From BECHA at ripe.net Mon Oct 2 11:07:21 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 11:07:21 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] HOWTO: "How RIPE NCC hackathons work" Message-ID: Hi, for some of you this might be the first hackathon in general, or the first RIPE NCC hackathon, so here is a gentle introduction to how we do it. If you want more to read more, and see photos, we publish all the "reviews" at RIPE Labs: http://labs.ripe.net/hackathons If you have any questions, please send them either to me or to the list. Ciao, Vesna * hackathons, in general, are "hacking marathons": a long event where people join to "hack" _together_ -- to create a "quick & dirty" solution to some problem; result is mostly a prototype: code, or sometimes physical objects. Other results are the connections forged between participants, experiences gained from working together, and hands-on knowledge. * the accent is on *team-work* & *cooperation*, rather then on competition! * work is done in "interdisciplinary groups": small teams of 3-5 people, coming from diverse backgrounds, knowledge level, skills -- this diversity leads to unexpected combinations, creative ideas, and genius solutions! Format: - before the start, we communicate on-line: propose projects, introduce ourselves to each other, discuss ideas, brainstorm... We use EtherPad & a mailing list & IRC & even Facebook/Twitter/whatever - in the morning of the first day, we start with personal introductions, where participants say something about themselves: what is their goal for this hackathon, their interests, their skills - several projects get introduced too, mostly by the organiser & possibly sponsors: so-called "challenges" , where the "hacks" are supposed to provide a solution - participants choose which project they want to work on, and form teams - these teams start brainstorming, decide on the direction and amount of work they think they can do in the remaining time (one & a half day!) - the rest of the time is given to _work_ : coding, designing, writing.. - we will also have several short "reviews" (like in Scrum!) to see how are the team progressing, to maybe re-group or merge, or change direction completely - everything is possible - food, refreshments and drinks are provided throughout the event (including lunch & dinner) - at the end of the second day, teams make presentations of their results: very short, 2 minutes talk & 1 minutes for questions - slides & code & photos & videos are shared (uploaded to GitHub; given to RIPE NCC to publish) - the jury selects several "winners", for the prizes that are mostly symbolic, based on the criteria set up in the "challenges". And then there's a party! :) We celebrate a successful cooperation, relax after two hectic & long days & have fun together! Link to all previous events: http://labs.ripe.net/hackathons + Link to code: https://github.com/RIPE-Atlas-Community/ripe-atlas-community-contrib/blob/master/README.md From BECHA at ripe.net Mon Oct 2 11:50:01 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 11:50:01 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions Message-ID: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Hi all, you should have received an other email with the details of participants, as were submitted during the application process. In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself -- and for the RIPE NCC staff, this is not optional ;-) Let me start: my role during the hackathon will be to facilitate & to be a juror, as well as to go on with arranging all the logistical details. So you do not need to know what are my programming skills (awk & grep ;-) , nor my technical background (Computer Science / Electrical Engineering in Belgrade, ex-Yugoslavia). As an ex-trainer, I know a lot of theory about IPv6; and as an ex-RIPE_Atlas-Community Builder, I know a lot about using RIPE Atlas, with CLI tools & web UI too. I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you to help arrange that with Labitat...) Ciao, Vesna From zorz at isoc.org Mon Oct 2 12:04:27 2017 From: zorz at isoc.org (Jan Zorz - ISOC) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 12:04:27 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <56e13502-45ff-6e3d-c575-3efa1cb612c4@isoc.org> On 02/10/2017 11:50, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself Hey, Let me add about my role - I'll be a juror and as such I'll not be able to take part in hacking the IPv6 itself (as much as I would like, but need to remain neutral), but since I've been dealing with IPv6 for decades now I'll be able to facilitate and discuss some ideas with the groups that may (or may not) come up during the hackathon ;) Cheers and see you all in Copenhagen, Jan Zorz -- Jan Zorz Internet Society mailto: ------------------------------------------ "Time is a lake, not a river..." - African -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type: application/pkcs7-signature Size: 4201 bytes Desc: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature URL: From BECHA at ripe.net Mon Oct 2 12:37:12 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 12:37:12 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Other IPv6-related Events in Denmark November 2017 In-Reply-To: <1c95d6b7-4c8e-bf01-6823-413646d494e7@ripe.net> References: <1c95d6b7-4c8e-bf01-6823-413646d494e7@ripe.net> Message-ID: <804b6426-90a2-5894-4aed-950011fad297@ripe.net> Hi, In addition to the hackathon, RIPE NCC has scheduled the following events in Denmark in November 2017. Please find more information below: ------------------ 6 November 2017 ------------------ IPv6 Day Denmark ===== General Information IPv6 Day Denmark ===== IPv6 Day Denmark is a unique opportunity for Internet operators and other Internet stakeholders in Denmark to come together and discuss the challenge of IPv6 deployment in the Danish context. The RIPE NCC, the Regional Internet Registry (RIR) that serves Denmark, will host a day-long event, featuring keynote speakers from industry, government and the international Internet community, as well as roundtable discussion of the challenges and opportunities presented by IPv6 adoption. The event offers decision-makers and network engineers the opportunity to share knowledge, compare experiences and identify areas for national cooperation. IPv6 Day Denmark is open for anyone to attend and is free for all participants. To register please visit: https://www.ripe.net/events/ipv6-day-denmark/register Location: ---------- TIVOLI HOTEL & CONGRESS CENTER Arni Magnussons Gade 2 - 4 DK-1577 K?benhavn V http://www.tivolicongresscenter.dk -------------------- 7-8-9 November 2017 -------------------- RIPE NCC Training Courses The RIPE NCC is organising a one-day Basic IPv6 Training Course and a two-day Advanced IPv6 Training Course after the IPv6 Day Denmark. The courses are free. RIPE NCC members can register via the following links: - https://lirportal.ripe.net/training/register/courseCode/IPX20170024 for Basic IPv6 Training Course (7 November 2017) - https://lirportal.ripe.net/training/register/courseCode/ADV20170019 for Advanced IPv6 Training Course (8-9 November 2017) If you are not a RIPE NCC member, please email to register and include your name, the course name and whether or not you want the vegetarian meal option. Location: ---------- TIVOLI HOTEL & CONGRESS CENTER Arni Magnussons Gade 2 - 4 DK-1577 K?benhavn V http://www.tivolicongresscenter.dk With kind regards, RIPE NCC Training Services From harry at harryreeder.co.uk Mon Oct 2 13:27:57 2017 From: harry at harryreeder.co.uk (Harry Reeder) Date: Mon, 02 Oct 2017 11:27:57 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <56e13502-45ff-6e3d-c575-3efa1cb612c4@isoc.org> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <56e13502-45ff-6e3d-c575-3efa1cb612c4@isoc.org> Message-ID: Hello All, I'm taking part, this is my first time venturing into the world of RIPE hackathons, but I'm eager to give things a go and do what I can :) I'm a final year software engineering student here im Edinburgh, but outside of that and my job, I help out with HUBS (https://hubs.net.uk) who work with and provide transit for small community broadband groups mostly