a generic issue on a given operating system platform.
 Some of these problems are solvable, however.  For instance, we used
 localhost as a proxy for Skype, and then used SSH to tunnel to an
 external web proxy, bypassing Skype's limitations with regard to
 connecting to IPv6 destinations or even IPv6 proxies.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 11] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

5.4. Gaming

 Another class of applications that we tried was games.  We tried both
 web-based gaming and standalone gaming applications that have
 "network", "Internet", or "LAN" gaming modes.  The results are shown
 in Table 2.
   SYSTEM                                           STATUS
   Web-based (e.g., armorgames)                       OK
   Runescape (on the web)                           NOT OK
   Flat out 2                                       NOT OK
   Battlefield                                      NOT OK
   Secondlife                                       NOT OK
   Guild Wars                                       NOT OK
   Age of Empires                                   NOT OK
   Star Wars: Empire at War                         NOT OK
   Crysis                                           NOT OK
   Lord of the Rings: Conquest                      NOT OK
   Rome Total War                                   NOT OK
   Lord of the Rings: Battle for Middle Earth 2     NOT OK
 Table 2. Gaming Applications in an IPv6-Only Network
 Most web-based games worked well, as expected from our earlier good
 general web experience.  However, we were also able to find one web-
 based game that failed to work (Runescape).  This particular game is
 a Java application that fails on an attempt to perform a HTTP GET
 request.  The reason remains unclear, but a likely theory is the use
 of an IPv4-literal in the application itself.
 The experience with standalone games was far more discouraging.
 Without exception, all games failed to enable either connections to
 ongoing games in the Internet or even LAN-based connections to other
 computers in the same IPv6-only LAN segment.  This is somewhat
 surprising, and the results require further verification.
 Unfortunately, the games provide no diagnostics about their
 operation, so it is hard to guess what is going on.  It is possible
 that their networking code employs older APIs that cannot use IPv6
 addresses [RFC4038].  The inability to provide any LAN-based
 connectivity is even more surprising, as this must mean that they are
 unable to use IPv4 link local connectivity, which should have been
 available to the devices (IPv4 was not blocked; just that no DHCP
 answers were provided on IPv4).
 While none of the standalone games we tested in the summer of 2010
 were IPv6-capable, the situation improved during the experiment.  For
 instance, a popular online game, World of Warcraft, now has IPv6

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 12] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 support in its latest version and some of the older games that have
 been re-released as open source (e.g., Quake) have been patched IPv6-
 capable by the open source community.

5.5. Music Services

 Most of the web-based music services appear to work fine, presumably
 because they employ TCP and HTTP as a transport.  One notable
 exception is Spotify, which requires communication to specific IPv4
 addresses.  A proxy configuration similar to the one we used for
 Skype makes it possible to use Spotify as well.

5.6. Appliances

 There are also problems with different appliances such as webcams.
 Many of them do not support IPv6; hence, they will not work in an
 IPv6-only network.  Also, not all firewalls support IPv6.  Or even if
 they do, they may still experience issues with some aspects of IPv6
 such as fragments.
 Some of these issues are easily solved when the appliance works as a
 server, such as what most webcams and our sensor gateway devices do.
 We placed the appliance in the IPv4 part of the network (in this
 case, in private address space), added its name to the local DNS, and
 simply allowed devices from the IPv6-only network reach it through
 NAT64.

5.7. Other Differences

 One thing that becomes simplified in an IPv6-only network is source
 address selection [RFC3484].  As there is no IPv4 connectivity, the
 host only needs to consider its IPv6 source address.  For global
 communications, there is typically just one possible source address.
 Some networks that advertise IPv6 addresses in their DNS records in
 reality have some problems.  For instance, a popular short URL
 forwarding service has advertised a deprecated IPv4-compatible IPv6
 address [RFC4291] in its AAAA record, making it impossible for this
 site to be reached unless either IPv4 or NAT64 translation to an IPv4
 destination is used.

6. Experiences with NAT64

 After correcting some initial bugs and stability issues, the NAT64
 operation itself has been relatively problem-free.  There have been
 no unexplained DNS problems or lost sessions.  With the exception of
 the specific applications mentioned above and IPv4 literals, the user

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 13] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 experience has been in line with using IPv4 Internet through a NAT44
 device.  These failures with the specific applications are clearly
 very different from the IPv4 experience, however.
 The rest of this section discusses our measurements on specific
 issues.  These tests and measurements were performed during the year
 2011 and present a snapshot of the situation on that time.  More up-
 to-date measurement information can be found from various online
 tools such as [HE-IPv6].

