[ISN] Defense Department begins six months of IPv6 interoperability tests

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Thu Oct 23 2003 - 00:42:39 PDT

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    http://www.computerworld.com/governmenttopics/government/story/0,10801,86243,00.html
    
    Story by Linda Rosencrance 
    OCTOBER 20, 2003 
    COMPUTERWORLD
    
    For the next six months, the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) will
    operate the largest multivendor IPv6 (Internet Protocol Version 6)  
    network to date.
    
    Today, the North American IPv6 Task Force announced that the network,
    dubbed the Moonv6 project, has been deployed to evaluate
    next-generation Internet technology to support network-centric
    military operations.
    
    The DOD has said it will migrate its existing Global Information Grid
    Network, based at University of New Hampshire, to the new IPv6 network
    by 2008.
    
    "Future combat and defense systems need network ubiquity, mobility and
    security that the current Internet protocol, IPv4, cannot provide,"  
    said Maj. Roswell Dixon, Joint Interoperability Testing Command
    tactical data systems/IPv6 test director at Fort Huachuca, Ariz., in a
    statement. "The lack of security and flexibility in the current
    protocol has hampered efforts to build next-generation secure
    communications."
    
    In a telebriefing on Oct. 17, Dixon said the IPv6 project was
    groundbreaking for the Defense Department. "This is the first time
    we've had representation from all the services" in a test of the new
    protocol, he said.
    
    The Moonv6 project is a collaboration among industry, engineering and
    several DOD organizations and is designed to examine the
    interoperability of IPv6 equipment, software and services under
    real-world conditions.
    
    The Interoperability Laboratory of the University of New Hampshire
    (UNH-IOL) just completed the Moonv6 project's initial interoperability
    and test period, which ran from Oct. 7 to 17. The goal is to keep
    Moonv6 up and running permanently as the North American IPv6 backbone.
    
    One of the major factors driving the move from the IP Version 4 now in
    use to to IPv6 is a perceived scarcity of IP addresses for new devices
    such as Internet-enabled mobile phones. IPv4 addresses are 32 bits
    long, enough for around 4 billion unique addresses, although
    inefficiencies in the division and allocation of the address space
    means that many of these aren't available for use.
    
    IPv6 extends the address length to 128 bits, or around 340 billion
    billion billion billion unique addresses.
    
    While governments and network operators in Europe and Asia have been
    conducting large-scale tests of IPv6 for the last three years, the
    U.S. response to IPv6 has been "lackluster," according to the Web site
    of Moon's organizers. And the country is still playing catch-up: The
    DOD tests were originally due to begin on Oct. 3 and finish Oct. 17,
    but haven't yet begun, according to information provided by the
    organizers.
    
    Participants in the Moon tests include the DOD, the UNH-IOL, the North
    American IPv6 Task Force, several networking software and equipment
    vendors including IBM, Microsoft Corp., Hewlett-Packard Co., Cisco
    Systems Inc., Fujitsu Ltd., Sun Microsystems Inc. and Nokia Corp., as
    well as Japan-based network operator Nippon Telegraph and Telephone
    Corp., according to a statement issued today.
    
    Peter Sayer of the IDG News Service contributed to this report.
    
    
    
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