Pekka,
This topic has come up in the past -- the last time I recall it being a
significant issue was IETF 63 in Paris, France. On multiple occasions
since then we have asked for volunteers with IPv6 expertise to help
complete the IPv6 bits of this I-D. Unfortunately, we have gotten
little to no response. Do you wish to help out with this? Or, can you
provide a pointer to folks in the IPv6 world that can take a look at
this doc and help out?
Thanks,
-shane
Pekka Savola wrote:
On Wed, 16 Aug 2006, Internet-Drafts@xxxxxxxx wrote:
A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts
directories.
This draft is a work item of the Layer 2 Virtual Private Networks
Working Group of the IETF.
Title : ARP Mediation for IP Interworking of Layer 2 VPN
Author(s) : H. Shah, et al.
Filename : draft-ietf-l2vpn-arp-mediation-07.txt
Pages : 21
Date : 2006-8-16
...
The VPWS service [L2VPN-FRM] provides point-to-point connections
between pairs of Customer Edge (CE) devices. It does so by
binding two Attachment Circuits (each connecting a CE device
with a Provider Edge, PE, device) to a pseudowire (connecting
the two PEs). In general, the Attachment Circuits must be of
the same technology (e.g., both Ethernet, both ATM), and the
pseudowire must carry the frames of that technology. However,
if it is known that the frames' payload consists solely of IP
datagrams, it is possible to provide a point-to-point connection
in which the pseudowire connects Attachment Circuits of
different technologies. This requires the PEs to perform a
function known as "ARP Mediation". ARP Mediation refers to the
process of resolving Layer 2 addresses when different resolution
protocols are used on either Attachment Circuit. The methods
described in this document are applicable even when the CEs run
a routing protocol between them, as long as the routing protocol
runs over IP.
The document says,
10. IPV6 Considerations
The support for IPV6 is not addressed in this draft and is for
future study.
This needs to be addressed throughout the document.
The whole point of L2VPNs (IMHO) is that it's agnostic of what protocols
users run above L2. Users depend on a transparent L2 service model and
this model breaks that assumption.
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