6.1. IPv4 Address Literals

 While browsing in general works, IPv4 literals embedded in the HTML
 code may break some parts of the web pages when using IPv6-only
 access.  This happens because the DNS64 cannot synthesize AAAA
 records for the literals since the addresses are not queried from the
 DNS.  Luckily, the IPv4 literals seem to be fairly rarely
 encountered, at least so that they would be noticed, with regular web
 surfing.  The authors have run into this issue only few times during
 the entire experiment.  Only two of those cases had a practical
 impact (in YouTube, some of the third-party applications for
 downloading content did not work and one hotel's web page had a
 literal link to its reservation system).
 We have attempted to measure the likelihood of running into an IPv4
 literal in the web.  To do this, we took the top 1,000 and 10,000 web
 sites from the Alexa popular web site list.  With 1,000 top sites,
 0.2% needed an IPv4 literal to render all components in their top
 page (e.g., images, videos, JavaScript, and Cascading Style Sheet
 (CSS) files).  With 10,000 top sites, this number increases to 2%.
 However, it is not clear what conclusions can be made about this.  It
 is often the case that there are unresolvable or inaccessible
 components on a web page anyway for various reasons, and to
 understand the true impact we would have to know how "important" a
 given page component was.  Also, we did not measure the number of
 links with IPv4 literals on these pages, nor did we attempt to search
 the site in any thorough manner for these literals.
 As noted, personal anecdotal evidence says that IPv4 literals are not
 a big problem.  But clearly, cleaning the most important parts of the
 web from IPv4 literals would be useful.  With tools such as the
 popular web site list, some user pressure, and co-operation from the
 content providers the most urgent part of the problem could hopefully
 be solved as a one-time effort.  While IPv4 literals still exist in
 the web, using a suitable HTTP proxy (e.g., [ADD-LITERALS]) can help
 to cope with them.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 14] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

6.2. Comparison of Web Access via NAT64 to Other Methods

 We also compared how well the web works behind a NAT64 compared to
 IPv4-only and native IPv6 access.  For this purpose, we used wget to
 go through the same top web site lists as described in Section 6.1,
 again downloading everything needed to render their front page.  The
 tests were repeated and average failure rate was calculated over all
 of the runs.  Separate tests were conducted with an IPv4-only
 network, an IPv6-only network, and an IPv6-only network with NAT64.
 When accessed with the IPv4-only network, our tests show that 1.9% of
 the sites experienced some sort of error or failure.  The failure
 could be that the whole site was not accessible, or just that a
 single image (e.g., an advertisement banner) was not loaded properly.
 It should also be noted that access through wget is somewhat
 different from a regular browser: some web sites refuse to serve
 content to wget, browsers typically have DNS heuristics to fill in
 "www." in front of a domain name where needed, and so on.  In
 addition to missing advertisement banners, temporary routing glitches
 and other mistakes, these differences also help to explain the reason
 for the high baseline error rate in this test.  It should also be
 noted that variations in wget configuration options produced highly
 different results, but we believe that the options we settled on bear
 closest resemblance to real-world browsing.
 When we tried to access the same sites with native IPv6 (without
 NAT64), 96% of the sites failed to load correctly.  This was as
 expected, given that most of the Internet content is not available on
 IPv6.  The few exceptions included, for instance, sites managed by
 Google.
 When the sites were accessed from the IPv6-only network via a NAT64
 device, the failure rate increased to 2.1%.  Most of these failures
 appear to be due to IPv4 address literals, and the increased failure
 rate matches that of IPv4 literal occurrence in the same set of top
 web sites.  With the top 10,000 sites, the failure rate with NAT64
 increases similarly to our test on IPv4 address literals.

7. Future Work

 One important set of measurements remains for future work.  It would
 be useful to understand the effect of DNS64 and NAT64 on response
 time and end-to-end communication delays.  Some users have anecdotal
 reports of slow web browsing response times, but we have been unable
 to determine if this was due to the IPv6-only network mechanisms or
 for some other reason.  Measurements on pure DNS response times and
 packet round-trip delays does not show a significant difference from
 a NAT44 environment.  It would be particularly interesting to measure

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 15] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 delays in the context of dual-stack versus NAT64-based IPv6-only
 networking.  When using dual-stack, broken IPv6 connectivity can be
 repaired by falling back to IPv4 use.  With NAT64, this is not always
 possible as discussed in Section 3.2.
 Also, more programs, especially VoIP and Peer-to-Peer (P2P)
 applications should be tested with NAT64.  In addition, tunneling and
 mobility protocols should be tested and especially Virtual Private
 Network (VPN) protocols and applications would deserve more thorough
 investigation.

