[IP] China disowns IPv9 hype | The Register
Begin forwarded message:
From: Randall <rvh40@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: July 6, 2004 8:38:30 AM EDT
To: Dave Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: China disowns IPv9 hype | The Register
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/06/ipv9_hype_dismissed/
China disowns IPv9 hype
By John Leyden (john.leyden at theregister.co.uk)
Published Tuesday 6th July 2004 10:37 GMT
Evidence is growing that IPv9, hyped up the widely-adopted foundation of
a next generation Internet infrastructure in China, is really a marginal
project backed by few even in China.
Reports
(http://www.chinatechnews.com/index.php?action=show&type=news&id=1405)
from China this week about widespread adoption of the previously unheard
of Internet protocol have created bewilderment and something approaching
a diplomatic incident in the sysadmin community.
Cash`n`Carrion
Click Here
Vint Cerf, SVP of technology strategy at MCI, and one of chief
architects of the modern Internet, was bewildered by the reports. In an
email sent to senior figures in the Chinese Internet community, he
asked: "What could this possibly be about? As far as I know, IANA
[Internet Assigned Numbers Authority] has not allocated the IPv9
designation to anyone. IPv9 is not an Internet standard. Could you
please explain what is intended here? I am disturbed by the reference to
root servers, 'control'. What is the 'ten digit text file' all about?
Who is behind the Shanghai Jiuyao Digital Network Company?"
Professor Hualin Qian of the Computer Network Information Center of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences described IPv9 as a research project that
turned out to have serious practical shortcomings and little support.
"CNIC explains IPv9 is proposed by the director, Mr. Xie Jian-Ping, of
the Institute of Chemical Engineering located in Shanghai. Two years
ago, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) invited them to introduce their
idea about IPv9. According to my understanding, their proposal includes
two main aspects: the first one is IPv9, the second one is Digital
Domain Names.
"For IPv9, they think that the address space of IPv6 (128bits long) is
not enough for future use, they expanded the IP address to 256 bits. I
don't think the protocols for IPv9 have major difference from IPv6
except the longer IP address. Almost all the people working on networks
in CAS do not agree with their opinion, because there is not any
evidence showing that the IPv6 address is not enough and using 256 bits
source and destination IP address will increase the overhead of an IP
packet. And when communicating with IPv4/IPv6, equipment such as NAT-PT
[Network Address Translation] must be installed. This will be the bottle
neck for future high capacity interconnection with IPv4 and IPv6 global
Internet."
Hualin added that IPv9 is unfamiliar to network experts from Fudan
University in Shanghai who "do not know any deployment of IPv9 in
Shanghai" contrary to initial reports by China's official news agency,
Xinhua.
Tim Chown of Southampton University, and technology adviser to the IPv6
Task Force in the UK, told El Reg: "The consensus now seems to be it is
one researcher or group trying to promote a 256-bit adaptation of IPv6,
but it doesn't yet seem to have much traction. It is hard to tell how
serious it is, or whether it is a complete non-starter in the same way
as Jim Fleming's ludicrous IPv8 is. There may well be some sensible
ideas behind IPv9, but IPv6 is the system that is standardised and now
(very) widely implemented." ®
Related stories
China adopts mystery Internet Protocol
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/05/china_ipv9_mystery/)
China snoops on text messages
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/07/02/china_text_snoop/)
Brussels gets up to speed with IPv6
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/01/19/brussels_gets_up_to_speed/)
IPv6 Task Force UK works on five-year plan
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/01/24/ipv6_task_force_uk_works/)
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