based in the remote west coast of Scotland. I also enjoy spending a large amount of time in my local Hackerspace, so I'd be down to head along there on the Friday evening, that does sound fun! I've also jumped on IRC, I am tbrb. Harry On Mon, Oct 2, 2017 at 11:04 AM Jan Zorz - ISOC wrote: > On 02/10/2017 11:50, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > > In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself > > Hey, > > Let me add about my role - I'll be a juror and as such I'll not be able > to take part in hacking the IPv6 itself (as much as I would like, but > need to remain neutral), but since I've been dealing with IPv6 for > decades now I'll be able to facilitate and discuss some ideas with the > groups that may (or may not) come up during the hackathon ;) > > Cheers and see you all in Copenhagen, Jan Zorz > > -- > Jan Zorz > Internet Society > mailto: > ------------------------------------------ > "Time is a lake, not a river..." - African > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nikos at roussos.cc Mon Oct 2 20:03:18 2017 From: nikos at roussos.cc (Nikos Roussos) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 21:03:18 +0300 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <14c3b8b6-1c78-63e5-2da6-5d951765e904@roussos.cc> Hi all, I'm involved for many years now in Open Source projects and communities. My technical background is mostly around web technologies and development. I work as a Full Stack Web Engineer, and code voluntarily for various Open Source projects. This would be my first RIPE hackathon, so I'm very much looking forward meeting you all at Copenhagen, and I'd love to visit Labitat ;) You'll find me as @comzeradd almost everywhere. ~nikos -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 833 bytes Desc: OpenPGP digital signature URL: From ebal at fsfe.org Mon Oct 2 20:34:29 2017 From: ebal at fsfe.org (ebal at fsfe.org) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 21:34:29 +0300 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Dear All, this is my first time participating in such event and I am really excited to be included. I work for an ISP as a sysadmin (mostly doing operations), trying to deploy IPv6 dual stack in public (and internal) services. Notably project is our transition to a lwAFTR implementation with some friendly customers working out any initial problem. My handle name is: ebal in IRC @ebalaskas on twitter -- Evaggelos Balaskas PGP: '0x1c8968af8d2c621f' https://www.linkedin.com/in/evaggelosbalaskas From nathalie at ripe.net Mon Oct 2 13:31:35 2017 From: nathalie at ripe.net (Nathalie Trenaman) Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2017 13:31:35 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <289EA475-7ED8-46B0-B421-33149CAD33F7@ripe.net> Hi all, My name is Nathalie, and I currently have 2 roles at RIPE NCC; Trainer and IPv6 Programme Manager. With these 2 hats on, I?m very involved in the whole Danish IPv6 Week. On Saturday and Sunday, I will be one of the jurors of the IPv6 Hackathon, looking forward to meet all of you! I?ve got some experience with IPv6 and home automation, IPv6 routing etc. On Monday, I will organise the IPv6 Day, with national and international speakers and on Tuesday till Thursday I will be the trainer for the Basic and Advanced IPv6 courses. I?m very excited for this week, and if there is anything I can help with, please let me know! Cheers, Nathalie K?nneke-Trenaman IPv6 Program Manager RIPE NCC From wenqin.shao at telecom-paristech.fr Tue Oct 3 10:01:32 2017 From: wenqin.shao at telecom-paristech.fr (Wenqin SHAO) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 10:01:32 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hi all, I'm Wenqin from Telecom ParisTech. I'm a final year PhD student specialised in network measurement, e.g. topologies, performances, visualisations, etc. RIPE Atlas has been one of the major data sources in my researches. This will be my second time attending RIPE hackathon (last time was the interface one). It is really a lovely occasion to meet people, exchange ideas, and make things happen together. I'm looking forward to seeing you all. Regards, wenqin > On 02 Oct 2017, at 11:50, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > > Hi all, > > you should have received an other email with the details of > participants, as were submitted during the application process. > > In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself > -- and for the RIPE NCC staff, this is not optional ;-) > > Let me start: > > my role during the hackathon will be to facilitate & to be a juror, > as well as to go on with arranging all the logistical details. > > So you do not need to know what are my programming skills (awk & grep > ;-) , nor my technical background (Computer Science / Electrical > Engineering in Belgrade, ex-Yugoslavia). As an ex-trainer, I know a lot > of theory about IPv6; and as an ex-RIPE_Atlas-Community Builder, I know > a lot about using RIPE Atlas, with CLI tools & web UI too. > > I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are > interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you > to help arrange that with Labitat...) > > Ciao, > Vesna > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon From Richard.Patterson at sky.uk Tue Oct 3 10:53:58 2017 From: Richard.Patterson at sky.uk (Patterson, Richard (Sky Network Services (SNS))) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 08:53:58 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <03A3EFEB-F27F-42E4-8EDF-90AB09BDE931@sky.uk> Kia ora koutou, First hackathon for me, RIPE or otherwise, as I?m a network engineer by trade. Currently doing network design for AS5607, Sky UK, where we?ve just finished rolling out IPv6 to about 95% of our customer base. -Richard On 02/10/2017, 10:50, "ipv6-hackathon on behalf of Vesna Manojlovic" wrote: Hi all, you should have received an other email with the details of participants, as were submitted during the application process. In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself -- and for the RIPE NCC staff, this is not optional ;-) Let me start: my role during the hackathon will be to facilitate & to be a juror, as well as to go on with arranging all the logistical details. So you do not need to know what are my programming skills (awk & grep ;-) , nor my technical background (Computer Science / Electrical Engineering in Belgrade, ex-Yugoslavia). As an ex-trainer, I know a lot of theory about IPv6; and as an ex-RIPE_Atlas-Community Builder, I know a lot about using RIPE Atlas, with CLI tools & web UI too. I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you to help arrange that with Labitat...) Ciao, Vesna _______________________________________________ ipv6-hackathon mailing list ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon Information in this email including any attachments may be privileged, confidential and is intended exclusively for the addressee. The views expressed may not be official policy, but the personal views of the originator. If you have received it in error, please notify the sender by return e-mail and delete it from your system. You should not reproduce, distribute, store, retransmit, use or disclose its contents to anyone. Please note we reserve the right to monitor all e-mail communication through our internal and external networks. SKY and the SKY marks are trademarks of Sky plc and Sky International AG and are used under licence. Sky UK Limited (Registration No. 2906991), Sky-In-Home Service Limited (Registration No. 2067075) and Sky Subscribers Services Limited (Registration No. 2340150) are direct or indirect subsidiaries of Sky plc (Registration No. 2247735). All of the companies mentioned in this paragraph are incorporated in England and Wales and share the same registered office at Grant Way, Isleworth, Middlesex TW7 5QD. From sds at ripe.net Tue Oct 3 11:05:57 2017 From: sds at ripe.net (Stephen D. Strowes) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 11:05:57 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hi! I'm a measurements/researcher type person at the NCC. I've been yammering on about v4 exhaustion and v6 deployment for a clear