8. Conclusions and Recommendations

 The main conclusion is that it is possible to employ IPv6-only
 networking.  For large classes of applications, there are no
 downsides or the downsides are negligible.  We have been unable to
 spot any practical difference in the web browsing experience, for
 instance.  Additionally, IPv6 usage -- be it in dual-stack or IPv6-
 only form -- comes with inherent advantages, such as enabling direct
 end-to-end connectivity.  In our case, we employed this by enabling
 direct connectivity to devices in a home network from anywhere in the
 (IPv6) Internet.  There are, however, a number of issues as well,
 such as lack of IPv6 support in some applications or bugs in untested
 parts of the code.
 Our experience with IPv6-only networking confirms that dual stack
 should still be our recommended model for general purpose networking
 at this point in time.  However, IPv6-only networking can be employed
 by early adopters or highly controlled networks.  One example of such
 a controlled network is a mobile network with operator-driven
 selection of handsets.  For instance, on some handsets that we
 tested, we were unable to see any functional difference between IPv4
 and IPv6.
 Our recommendations apply at the present time.  With effort and time,
 deployment barriers can be removed and IPv6-only networking becomes
 applicable in all networking situations.
 Some of the improvements are already in process in the form of new
 products and additional IPv6 support.  For instance, we expect that
 the handset market will have a much higher number of IPv6-capable
 devices in the near future.  However, some of the changes do not come
 without the community spending additional effort.  We have identified
 a number of actions that should be taken to improve the state of
 IPv6-only networking.  These include the following:

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 16] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 DNS Discovery
    The state of DNS discovery continues to be one of the main
    barriers for easy adoption of IPv6-only networking.  Since DNS
    discovery is not a problem in dual-stack networking, there has
    been too little effort in testing and deploying the necessary
    components.  For instance, it would be useful if RA-based DNS
    discovery came as a standard feature and not as an option in Linux
    distributions.  Our hope is that recent standardization of the RA-
    based DNS discovery at the IETF will help this happen.  Other
    operating systems face similar issues.  The authors believe that
    at this time, prudent operational practices call for maximizing
    the number of offered automatic configuration mechanisms on the
    network side.  It might be useful for an IETF document to provide
    guidance on operating DNS in IPv6-only networks.
 Network Managers
    Other key software components are the various network management
    and attachment tools in operating systems.  These tools generally
    have the required functionality, but do not always appear to have
    been tested very extensively on IPv6, or let alone IPv6-only
    networks.  Further work is required here.
 Firewalls
    More work is needed to ensure that IPv6 is supported in equal
    manner in various firewall products.
 Application Support
    By far, the most important action, at least for our group of
    users, would be to bring some key applications (e.g., instant
    messaging and VoIP applications and games) to a state where they
    can be easily run on IPv6-only networks and behind a NAT64.  To
    facilitate this, application programmers should use IP-version-
    agnostic APIs so that applications automatically use IPv4 or IPv6
    depending on what is available.  In some cases, it may also be
    necessary to add support for new types of ALGs.
 IPv4 Literals
    The web should be cleaned of IPv4 literals.  Also, IPv4 literals
    should be avoided in application protocol signaling messages.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 17] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 Measurements and Analysis
    It is also important to continue with testing, measurement, and
    analysis of which Internet technologies work in IPv6-only
    networks, to what extent, at what speed, and where the remaining
    problems are.
 Guidelines
    It is also useful to provide guidance for network administrators
    and users on how to turn on IPv6-only networking.
 As can be seen from the above list, there are only minor things that
 can be done through standardization.  Most of the effort is practical
 and centers around improving various implementations.

