A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts directories.
Title : Dual Stack Hosts using the "Bump-In-the-Stack" Technique (BIS)
Author(s) : B. Huang, et al.
Filename : draft-huang-behave-rfc2767bis-02.txt
Pages : 18
Date : 2010-03-08
This document describes the "Bump-In-the-Stack" (BIS) host based
protocol translation mechanism that allows applications supporting
only one IP address family to communicate with peers that are
reachable or supporting only the other address family. Furthermore,
this technology avoids need for unnecessary double protocol
translation in the case where destination is dual-stack enabled.
This specification addresses scenarios where a host is provided dual
stack or IPv6 only network connectivity. In the dual stack network
case, single address family applications in the host will communicate
directly with other hosts reachable with the different address
family. In the case of IPv6 only network or IPv6 only destination,
IPv4-originated communications have to be be translated into IPv6.
In the scenario of single address family access network, but dual-
stack destination, network based translation is always avoided.
Technically, the BIS-enabled host resolves both IPv4 and IPv6
addresses of the destination and behaves according to received
responses.
Acknowledgement of previous work
This document is an update to and directly derivative from Kazuaki
TSUCHIYA, Hidemitsu HIGUCHI, and Yoshifumi ATARASHI's [RFC2767],
which similarly provides a dual stack host means to communicate with
other IPv6 host using existing IPv4 appliations.The original document
was a product of the NGTRANS working group.
The changes in this document reflect three components
1. Supporting IPv6 only network connections
2. Extending ENR and address mapper to operate differently
3. Adding an alternative way to implement the ENRStatus of this Memo
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