decade. In recent former lives: I led the team building monitoring agents at Boundary (and got IPv6 flow monitoring in place even if the rest of the pipeline never got there), and subsequently wound up running the IPv6 program at Yahoo. I have nothing to do with the demise of either company. You can trust me. See you in Copenhagen! S. From BECHA at ripe.net Tue Oct 3 11:29:24 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 11:29:24 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Preparing in advance by watching webinars, recordings, or learning from slides In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <461c068f-de89-6343-0e4e-5aa87d957ba8@ripe.net> Hi all, before every hackathon, we used to give a special webinar for the participants, with goals: - to save time when we meet up in person (by cutting out the long introduction by RIPE NCC) - to give you info about data sets (RIPE Atlas, RIPEstat..) - to introduce you to some of the RIPE NCC staff This time, we will do it differently, because 1) there's already an "online event" coming up *thus Thursday* 2) we have recordings from previous editions 3) I don't have time to prepare a new webinar :( (working part time...) So please, see bellow for the opportunities to learn about RIPE Atlas & IPv6. Share & Enjoy :) Vesna 1) RIPE NCC::Educa are free, online learning events that bring industry experts together to share insight, expertise and best practice, this time focuses on RIPE Atlas Thursday, 5 October from 8:00 - 13:00 UTC. Reserve your place here: https://www.ripe.net/support/training/ripe-ncc-educa You can join us for one session, multiple sessions or the full programme. We?re updating the agenda constantly, so be sure to check here for the latest additions: https://www.ripe.net/support/training/ripe-ncc-educa/agenda 2) In April 2017 , we gave a webinar about RIPE NCC data sets: * the webinar recording is available here: http://meet95212513.adobeconnect.com/p5sih9ji0zx/ * Slides are available here: https://wiki.techinc.nl/index.php/File:Pdf_DNS_Measurements_hackathon_webinar_v1_.pdf * More training material about RIPE Atlas: https://www.ripe.net/support/training/material 3) Slides & other material for the "Basic IPv6 Course": https://www.ripe.net/support/training/material#IPV6 RIPE NCC Academy : Introduction to IPv6 Course https://academy.ripe.net/enrol/index.php?id=2 Webinar: "IPv6 in the RIPE Database" 12th October https://www.ripe.net/support/training/learn-online/webinars/ipv6-in-the-ripe-database & more webinars: https://www.ripe.net/support/training/learn-online/webinars From vanush.kamaryan at gmail.com Tue Oct 3 11:30:21 2017 From: vanush.kamaryan at gmail.com (Vanush Kamaryan) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 13:30:21 +0400 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <03A3EFEB-F27F-42E4-8EDF-90AB09BDE931@sky.uk> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <03A3EFEB-F27F-42E4-8EDF-90AB09BDE931@sky.uk> Message-ID: ???? ??? (barev dzez), hi all :) This is my first participiation in such kind of events, and I'm full of enthusiasm to learn something and experience my skills. I have good skills with web programming but because of army I lost most of mathematical knowledge :( A couple of freelance years I worked with all popular CMS's, experience in Linux shell scripting, network administration basics and etc. Currently I am working as a Laravel developer, studying in university and playing Star Craft at free time. I always supported Open Source community but never have code pushed to it, so I think this is a very good start. 2017-10-03 12:53 GMT+04:00 Patterson, Richard (Sky Network Services (SNS)) < Richard.Patterson at sky.uk>: > Kia ora koutou, > > First hackathon for me, RIPE or otherwise, as I?m a network engineer by > trade. > Currently doing network design for AS5607, Sky UK, where we?ve just > finished rolling out IPv6 to about 95% of our customer base. > > -Richard > > > On 02/10/2017, 10:50, "ipv6-hackathon on behalf of Vesna Manojlovic" < > ipv6-hackathon-bounces at ripe.net on behalf of BECHA at ripe.net> wrote: > > Hi all, > > you should have received an other email with the details of > participants, as were submitted during the application process. > > In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself > -- and for the RIPE NCC staff, this is not optional ;-) > > Let me start: > > my role during the hackathon will be to facilitate & to be a juror, > as well as to go on with arranging all the logistical details. > > So you do not need to know what are my programming skills (awk & grep > ;-) , nor my technical background (Computer Science / Electrical > Engineering in Belgrade, ex-Yugoslavia). As an ex-trainer, I know a lot > of theory about IPv6; and as an ex-RIPE_Atlas-Community Builder, I know > a lot about using RIPE Atlas, with CLI tools & web UI too. > > I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are > interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you > to help arrange that with Labitat...) > > Ciao, > Vesna > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > > > Information in this email including any attachments may be privileged, > confidential and is intended exclusively for the addressee. The views > expressed may not be official policy, but the personal views of the > originator. If you have received it in error, please notify the sender by > return e-mail and delete it from your system. You should not reproduce, > distribute, store, retransmit, use or disclose its contents to anyone. > Please note we reserve the right to monitor all e-mail communication > through our internal and external networks. SKY and the SKY marks are > trademarks of Sky plc and Sky International AG and are used under licence. > > Sky UK Limited (Registration No. 2906991), Sky-In-Home Service Limited > (Registration No. 2067075) and Sky Subscribers Services Limited > (Registration No. 2340150) are direct or indirect subsidiaries of Sky plc > (Registration No. 2247735). All of the companies mentioned in this > paragraph are incorporated in England and Wales and share the same > registered office at Grant Way, Isleworth, Middlesex TW7 5QD. > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > -- Peace, Love, and a Free Internet -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hlk at kramse.org Tue Oct 3 15:24:04 2017 From: hlk at kramse.org (=?utf-8?Q?Henrik_Lund_Kramsh=C3=B8j?=) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 15:24:04 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <27927672-C004-48BD-BBC9-FC5BB1560D0B@kramse.org> Hi All I am a security and network person, currently working at NORDU.net I finished my overview thesis about IPv6 i 2002, and have been trying to push it in DK since before then. I know a lot about routing, packets, firewalls, security, data, curl/grep/cut/ and trying to learn more Python, but not a great programmer. I also love doing intrusion detection work using tools like Kibana, Elasticsearch, Grafana, logs, Bro, Suricata etc. I have been to RIPE meetings, and hacker camps but never the hackathons, looking forward to seeing you all. - also a native dane, so if you have questions about DK, places, the city of Copenhagen feel free to ask me. -- Mvh/Best regards Henrik ? Henrik Lund Kramsh?j, Follower of the Great Way of Unix internet samurai cand.scient CISSP hlk at kramse.org hlk at zencurity.dk +45 2026 6000 From shahin at gharghi.ir Tue Oct 3 15:49:37 2017 From: shahin at gharghi.ir (Shahin Gharghi) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 17:19:37 +0330 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <27927672-C004-48BD-BBC9-FC5BB1560D0B@kramse.org> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <27927672-C004-48BD-BBC9-FC5BB1560D0B@kramse.org> Message-ID: Hi all, I'm project management of implementing IPv6 in a big fixed service provider in Iran (Asiatech). My job is pushing people to increase use of IPv6 in Iran. With some developing skills in my background, I have developed some network and measurement tools. This is my first Hackathon and I'm looking forward to see you all and learn from you. On Tue, Oct 3, 2017 at 4:54 PM, Henrik Lund Kramsh?j wrote: > Hi All > > I am a security and