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IPv6 support on Virgin media

dgcarter
Dialled in

Does anyone know whether (and if so when) Virgin plan to implement IPv6 on its network?

1,493 REPLIES 1,493


@Anonymous wrote:

Cool. Network, apart from CPE, has been ready for nearly a year now. Trials on the 'private' cable network, the 10. addresses being moved to IPv6, have been a thing for a while. Great to see prefixes starting to be advertised .


Thanks that is good to know. There are also two IPv6 BGP peers now. The same two prefixes have been advertised for quite a while now.

TonyJr

For VMB users, I'm wondering whether VM is going to tunnel IPv4 over the IPv6 with GRE. So business users won't be using CG NAT and residential users might have to swap to business to retain the full NAT capabilities.

And will IPv6 basically become static ie each user is assigned a static IPv6 allocation rather than a dynamic one? Alleviating the current static/dynamic choice.

Could the pricing tiers change due to this? eg

1. Normal user = IPv6 static with IPv4 CG NAT
2. Elevated User = IPv6 plus IPv4 (not CG NAT via GRE) = extra cost.

Sunday update --- the Virgin Media IPv6 growth curve continued over the Xmas / New Year period:

apnic_2019_01_06_Sun_vm.png

 

Today's sample count for VM stands at 16,787 per day.

So, here we are, 2019 and still no IPv6. It would be nice to think that the release of an IPv6 service is imminent, but Virgin has ignored our hopes so many times before. If anyone sees other indications that something is stirring in the wings, it would be nice to hear your thoughts.

Morgaine.

"If it only does IPv4, it is broken." -- George Michaelson, APNIC.

By the end of March, this thread will have been going for nine years.

Best not to rush things...

 

Well, the count is definitely climbing on a daily basis. I suspect by tonight it will hit the 17k mark. Quite what that means is anybodies business as some of the previous graphs look like my bank balance after the wife has got hold of my debit card!!


@louis-m wrote:

Well, the count is definitely climbing on a daily basis. I suspect by tonight it will hit the 17k mark. Quite what that means is anybodies business as some of the previous graphs look like my bank balance after the wife has got hold of my debit card!!


I agree with the graph vs wife with debit card Smiley Very Happy.

I would also like to place a bet of 50p that the switch has been flipped. I wonder what the odds are.....

TonyJr

@TonyJr writes:

I would also like to place a bet of 50p that the switch has been flipped. I wonder what the odds are.....

 

Depends on what you mean by "flipped the switch".

If you mean that VM has an internal date for official release of the IPv6 service, it's possible, but the same could have been said before in earlier years and it didn't materialize.  On the other hand, if you mean that the current growth curve shows that it has already been released but slowly, then my guess is that it's a "No".  The reason is that the numbers we are seeing are too small to support that theory.

I don't know how many of those numbered areas or districts of operation Virgin has, but all of the ones I've seen mentioned have had two digits, so a reasonable guess would be that there are fewer than 100.  Doing a ballpark guesstimate --- 5 million subscribers, 100 districts, one PoP per district --- gives us 50 thousand subscribers per smallest increment (turning on just one PoP at a time), whereas the daily increments that we're seeing are over 100 times smaller than that.  So, the current figures don't support a theory of "it's already running in the wild".  In any case, if it were already available in a limited area, someone would be reporting that they have IPv6 on their CPE, but they haven't.  My guess is that VM IPv6 is still limited to a small-scale secret trial group.

"If it only does IPv4, it is broken." -- George Michaelson, APNIC.

Anonymous
Not applicable

Regarding CG-NAT, sure they're going to do that? Could be using IP-in-IP?

https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2473

Would require a horrendous amount of resources running everyone through a NAPT AFTR.

Lightweight 4over6 might be a plan, too, can present public IPv4 addresses.

https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7596

@Ignition:  A few related points:

 

• Liberty Global running DS-Lite in all of their countries but something different in UK seems extremely unlikely.

• How IPv4 is provisioned within a native IPv6 deployment doesn't affect the IPv6 numbers that we're seeing.

• I think it's a reasonable guess that Liberty Global / Virgin beancounters will be going for the least costly option.

• DS-Lite provides the cost and support benefits of IPv6-only internal infrastructure, plus IPv4-As-A-Service later.

• Deploying DS-Lite now would allow them to profit from their excess IPv4 addresses before world prices tumble.

 

Given the above, I don't expect Liberty Global's IPv6 deployment in UK to be any different than elsewhere.

 

"If it only does IPv4, it is broken." -- George Michaelson, APNIC.

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thanks for the detailed response!