In a message written on Tue, Nov 09, 2004 at 11:46:49PM +0100, Iljitsch van Beijnum wrote: > However, there is plenty of address space in IPv6 to go NATless, so > protocol desingers and implementers are unlikey to add NAT workarounds > for IPv6. This means it's very unlikely that applications that don't > use simple client/server communication are going to work with NAT in > IPv6.
As long as IPv4 exists, which I predict will be a long time, the
"protocol designers" which are really application developers for
your purposes, will write to the lowest common denominator. API's
for all the major platforms already look like this; you open a TCP
socket to an end address, be it IPv4 or IPv6 in a dual stack machine.
So with the protocols still designed to work over IPv4 NAT, and the
complexity of IPv6 NAT being roughly "s/long/long long/g" (yes,
simplified, but you get my point) and recompiling your NAT code,
I'm not sure what will be the barrier to IPv6 NAT.
I would love to see a solid technical reason why IPv6 NAT will NOT work.
In the absense of that I will stick to my guns and say that it will
work and be available, and most likely sooner rather than later.
--
Leo Bicknell - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - CCIE 3440
PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/
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