Hi, my name is Ivan and I am currently a final year student at University of Westminster. My course is Computer Network Security and I am doing a final year project on IPv6 deployment.
One of the parts of my project will be to create a deployment guide for residential users. My ISP currently does not support IPv6 and my router is also IPv4-only. I will be using my home network to try and still connect to the Internet using IPv6.
I just wanted to find out what other options do residentail users have apart from tunnel brokers if their ISP is not IPv6 ready and their router is IPv4 only?
Comment
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by ivan kovachev on February 1, 2012 at 7:30pm What options are available to connect using ipv6 for the following scenario:
- no ISP and router IPv6 support (edge router at home)
- no ISP but Ipv6 capable router
- ISP but no router support
I would like to find out all the possible mechanisms to connect based on the scenarios above.
Thank you
Comment by John M Baird on February 1, 2012 at 11:30am If you rule out native or tunnel broker IPv6 transport, then you will need to establish some other type of tunnel or an address translation service on an end-device on your home network. There are literally dozens of possibilities. See this IPv6 Transition Techniques article on the DREN IPv6 knowledge base www.hpc.mil/cms2/index.php/ipv6-knowledge-base-deployment/153-v6-tr...
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