- IPv6 translation mechanisms
IPv6 translation mechanisms are used to allow
IPv6 -connected hosts to accessIPv4 -only Internet resources and hosts. Some IPv6 translation mechanisms were first defined in RFC 1933 but this RFC has been obsoleted by RFC 4213.Stateless IP/ICMP Translation (SIIT)
RFC 2765 defines a mechanism known as "Stateless IP/ICMP Translation", or SIIT. SIIT is a mechanism which translates
IPv6 packets intoIPv4 packets and vice-versa. It was initially drafted in February 2000 by E. Nordmark ofSun Microsystems .Basically SIIT describes a method by which a
router interprets an IPv4 header and creates a parallel IPv6 header with equivalent information and the inverse equivalent operation of converting an IPv6 header into an IPv4 header. The actual means of converting an IPv4 address to an IPv6 address or vice-versa may vary, and the means by which the routing occurs is described as unspecified in the RFC.Due to the method in which SIIT operates it is not a sufficient migration mechanism in that it is incapable of coordinating more than two unique addresses on either side. This means that every IPv6 host would be required to have a globally routable IPv4 address as well.
NAT-PT
"Network Address Translation/Protocol Translation" (or simply NAT-PT) is defined in RFC 2766 but due to numerous problems, it has been obsoleted by RFC 4966 and deprecated to historic status. It is typically used in conjunction with a DNS
Application-level gateway (DNS-ALG) implementation.NAPT-PT
While almost identical to NAT-PT, "Network Address Port Translation + Protocol Translation" which is also described in RFC 2766 adds translation of the ports as well as the address. This is done primarily to avoid two hosts on one side of the mechanism from using the same exposed port on the other side of the mechanism, which could cause application instability and/or security flaws.
Transport Relay Translation (TRT)
RFC 3142 defines the "Transport Relay Translation" (TRT) method. This is the most common form of NAT-PT/NAPT-PT but relies on DNS translation between AAAA and A records known as "DNS-ALG" as defined in RFC 2694.
IPv4 NAT
Network Address Translation (NAT) using IPv4 can be used to provide IPv4 connectivity to IPv6-only networks. Depending on the details of network deployment, several scenarios can be envisioned for deployment. For example, a network would establish an IPv4-over-IPv6 tunnel to an IPv4 NAT router on the service providers network.See also
*
Comparison of IPv6 application support
*stone (software) : port translator for Windows & Unix-based systems.
*faithd : BSD-based static TRT implementation
*RFC 2767, Bump-in-the-Stack / Bump-in-the-API
*RFC 3089, Socks-based Gateway
*RFC 3142, TCP-UDP RelayReferences
*ISBN 3-540-24524-3: "IPv6 in Practice" by Benedikt Stockebrand, 2006
External links
* [http://www.join.uni-muenster.de/Dokumente/Howtos/Howto_TRT.php?lang=en TRT Howto from 2003]
* [http://student.grm.hia.no/master/ikt03/ikt6400/g03/filer/Hovedprosjekt_G3.doc IPv6 - Prospects and problems: a technical and management investigation into the deployment of IPv6]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.