network person, currently working at NORDU.net > > I finished my overview thesis about IPv6 i 2002, and have been trying to > push it in DK since before then. > > I know a lot about routing, packets, firewalls, security, data, > curl/grep/cut/ and trying to learn more Python, but not a great programmer. > I also love doing intrusion detection work using tools like Kibana, > Elasticsearch, Grafana, logs, Bro, Suricata etc. > > I have been to RIPE meetings, and hacker camps but never the hackathons, > looking forward to seeing you all. > > > - also a native dane, so if you have questions about DK, places, the city > of Copenhagen feel free to ask me. > > > -- > Mvh/Best regards > > Henrik > ? > Henrik Lund Kramsh?j, Follower of the Great Way of Unix > internet samurai cand.scient CISSP > hlk at kramse.org hlk at zencurity.dk +45 2026 6000 > > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > -- Shahin Gharghi -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From barberio at fb.com Tue Oct 3 20:32:39 2017 From: barberio at fb.com (Andrea Barberio) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 18:32:39 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <27927672-C004-48BD-BBC9-FC5BB1560D0B@kramse.org>, Message-ID: Hello everyone, I am a production engineer (a mix of software, systems and network engineering) at Facebook, where I used to operate the internal DNS infrastructure until now (I'm transitioning to a new team). Here everything is already IPv6 :-) but the internet is not, so what better than this hackaton to try to bring more v6 to the world? This is my second hackaton, the first being the DNS hackaton 6 months ago - I loved it! I have experience in network monitoring, systems design and reverse engineering, and I maintain and contribute as much as I can to open source projects in this space. My full story at https://insomniac.slackware.it . On IRC as `insomniac`. Someone mentioned a Facebook group (I know I know) for this hackaton - is there one already, and if so which one? Or can I just create one and spread the invites? Looking forward to meeting everyone in Copenhagen :-) Andrea insomniac's lair :: home insomniac.slackware.it If you are looking for Dublin Traceroute, you'll find it here: https://dublin-traceroute.net . The Python bindings with visualization and statistic analysis are at ... ________________________________ From: ipv6-hackathon on behalf of Shahin Gharghi Sent: 03 October 2017 14:49:37 To: ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net Subject: Re: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions Hi all, I'm project management of implementing IPv6 in a big fixed service provider in Iran (Asiatech). My job is pushing people to increase use of IPv6 in Iran. With some developing skills in my background, I have developed some network and measurement tools. This is my first Hackathon and I'm looking forward to see you all and learn from you. On Tue, Oct 3, 2017 at 4:54 PM, Henrik Lund Kramsh?j > wrote: Hi All I am a security and network person, currently working at NORDU.net I finished my overview thesis about IPv6 i 2002, and have been trying to push it in DK since before then. I know a lot about routing, packets, firewalls, security, data, curl/grep/cut/ and trying to learn more Python, but not a great programmer. I also love doing intrusion detection work using tools like Kibana, Elasticsearch, Grafana, logs, Bro, Suricata etc. I have been to RIPE meetings, and hacker camps but never the hackathons, looking forward to seeing you all. - also a native dane, so if you have questions about DK, places, the city of Copenhagen feel free to ask me. -- Mvh/Best regards Henrik ? Henrik Lund Kramsh?j, Follower of the Great Way of Unix internet samurai cand.scient CISSP hlk at kramse.org hlk at zencurity.dk +45 2026 6000 _______________________________________________ ipv6-hackathon mailing list ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon -- Shahin Gharghi -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From samer.lahoud at usj.edu.lb Tue Oct 3 20:49:53 2017 From: samer.lahoud at usj.edu.lb (Samer Lahoud) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 18:49:53 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <72C94E6A-CDAA-4C3C-A019-C9D5710B488C@usj.edu.lb> Dear all, I am an Associate Professor at Universit? Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth in Lebanon. I teach courses on various topics related to IP networks: inter-domain routing with BGP, QoS in IP networks, Internet of Things, Transition to IPv6. I am a teacher of the online course MOOC Routing and Quality of Service (in French https://www.fun-mooc.fr/courses/MinesTelecom/04011S03/session03/about), and I have developed software tools (using python) for automatically generating a report on the Internet routing in Lebanon http://internet-today.lahoud.fr/routing-report.html. This will be my first hackathon. I am really excited to meet you all in Copenhagen! My twitter account is: @samer_lahoud Best regards, Samer. ---- Samer Lahoud Professeur associ? Universit? Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth ESIB - Laboratoire CIMTI Tel: (+961) 1 421 339 > On 2 Oct 2017, at 12:50, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > > Hi all, > > you should have received an other email with the details of > participants, as were submitted during the application process. > > In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself > -- and for the RIPE NCC staff, this is not optional ;-) > > Let me start: > > my role during the hackathon will be to facilitate & to be a juror, > as well as to go on with arranging all the logistical details. > > So you do not need to know what are my programming skills (awk & grep > ;-) , nor my technical background (Computer Science / Electrical > Engineering in Belgrade, ex-Yugoslavia). As an ex-trainer, I know a lot > of theory about IPv6; and as an ex-RIPE_Atlas-Community Builder, I know > a lot about using RIPE Atlas, with CLI tools & web UI too. > > I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are > interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you > to help arrange that with Labitat...) > > Ciao, > Vesna > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon From ioana at simula.no Wed Oct 4 00:42:30 2017 From: ioana at simula.no (Ioana Livadariu) Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2017 00:42:30 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <72C94E6A-CDAA-4C3C-A019-C9D5710B488C@usj.edu.lb> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <72C94E6A-CDAA-4C3C-A019-C9D5710B488C@usj.edu.lb> Message-ID: Hi all, I'm a PhD student with Simula Research Laboratory in NO. My work focused on studying the IPv6 adoption in the Internet, which involved network measurements, modeling and data analysis. This is my first hackathon, so I'm really looking forward to it. See you in one month in Copenhagen! Ioana On 10/3/17 8:49 PM, Samer Lahoud wrote: > Dear all, > > I am an Associate Professor at Universit? Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth in Lebanon. > I teach courses on various topics related to IP networks: inter-domain routing with BGP, QoS in IP networks, Internet of Things, Transition to IPv6. > I am a teacher of the online course MOOC Routing and Quality of Service (in French https://www.fun-mooc.fr/courses/MinesTelecom/04011S03/session03/about), and I have developed software tools (using python) for automatically generating a report on the Internet routing in Lebanon http://internet-today.lahoud.fr/routing-report.html. > > This will be my first hackathon. > I am really excited to meet you all in Copenhagen! > > My twitter account is: @samer_lahoud > > Best regards, > Samer. > ---- > Samer Lahoud > Professeur associ? > Universit? Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth > ESIB - Laboratoire CIMTI > Tel: (+961) 1 421 339 > >> On 2 Oct 2017, at 12:50, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: >> >> Hi all, >> >> you should have received an other email with the details of >> participants, as were submitted during the application process. >> >> In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself >> -- and for the RIPE NCC staff, this is not optional ;-) >> >> Let me start: >> >> my role during the hackathon will be to facilitate & to be a juror, >> as well as to go on with arranging all the logistical details. >> >> So you do not need to know what are my programming skills (awk & grep >> ;-) , nor my technical background (Computer Science / Electrical >> Engineering in Belgrade, ex-Yugoslavia). As an ex-trainer, I know a lot >> of theory about IPv6; and as an ex-RIPE_Atlas-Community Builder, I know >> a lot about using RIPE Atlas, with CLI tools & web UI too. >> >> I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are >> interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you >> to help arrange that with Labitat...) >> >> Ciao, >> Vesna >> >> _______________________________________________ >> ipv6-hackathon mailing list >> ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net >> https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon From ast at fiberby.net Wed Oct 4 00:12:47 2017 From: ast at fiberby.net (=?UTF-8?Q?Asbj=c3=b8rn_Sloth_T=c3=b8nnesen?=) Date: Tue, 3 Oct 2017 22:12:47 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hi, This is my second RIPE Atlas hackathon, my first was the Interface hackathon also in Copenhagen. I work at a local ISP, Fiberby (AS42541), doing just about everything with the more technical infrastructure from racking and routing to backend web development and kernel patches. We unfortunately still have a few issues ahead before we can roll-out IPv6 to our end-users. Mostly in the DHCPv6 & RA area. I have contributed to a lot of different Open Source projects, most recently related to the Linux networking projects. Like Kramse I'm also a local Copenhagener. On 10/02/2017 09:50 AM, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are > interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you > to help arrange that with Labitat...) I have added it to Labitat's calendar. https://labitat.dk/wiki/RIPE_Atlas_IPv6_Hackathon -- Best regards Asbj?rn Sloth T?nnesen Network Engineer Fiberby ApS - AS42541 From BECHA at ripe.net Wed Oct 4 10:38:46 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2017 10:38:46 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <27927672-C004-48BD-BBC9-FC5BB1560D0B@kramse.org> Message-ID: <4c3f4745-a77d-7b88-9629-50902cf8df4c@ripe.net> Hi, On 03/10/2017 20:32, Andrea Barberio wrote: > Someone mentioned a Facebook?group (I know I know)?for this hackaton - > is there one already,?and if so which one? Or can I just?create one and > spread the invites? it's called "RIPE Hackers": https://www.facebook.com/groups/516605521854515/ (I'm not there, so please tell me of anything urgent, logistics wise, that was asked in that group..) Vesna From MINDNICH at de.ibm.com Wed Oct 4 11:16:04 2017 From: MINDNICH at de.ibm.com (Andy Mindnich1) Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2017 11:16:04 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hi, I'm a network architect, working for the IBM internal network since more than 17 years. Four years ago, I started to develop and roll-out IPv6 for us internally. Since then, I've been driving a global program around the world certifying various network services and bringing IPv6 to IBMers around the world (given the size though, still have many years to go). This is going to be my first hackathon and my coding skill are somewhat rusty, but I think I can contribute an enterprise view on IPv6 requirements. Greetings, Andy Mindnich -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From barberio at fb.com Wed Oct 4 11:22:24 2017 From: barberio at fb.com (Andrea Barberio) Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2017 09:22:24 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <4c3f4745-a77d-7b88-9629-50902cf8df4c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <27927672-C004-48BD-BBC9-FC5BB1560D0B@kramse.org> , <4c3f4745-a77d-7b88-9629-50902cf8df4c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Thanks Vesna :) the group description says it's for an old hackaton in Bucharest. But if you're not there I'm not sure of the value of using FB groups. Andrea ________________________________ From: ipv6-hackathon on behalf of Vesna Manojlovic Sent: 04 October 2017 09:38:46 To: ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net Subject: Re: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions Hi, On 03/10/2017 20:32, Andrea Barberio wrote: > Someone mentioned a Facebook group (I know I know) for this hackaton - > is there one already, and if so which one? Or can I just create one and > spread the invites? it's called "RIPE Hackers": https://www.facebook.com/groups/516605521854515/ (I'm not there, so please tell me of anything urgent, logistics wise, that was asked in that group..) Vesna _______________________________________________ ipv6-hackathon mailing list ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=https-3A__lists.ripe.net_mailman_listinfo_ipv6-2Dhackathon&d=DwIF-g&c=5VD0RTtNlTh3ycd41b3MUw&r=9mqM_LCvEkL15lYAl4IGdQ&m=AzRzGSb7VZodjdvr1OR3A6rLxD7oJs88DFmp59Yw-ZA&s=KDLvhuqPe2qC99Jcvl31e5FuDjBvEUARRwvIvxSXMDY&e= -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From svenne at kracon.dk Wed Oct 4 11:22:58 2017 From: svenne at kracon.dk (Svenne Krap) Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2017 11:22:58 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <56e13502-45ff-6e3d-c575-3efa1cb612c4@isoc.org> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <56e13502-45ff-6e3d-c575-3efa1cb612c4@isoc.org> Message-ID: Hi All I am a programmer,DBA and network person, I have consulted through my own company for a decade. I run my own hosting/colo business under my own AS and my company is a RIPE member. I have had IPV6 in production for quite some years, though not on all networks.. This is my first RIPE hackathon, and I also live in Copenhagen. Svenne -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mmandrino at madnet.rs Thu Oct 5 16:17:14 2017 From: mmandrino at madnet.rs (Miroslav Mandrino) Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2017 16:17:14 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <5cbf01d33de4$a4b21b50$ee1651f0$@madnet.rs> Hello everyone, I work at a (mostly) wireless ISP in Serbia, with more and more users switching to FTTH and optics lately. Most of the time I work as network engineer, currently for AS197021, but also did some programming. This is my first hackathon, but it would be my third RIPE event. I am trying to deploy IPv6 for company I currently work for, as it is not yet used although we have IP space reserved and most of our EQ is IPv6 compatible. My biggest interest is security on IPv6. I would also like to help others in my surrounding switch to IPv6. I have been watching IPv6 progress for last 2 years very actively. Also I am a big fan and supporter of open source software, I like to help and spread the word. I like to see good ideas put to use. Looking forward to meeting you all. Pozdrav, Miroslav Mandrino Sistem Administrator MadNet d.o.o. Dr ?arka Fogara?a 37 26000 Pan?evo, Srbija I: www.madnet.rs E: mmandrino at madnet.rs T: 013 355 505, lok: 2101 M: 064 813 0062 From daniel at lublin.se Thu Oct 5 16:19:11 2017 From: daniel at lublin.se (Daniel Lublin) Date: Thu, 5 Oct 2017 16:19:11 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <20171005141911.GA25533@ot.lublin.se> Good day, I've been onto computer networks since the late 80s and the BBS days. Never really did any Internetworking professionally, but developed an interest over the years. Particularly in DNS, and from the beginning out of necessity upon deciding to run my own mail etc infrastructure. IPv6 was from the beginning a great, practical way for me to connect to devices residing on silly NAT:ed home-networks, and such. Without resorting to convoluted port-forwarding setups. Having spent quite some years travelling, I'm now residing in Malm?. Currently working as a consultant, doing various development. A bit more embedded and low-level than I would prefer -- and, well, I guess a bit too high level in the network stack :) I'm looking forward to collaborating with you all, and putting my shoulder to the wheel in encouraging IPv6 