On Wednesday, February 02, 2011 03:16:59 am Iljitsch van Beijnum wrote:
> A clear win. Of course it does mean that people <gasp> have to learn 
> something new when adopting IPv6.

Ever hear of intellectual inertia?  The more that has to be learned to go a new 
path, the less likely that path will be chosen if another path still works, or 
can be made work with incremental changes.

There's already too much new to learn, and not as many available hours or 
people to learn it.

<put on op hat>
What I want is to add an IPv6 subnet or subnets to my already tuned DHCP server 
config, add IPv6 addresses to the addresses handed out (in the same config 
clause as the IPv4 addresses are stored, preferably), update the DHCP server 
software to IPv6-capability, restart the DHCP server, and both IPv4 and IPv6 
clients get what they need, through the same already locked down channels, with 
no other upgrades required.

Takes what, thirty minutes per DHCP server if you're slow?  

Instead, I'll have to completely relearn how dynamic allocation works, learn 
about and protect against a new attack vector, learn about and deploy new 
hardware and software more than likely, and in general pull my hair out 
debugging new code and new platforms.... and so I'll be inclined to keep what 
works and bandaid it until it cannot be bandaided any more.  Sorry, but those 
are the operational facts of life.
<take off op hat>

IPv6's uptake has been slow because it is too different, IMO, and thus 
intellectual inertia (in the complete Newtonian physics sense of the word) 
kicks in.  IPv4 is a huge mass moving at a large velocity, and the delta force 
vector to adjust course is too great for many to swallow.  It doesn't seem that 
different until you add all those pesky little details up.  Try that exercise 
one day, and add up *all* the differences that operators have to know and 
implement to go IPv6, and balance that against smaller staffs and smaller 
budgets.

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