9. Security Considerations

 By itself, the use of IPv6 instead of IPv4 does not make a big
 security difference.  The main security requirement is that,
 naturally, network security devices need to be able to deal with IPv6
 in these networks.  This is already required in all dual-stack
 networks.  As noted, it is important, e.g., to ensure firewall
 capabilities.  Security considerations for NAT64 and DNS64 are
 discussed in [RFC6146] and [RFC6147].
 In our experience, many of the critical security functions in a
 network end up being on the dual-stack part of the network anyway.
 For instance, our mail servers obviously still have to be able to
 communicate with both the IPv4 and IPv6 Internet, and as a result,
 they and the associated spam and filtering components are not in the
 IPv6-only part of the network.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 18] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

10. References

10.1. Normative References

 [RFC2663]       Srisuresh, P. and M. Holdrege, "IP Network Address
                 Translator (NAT) Terminology and Considerations",
                 RFC 2663, August 1999.
 [RFC3484]       Draves, R., "Default Address Selection for Internet
                 Protocol version 6 (IPv6)", RFC 3484, February 2003.
 [RFC3736]       Droms, R., "Stateless Dynamic Host Configuration
                 Protocol (DHCP) Service for IPv6", RFC 3736,
                 April 2004.
 [RFC4213]       Nordmark, E. and R. Gilligan, "Basic Transition
                 Mechanisms for IPv6 Hosts and Routers", RFC 4213,
                 October 2005.
 [RFC6106]       Jeong, J., Park, S., Beloeil, L., and S. Madanapalli,
                 "IPv6 Router Advertisement Options for DNS
                 Configuration", RFC 6106, November 2010.

10.2. Informative References

 [RFC4038]       Shin, M-K., Hong, Y-G., Hagino, J., Savola, P., and
                 E. Castro, "Application Aspects of IPv6 Transition",
                 RFC 4038, March 2005.
 [RFC4291]       Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
                 Architecture", RFC 4291, February 2006.
 [RFC4861]       Narten, T., Nordmark, E., Simpson, W., and H.
                 Soliman, "Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6
                 (IPv6)", RFC 4861, September 2007.
 [RFC4966]       Aoun, C. and E. Davies, "Reasons to Move the Network
                 Address Translator - Protocol Translator (NAT-PT) to
                 Historic Status", RFC 4966, July 2007.
 [RFC6052]       Bao, C., Huitema, C., Bagnulo, M., Boucadair, M., and
                 X. Li, "IPv6 Addressing of IPv4/IPv6 Translators",
                 RFC 6052, October 2010.
 [RFC6144]       Baker, F., Li, X., Bao, C., and K. Yin, "Framework
                 for IPv4/IPv6 Translation", RFC 6144, April 2011.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 19] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

 [RFC6145]       Li, X., Bao, C., and F. Baker, "IP/ICMP Translation
                 Algorithm", RFC 6145, April 2011.
 [RFC6146]       Bagnulo, M., Matthews, P., and I. van Beijnum,
                 "Stateful NAT64: Network Address and Protocol
                 Translation from IPv6 Clients to IPv4 Servers",
                 RFC 6146, April 2011.
 [RFC6147]       Bagnulo, M., Sullivan, A., Matthews, P., and I. van
                 Beijnum, "DNS64: DNS Extensions for Network Address
                 Translation from IPv6 Clients to IPv4 Servers",
                 RFC 6147, April 2011.
 [RFC6384]       van Beijnum, I., "An FTP Application Layer Gateway
                 (ALG) for IPv6-to-IPv4 Translation", RFC 6384,
                 October 2011.
 [ADD-LITERALS]  Wing, D., "Coping with IP Address Literals in HTTP
                 URIs with IPv6/IPv4 Translators", Work in Progress,
                 March 2010.
 [HE-IPv6]       Hurricane Electric, "Global IPv6 Deployment Progress
                 Report", February 2012,
                 <http://bgp.he.net/ipv6-progress-report.cgi>.

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 20] RFC 6586 IPv6-Only Experiences April 2012

Appendix A. Acknowledgments

 The authors would like to thank the many people who have engaged in
 discussions around this topic, and particularly the people who were
 involved in building some of the new tools used in our network, our
 users who were interested in going where only few had dared to
 venture before, or people who helped us in this effort.  In
 particular, we would like to thank Martti Kuparinen, Tero Kauppinen,
 Heikki Mahkonen, Jan Melen, Fredrik Garneij, Christian Gotare, Teemu
 Rinta-Aho, Petri Jokela, Mikko Sarela, Olli Arkko, Lasse Arkko, and
 Cameron Byrne.  Also, Marcelo Braun, Iljitsch van Beijnum, Miika
 Komu, and Jouni Korhonen have provided useful discussion and comments
 on the document.

Authors' Addresses

 Jari Arkko
 Ericsson
 Jorvas  02420
 Finland
 EMail: jari.arkko@piuha.net
 Ari Keranen
 Ericsson
 Jorvas  02420
 Finland
 EMail: ari.keranen@ericsson.com

Arkko & Keranen Informational [Page 21]

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