Even though the number of available IPv4 addresses
are dwindling faster than expected, the move to IPv6 remains sluggish,
according to a recent study from Arbor Networks.
In a study of native IPv6 traffic volumes across
multiple large carriers, IPv6 adoption remains minuscule as a result of
technical and design challenges, no economic incentives, and a dearth
of IPv6 content, according to the Arbor Networks study released April
19. During the six month study period, Arbor Networks researchers found
that traffic over IPv4 networks grew by an average of 40 percent to 60
percent while IPv6 traffic actually decreased by an average of 12
percent proportionately because it was not growing fast enough in
comparison to IPv4 traffic.
“Despite 15 years of IPv6 standards development,
vendor releases and advocacy, only a small fraction of the Internet has
adopted IPv6,” said Arbor Networks chief scientist Craig Labovitz.
While actual IPv6 traffic volumes have gone up, it
has shrunk as a percentage of all Internet traffic, to a mere 0.25
percent of all net traffic, Labovitz said. The top IPv6 applications
are largely peer-to-peer applications such as BitTorrent, accounting
for 61 percent of traffic. In comparison, peer-to-peer networks account
for 8 percent of IPv4-based traffic. Web traffic makes up the second
largest block of traffic on both IPv4 and IPv6 networks, but the
differences are still striking. HTTP traffic accounts for 19 percent of
IPv4 traffic, compared to a mere 4.6 percent over IPv6.
Online video, such as Netflix, YouTube and Web
video, accounted for a little less than half of IPv4 traffic, but they
didn’t even make a dent over IPv6. It’s ironic considering Netflix is
one of the few major companies with an IPv6-accessible Website.
Users and businesses that are interested in
migrating, but stymied by their ISP’s lack of IPv6 offerings, can use
tunnels to get IPv6 connectivity. Arbor examined the total IPv6 traffic
over a specific 24-hour period in February and found over 250,000 such
tunnels. More than 90 percent of the tunnels belonged to five major
tunnel brokers, including Hurricane Electric, Anycast and Microsoft’s
Teredo service.
The Arbor research highlighted the fact that most
companies and ISPs are way behind in their transition plans to move
their networking infrastructure to the newer address space. This is
worrying in light of the fact that the remaining IPv4 addresses are
running out faster than predicted.
ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers) allocated the last blocks of IPv4 addresses to the five
regional internet registries in a public ceremony on Feb. 3.
While existing sites will continue working just
fine even when the last IPv4 address has been assigned, any
organizations wanting to expand or add new capabilities will be unable
to without transitioning their network infrastructure to IPv6.
In fact, that’s more or less the case for Asia-Pacific businesses. The Asia Pacific Network Information Center,
the RIR responsible for assigning IP addresses to the region, announced
the release of its last available batch of IPv4 addresses on April 15.
While analysts had predicted APNIC would run out of the IP address
blocks first, the predictions had estimated the supply would last till
the summer.
"Considering the ongoing demand for IP addresses,
this date effectively represents IPv4 exhaustion for many of the
current operators in the Asia Pacific region," said APNIC director
general Paul Wilson.
APNIC have placed the remaining IPv4 addresses under limited distribution. "From this day onwards, IPv6 is mandatory for building new Internet networks and services," Wilson said.
Asia-Pacific is well on the way to become the
first “IPv6-enabled region,” but businesses need to begin the migration
if they haven’t already done so in order to “remain viable,” according
to Wilson.
The American Registry for Internet Numbers
received 253 requests for IPv6 address blocks from internet service
providers in the first quarter of 2011, compared to 134 requests in the
last quarter of 2010. It’s not just ISPs talking about IPv6, as ARIN
also received 247 end-user requests for IPv6 address space in the first
quarter 2011, compared to 103 requests in first quarter 2010. ARIN
received a total of 434 requests from ISPs in 2010, and expects
requests to exceed that in 2011.
The upcoming “World IPv6 Day” on June 8 marks “a
major milestone in the Internet’s evolution,” Labovitz said, because it
will force businesses and ISPs to stress test the global network
infrastructure. “Will the flood of IPv6 traffic result in network
failures? As an industry, we’re not sure,” Labovitz concluded.