posted on 2013-05-01, 10:45authored byNejc Skoberne, Olaf Maennel, Iain PhillipsIain Phillips, Randy Bush, Jan Zorz, Mojca Ciglaric
The growth of the Internet has made IPv4 addresses a scarce resource. Due to slow IPv6 deployment, IANA-level IPv4 address exhaustion was reached before the world could transition to an IPv6-only Internet. The continuing need for IPv4 reachability will only be supported by IPv4 address sharing. This paper reviews ISP-level address sharing mechanisms, which allow Internet service providers to connect multiple customers who share a single IPv4 address. Some mechanisms come with severe and unpredicted consequences, and all of them come with tradeoffs. We propose a novel classification, which we apply to existing mechanisms such as NAT444 and DS-Lite and proposals such as 4rd, MAP, etc. Our tradeoff analysis reveals insights into many problems including: abuse attribution, performance degradation, address and port usage efficiency, direct intercustomer communication, and availability.
History
School
Science
Department
Computer Science
Citation
SKOBERNE, N. ... et al., 2014. IPv4 address sharing mechanism classification and tradeoff analysis. IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking, 22 (2), pp. 391-404.