Dear Working group,

Below are the draft minutes from ripe 81.

If you have any comments or remarks please let us know by replying to this 
email.
A big thanks to Nikolas for doing the scribe.

If we do not hear any comments these minutes will be published in about 2 weeks 
from now.

Rgds,

Ray, Jen, Benedikt.



 IPv6 Working Group Minutes - RIPE 81
Date: 29 October 2020, 13:00 - 13:45
WG Chairs: Benedikt Stockebrand, Jen Linkova, Raymond Jetten
Scribe: Nikolas Pediaditis
Status: Draft


Welcome - Agenda Bashing
The Chairs
The minutes of IPv6 Working Group session from RIPE 80 were accepted as final. 
There were no questions or comments.


RIPE554-bis - Tim Chown

The presentation is available here:
https://ripe81.ripe.net/presentations/58-ripe81-ipv6wg-ripe554bis-final.pdf

Dmitry Serbulov (Alpha Net Telecom LTD) asked if it would be possible to share 
material with attendees prior to the start of each session.

Raymond Jetten suggested that he should join the IPv6 WG mailing list.

Bringing IPv6 Everywhere - Nico Schottelius

The presentation is available here:
https://ripe81.ripe.net/presentations/73-ripe81-bringing-ipv6-everywhere.pdf

Ondrej Caletka (RIPE NCC) asked if connectivity will break if the host network 
becomes dual-stacked, or at worst, if the host network becomes IPv6-only.

Nico replied that it wouldn't. IPv4 connectivity would still be available, and 
IPv6 would be added to it.

Kurt Kayser (BDBOS) asked if geo-IP will always show that the VIIRB-users are 
in Switzerland.
Nico Schottelius replied that at the moment, yes.  And there is a bracket 
opening as soon as they are able to talk better to the RIPE API to change the 
registration of the /48 networks. It will be easy to actually assign the 
network to your location.

Christoph Berkemeier (DB Station&Service AG) asked if the IPv6 distribution is 
stateless only.

Nico confirmed that it is stateless at the moment but that could be changed if 
desired.

Veronica McKillop (UK IPv6 Council) asked where the device is being 
manufactured.

Nico replied that it's manufactured in China and shipped to and configured in 
Switzerland.

Dmitry Serbulov (Alpha Net Telecom LTD) asked if open source software is used 
between the device and the server it connects to.

Nico said that the software used, WireGuard and OpenWRT at the moment, are 
fully open source.

Vesna Manojlovic (RIPE NCC)  mentioned that a hackathon about RIPE Atlas 
software probes is taking place in November. She asked if Nico would be 
interested in joining and seeing how they could combine his router with RIPE 
Atlas software probes if possible.

Nico replied that it would be a really cool project.

Christoph Berkemeier (DB Station&Service AG) asked if there is a virtual 
appliance to enable legacy hosters.

Nico replied that it builds on top of your existing IPv4 network so everything 
that's legacy continues to work.  It's not a replacement. The nice thing about 
IPv6 is that although it is incompatible to IPv4 this also means that it runs 
in parallel to the existing infrastructure, allowing the legacy network to 
continue to work.


Recent Improvements in IPv6 Addressing  - Fernando Gont

The presentation is available here:
https://ripe81.ripe.net/presentations/72-fgont-ripe81-ipv6-wg-ipv6-addressing.pdf

Osamah Barakat (Siemens AG) asked if Windows 10 supports the latest IPv6 RFC or 
it is only Linux-based OS that support seen in the slide.

Fernando Gont replied that it's surprising that they don't support RFC 7217 as 
one the authors worked for Microsoft. They also haven't implemented the update 
of 4941 either. However, he was less concerned about 4941, as compared to the 
support for 7217, as it has not been published as an RFC.

End of the session.



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