adoption. /Daniel From jdenhertog at ripe.net Thu Oct 5 20:40:46 2017 From: jdenhertog at ripe.net (jdenhertog) Date: Thu, 05 Oct 2017 20:40:46 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions Message-ID: hi All, My name is Jasper den Hertog and I am a software engineer in the Research and Development department at the RIPE NCC. I am mainly a front-end and API developer and my main interests these days are geospatial analysis, visualisations and UIs. In another life I was an independent sysadmin and network engineer, but I never had the pleasure to be able to introduce IPv6 to my clients. My secret agenda for this hackathon is to create a voronoi overlay on a geographical map (like https://www.jasondavies.com/maps/voronoi/airports/). So if somebody has some IPv6 related dat with a geographical component: come over. I think we have an excellent field of participants for this hackathon. Looking forward to it, greetings, Jasper From mha at ecix.net Fri Oct 6 12:19:32 2017 From: mha at ecix.net (Matthias Hannig) Date: Fri, 6 Oct 2017 12:19:32 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hi everyone! I?m Matthias and I develop software for ECIX in Berlin. I write a lot of Python and Go code; for the frontend I mostly use React. By night, I spend a lot of time in our local hackerspace, fiddling around with electronics and, well, code. :) I?m really looking forward to seeing you all in Copenhagen! Matthias From pedrovaz at ripe.net Fri Oct 6 14:31:54 2017 From: pedrovaz at ripe.net (Pedro Vaz) Date: Fri, 6 Oct 2017 14:31:54 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <1dbfab07-ab59-230d-339e-01df9777a67d@ripe.net> Hello everyone, My name is Pedro Vaz and I work for the RIPE NCC as Trainer/Designer. My background is actually software engineering and in a past life that's how I spent my time fiddling between PHP, Perl scripts and stacks of Java code. Eventually I moved over to the front-end dev/design areas and all the way up to the UX/UI design bits. It's with the hat of UX/UI designer that I'm joining this Hackaton but I'm ready to pull out my coding skills wherever necessary. As a RIPE NCC trainer I've been delivering IPv6 courses throughout the RIPE region for the past 7 years. Never implemented it in 'real life' but I know it a bit from the theoretical side of things ;) This will be my first Hackaton. Not my first time in Copenhagen though (love the city! :)) Looking forward to meet you all! Pedro On 02/10/2017 11:50, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > Hi all, > > you should have received an other email with the details of > participants, as were submitted during the application process. > > In this thread, please add anything else you want to say about yourself > -- and for the RIPE NCC staff, this is not optional ;-) > > Let me start: > > my role during the hackathon will be to facilitate & to be a juror, > as well as to go on with arranging all the logistical details. > > So you do not need to know what are my programming skills (awk & grep > ;-) , nor my technical background (Computer Science / Electrical > Engineering in Belgrade, ex-Yugoslavia). As an ex-trainer, I know a lot > of theory about IPv6; and as an ex-RIPE_Atlas-Community Builder, I know > a lot about using RIPE Atlas, with CLI tools & web UI too. > > I also like visiting local hackerspaces in every town, so if you are > interested, we might do that on Friday evening (Asbjorn, looking at you > to help arrange that with Labitat...) > > Ciao, > Vesna > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > From luuk.hendriks at utwente.nl Thu Oct 12 11:52:40 2017 From: luuk.hendriks at utwente.nl (Luuk Hendriks) Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2017 11:52:40 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <20171012095240.k2wgpdcoajjcmzsb@corley.shackle.nl> Hallo, I'm a PhD student at the University of Twente, focussing on IPv6-related measurements, mostly with a security edge to it. Over the years, I've worked a lot with flow data (NetFlow/IPFIX), and I love to code my own tools (great excuse to toy around with new languages). Currently, I'm trying to get familiar enough with Rust so I can use it at the hackaton. This will be my second hackaton (attended the first one in Amsterdam, years ago). Been attending RIPE meetings since RIPE69 in London, presented some of my work/ideas in the IPv6-WG, and learned a lot from people there. Other interests include fermenting stuff, dogs, music and road cycling. Cheers, luuk (drk on IRC) From BECHA at ripe.net Mon Oct 16 12:12:09 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2017 12:12:09 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Reminder: logistics In-Reply-To: <2d5f0baa-7b0e-f051-6d88-1cc7f26eae2d@ripe.net> References: <2d5f0baa-7b0e-f051-6d88-1cc7f26eae2d@ripe.net> Message-ID: For the people that have been subscribed since, here is a repeat of info about the logistics. Most up-to-date information is on the EtherPad: https://pad.riseup.net/p/ripe_ncc-ipv6-hackathon Please read the mailing list archive for more info: https://www.ripe.net/ripe/mail/archives/ipv6-hackathon/ regards, Vesna -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: Welcome to the IPv6 Hackathon (mailing list) Date: Fri, 29 Sep 2017 14:01:11 +0200 From: Vesna Manojlovic To: ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net Dear colleagues/hackers, I'm happy to welcome you to the hackathon - the event itself, and the mailing list! Please use this list to talk to each other, about the content, and logistics, and hackathon structure... The list is archived, so please be careful what you post :) I will be sending more information to this list soon. The most urgent: 1) The venue is ITU: IT-Universitetet i K?benhavn Rued Langgaards Vej 7 2300 K?benhavn S https://www.itu.dk/om-itu/kontakt 2) Accommodation & travel Please arrange your own hotel & travel! We will provide a venue for the working-part of the day, refreshments, lunch & dinner on Saturday & Sunday -- thanks to the sponsorship received from Comcast. If you need help with getting visa, let me know. 3) Funding Thanks to the sponsors, some people will receive fixed amount of money, to cover part of their expenses, if they are working for non-profits or contributors to FLOSS projects. Those were already informed about that. Practically, it will be transferred to your bank account after the event. We will need some proof of your attendance (hotel bill, boarding pass..) and your bank details. The sooner I have them, the better for you ;-) 4) DO-OCRACY >From now on, this is *OUR* hackathon - together. So please take an active part, already! Your colleagues will appreciate it :) https://communitywiki.org/wiki/DoOcracy 5) Other communication channels We have an Etherpad with lots of info, including temporary (in progress) "List of _all_ participants" We have an IRC channel, and a Facebook group, and a GitHub repository. If someone can post the link to this, that would be lovely! (see "do-ocracy"). Thanks, more soon, Vesna From cjo at dknog.dk Mon Oct 16 12:42:23 2017 From: cjo at dknog.dk (Christian Johannesen) Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2017 10:42:23 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hey, I'll be a juror and as such I'll not be able to take part in hacking the IPv6 itself. I work as a network engineer a one.com and i am board member of DKnog Best regards, Christian -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From BECHA at ripe.net Mon Oct 16 12:44:32 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2017 12:44:32 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Projects & teams! Message-ID: <74adc674-23db-7df0-3b46-e342e97f76d5@ripe.net> Hi all, it is useful to present a project that you would like to suggest for the IPv6 hackathon, so that other people can join your team. There are some listed on the Etherpad already, mostly by Dave -- who can not even make it to the event itself! Thanks, Dave! https://pad.riseup.net/p/ripe_ncc-ipv6-hackathon Other ideas were floated in your introductions; and maybe on the IRC.. Let's try to narrow down the proposals to 5-7 projects, so that we can save time on Saturday morning (Day 1)... by making very short intro-talks, because people already got to know each other over email ;-) So: either start a new thread with your project name; or reply to this email & add some details.. or write on EtherPad about your project.. ask people to add names.. or.. get creative in some other way :) Thanks, Vesna From tf at flummer.net Mon Oct 16 13:59:25 2017 From: tf at flummer.net (Thomas Flummer) Date: Mon, 16 Oct 2017 13:59:25 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hi all, I'm actually an electronics engineer by education, but has been doing software development, mostly web, for the past 10-15 years. I have my own company and hopefully soon I'll have IPv6 for our servers. I like to make UI/UX look good and use design to communicate, and that might be the area where I can help the most, since my knowledge in networking, routing etc. isn't that deep, but I hope to learn a bit more during this hackathon, which will be my first. In my spare time, I like to tinker with various projects (3D printing, electronics, etc) in the local hackerspace, Labitat here in Copenhagen, and will be happy to give all of you a tour along with Asbj?rn. I'm flummer on the IRC. Best regards and see you all soon, Thomas Flummer From BECHA at ripe.net Tue Oct 17 10:41:27 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Tue, 17 Oct 2017 10:41:27 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Danish IPv6 Day, 6. November 2017 In-Reply-To: <804b6426-90a2-5894-4aed-950011fad297@ripe.net> References: <1c95d6b7-4c8e-bf01-6823-413646d494e7@ripe.net> <804b6426-90a2-5894-4aed-950011fad297@ripe.net> Message-ID: <48b992ad-43d6-a4d4-3ad3-42603e5420c0@ripe.net> Hi, the agenda for the IPv6 Day Denmark is published: https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/regional-meetings/ipv6-day-denmark If you'd like to attend, please register here: http://portal.ripe.net/meeting-pub/registration?meetingId=c93c0b44-ed48-4cd0-b3dd-09f5ef3770f5 Please notice: this event is in the different venue then the hackathon!! Ciao, Vesna On 02/10/2017 12:37, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > Hi, > > In addition to the hackathon, RIPE NCC has scheduled the following > events in Denmark in November 2017. Please find more information below: > > ------------------ > 6 November 2017 > ------------------ > > IPv6 Day Denmark > > ===== > General Information IPv6 Day Denmark > ===== > > IPv6 Day Denmark is a unique opportunity for Internet operators and > other Internet stakeholders in Denmark to come together and discuss > the challenge of IPv6 deployment in the Danish context. > > The RIPE NCC, the Regional Internet Registry (RIR) that serves > Denmark, will host a day-long event, featuring keynote speakers from > industry, government and the international Internet community, as well > as roundtable discussion of the challenges and opportunities presented > by IPv6 adoption. > > The event offers decision-makers and network engineers the opportunity > to share knowledge, compare experiences and identify areas for > national cooperation. > > IPv6 Day Denmark is open for anyone to attend and is free for all > participants. > > To register please visit: > https://www.ripe.net/events/ipv6-day-denmark/register > > Location: > ---------- > TIVOLI HOTEL & CONGRESS CENTER > Arni Magnussons Gade 2 - 4 > DK-1577 K?benhavn V > http://www.tivolicongresscenter.dk > > > -------------------- > 7-8-9 November 2017 > -------------------- > > RIPE NCC Training Courses > > The RIPE NCC is organising a one-day Basic IPv6 Training Course and a > two-day Advanced IPv6 Training Course after the IPv6 Day Denmark. The > courses are free. > > RIPE NCC members can register via the following links: > > - https://lirportal.ripe.net/training/register/courseCode/IPX20170024 > for Basic IPv6 Training Course (7 November 2017) > > - https://lirportal.ripe.net/training/register/courseCode/ADV20170019 > for Advanced IPv6 Training Course (8-9 November 2017) > > If you are not a RIPE NCC member, please email to > register and include your name, the course name and whether or not you > want the vegetarian meal option. > > Location: > ---------- > TIVOLI HOTEL & CONGRESS CENTER > Arni Magnussons Gade 2 - 4 > DK-1577 K?benhavn V > http://www.tivolicongresscenter.dk > > > With kind regards, > > RIPE NCC Training Services > > > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > From igor.rinkovec at gmail.com Mon Oct 23 14:22:30 2017 From: igor.rinkovec at gmail.com (Igor Rinkovec) Date: Mon, 23 Oct 2017 14:22:30 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hello all, I am a software engineering student who focuses on web dev most of the time. I do however enjoy learning new stuff in other tech related areas as well. I do know quite a bit about networks but this is not my main professional focus. I would like to work on a project that introduces IPv6 to people without professional interest in the technology. I would like to make data visualisations, tools and demos to help people understand IPv6. If no takers for the first project type, I am also free to give my development expertise to a good use on a project that I find interesting. My other interests include hacking and restoration of old Polaroid instant cameras, several interesting uses of blockchain technology and making weird stuff out of wood. ;) See ya guys soon! From BECHA at ripe.net Thu Oct 26 11:34:49 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Thu, 26 Oct 2017 11:34:49 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Dietary requirements? Message-ID: <20c9ab28-8f90-2e72-b329-29b5b7f602b4@ripe.net> Hi everyone, (please reply only to me, not the list) in order to inform the caterer & the dinner-venue for Sunday night, I need to know the numbers, and possible dietary restrictions: 1. will you be NOT joining the party/dinner on Sunday evening? (the default is - yes, you will stay on Sunday evening too; I am counting on that, so only let me know if you are leaving earlier) 2. Do you not eat meet, nor drink beer? Are you a vegan? Vegetarian? Pescaterian? (eats fish!) Do you have religiously-informed dietary preferences? Or do you have some health restrictions I need to inform the food suppliers about? The default for the dinner & catering is meat-eating; I made sure there will be vegetarian options, but now I need to know the numbers. Please let me know by Monday, and off-list. Thanks, Vesna From mw-hackathon at barfooze.de Fri Oct 27 04:05:21 2017 From: mw-hackathon at barfooze.de (Moritz Wilhelmy) Date: Fri, 27 Oct 2017 04:05:21 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> Message-ID: <1e66b077-88f5-4e88-edea-bfb7e7ee8db3@barfooze.de> Hello everybody. I've been interested in IPv6 adaption ever since I got into self-hosting and I've always been trying to have all my services available on a dual-stack setup. I worked as a sysadmin for a university chair and later a web company, but neither of them allowed me to roll out IPv6. As such, it has bothered me that IPv6 adoption rate remains rather low considering how long it has been around for. Over the years, I've contributed to some open source operating systems (various Linux distros, FreeBSD and NetBSD) and a couple of IRC related projects, among other things. I know Python, Perl 5, sed/awk/grep/sh and C and I'm interested in writing system-level code, network services and web-backend code (I can't do frontend, sorry) that interfaces with system level code (I could imagine a web interface for dhcpd6 or something like that, although I'm not quite sure for which use case). I think I'd prefer to stay in userspace for this hackathon, but if someone comes up with an idea for a small kernel module I'm willing to try to help with that too (I have no experience with network drivers on any OS but I'm interested) and I can also help with one of the visualization projects. I think I'm better at helping out than coming up with a good idea by myself so instead I'll look at the projects that people come up with and just try to contribute to one of those. This is my first time attending any RIPE NCC event and hackathon and I'm already looking forward to it. I'm ente on IRC (and other places too). I'm glad I got this over with. See you there! Moritz From mw-hackathon at barfooze.de Sat Oct 28 21:46:53 2017 From: mw-hackathon at barfooze.de (Moritz Wilhelmy) Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2017 21:46:53 +0200 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Project ideas? Message-ID: <9604fa73-4ca7-48dd-92b2-ec1df575cda6@barfooze.de> Hi all, from the Round of Introductions thread I've collected the following TL;DR summary of IPv6 related activities that people take part in: * IPv6 and home automation, self-hosting * sysadmins and network engineers deploying IPv6 services dual stack , IPv6 routing, IPv6 for transit networks, IPv6 for large companies * RIPE Atlas, measurement and data analysis * academic research and teaching on IPv6 and network engineering * UX/UI/Frontend web development and at least a couple of us are complaining that IPv6 takes too long to actually be used in production :) And I'm curious where the people who deal with IPv6 on a daily basis see deficits with the tools they have to use, because maybe we should center a project around that? Best regards, Moritz From samer.lahoud at usj.edu.lb Sun Oct 29 14:27:12 2017 From: samer.lahoud at usj.edu.lb (Samer Lahoud) Date: Sun, 29 Oct 2017 13:27:12 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Projet proposal: Rapidly deploying an IPv6 testing platform for education Message-ID: Dear all, I would like to propose a project that consists of rapidly deploying an IPv6 testing platform that can be used in student labs (or also in professional training). The description below is a first draft, I will be glad to receive any comments and modifications if you feel interested in the project outcome. ==== In a typical student lab, we would like to analyse the transition from IPv4 to IPv6, the coexistence of the two versions, and also the interaction with different applications. Let us take for example an IPv4/IPv6 dual stack HTTP server, a dual stack DNS server, an IPv4 only HTTP server, and an IPv6 only HTTP server. Playing with such servers will enable students to understand different challenges related to the transition from IPv4 to IPv6. For instance, when I type www.example.com in my browser, what will be the formulated DNS queries? When my PC receives two DNS replies, what HTTP/TCP connection will it try first? etc. My proposed idea is to use Mininet to automatically deploy the IPv4 and/or IPv6 servers (Mininet http://mininet.org creates a realistic virtual network, running real kernel, switch and application code, on a single machine). Then, this (virtual) server platform can be bridged with any hardware platform (for example student PCs, quagga routers, etc.) to obtain a full Lab workbench. Some additional outcomes of the proposed project can consist of writing a basic lab (with questions and answers) to promote the platform, and also exploring some SDN functionalities enabled by the use of Mininet. ==== If my proposed project is not retained, I will be glad to join efforts in designing an automatic tool that computes the AS-path inflation between IPv4 and IPv6 paths in the current DFZ routing table or maybe computing for each country the percentage of IPv6 AS-paths originating and terminating in the country but crossing ASes from other countries. Best regards, Samer Lahoud. ---- Samer Lahoud Professeur associ? Universit? Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth ESIB - Laboratoire CIMTI Tel: (+961) 1 421 339 From BECHA at ripe.net Mon Oct 30 12:41:37 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2017 12:41:37 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Projet proposal: Rapidly deploying an IPv6 testing platform for education In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <61e900c7-7f2b-4b61-0547-4cbda52135b8@ripe.net> Hi Samer, all, On 29/10/2017 14:27, Samer Lahoud wrote: > Dear all, > > I would like to propose a project that consists of rapidly deploying an IPv6 testing platform that can be used in student labs (or also in professional training). I added it to the Pad: https://pad.riseup.net/p/ripe_ncc-ipv6-hackathon Just so that we have most of the current project proposals in one place; the discussion on the list is, of course, welcome. Let this be an encouragement to the rest of you to: - read the current projects proposed - add your name to the one you like to take part in (you CAN CHANGE YOUR MIND later on!) - or: describe a different one ... Ciao, Vesna From BECHA at ripe.net Mon Oct 30 12:56:43 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2017 12:56:43 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Reminder: logistics: one week to go! In-Reply-To: References: <2d5f0baa-7b0e-f051-6d88-1cc7f26eae2d@ripe.net> Message-ID: HI everyone, let me remind you of the main logistics points for the upcoming hackathon: all listed, in more detail, here: https://pad.riseup.net/p/ripe_ncc-ipv6-hackathon 1) The venue is ITU: IT-Universitetet i K?benhavn Rued Langgaards Vej 7 2300 K?benhavn S https://www.itu.dk/om-itu/kontakt Room: DesignLab 2) Starting Time: 9:00 AM on Saturday 4th November 3) Food & drinks will be provided: Catering company throughout the day will provide: snacks/ tea & coffee / soft drinks / lunch (sandwiches) Special coffee: a fancy espresso/cappuccino making machine! Diner on Saturday: take-away/delivery pizza that we will order in. 4) Dinner on Sunday will be in the external venue: Hyggestund That's a beer place, with 4-course menu & beer tasting that matches; there will be soft-drinks available too. This is also a "closing party" of sorts, to say "thank you" for all your hard work during the weekend & to celebrate the results! 5) Un-official & traditional social event on Friday evening: visiting a local hackerspace Labitat: https://labitat.dk/wiki/RIPE_Atlas_IPv6_Hackathon: 6) You are also invited to the Danish IPv6 Day on Monday: https://www.ripe.net/participate/meetings/regional-meetings/ipv6-day-denmark 7) Where to place your code: GitHub collection of SW tools : https://github.com/RIPE-Atlas-Community/ripe-atlas-community-contrib/blob/master/README.md Looking forward to see you all soon! Any questions - please let me know! Vesna From christian.teuschel at ripe.net Mon Oct 30 17:40:01 2017 From: christian.teuschel at ripe.net (Christian Teuschel) Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2017 17:40:01 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <1e66b077-88f5-4e88-edea-bfb7e7ee8db3@barfooze.de> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <1e66b077-88f5-4e88-edea-bfb7e7ee8db3@barfooze.de> Message-ID: Apologies for my late introduction but academic obligations kept me busy. Having said that a few days ago I finished my MBA in Big Data and Business Analytics at the Amsterdam Business School. My thesis - and that is the more important part - dealt with "Identifying Drivers for IPv6 Deployment". Since the thesis is very fresh, I haven't had time to publish any results but if you are interested I'd love to extend the results with you! I'll provide you with more details in the next days and at the venue. In my professional life have been working at RIPE NCC's R&D department for the past 6 years. I run RIPEstat and contribute to RIPE Atlas. And last but not least, I'm looking forward to get to know you and work with you! All the best, Christian On 27/10/2017 04:05, Moritz Wilhelmy wrote: > Hello everybody. > > I've been interested in IPv6 adaption ever since I got into self-hosting > and I've always been trying to have all my services available on a > dual-stack setup. I worked as a sysadmin for a university chair and > later a web company, but neither of them allowed me to roll out IPv6. As > such, it has bothered me that IPv6 adoption rate remains rather low > considering how long it has been around for. > > Over the years, I've contributed to some open source operating systems > (various Linux distros, FreeBSD and NetBSD) and a couple of IRC related > projects, among other things. I know Python, Perl 5, sed/awk/grep/sh and > C and I'm interested in writing system-level code, network services and > web-backend code (I can't do frontend, sorry) that interfaces with > system level code (I could imagine a web interface for dhcpd6 or > something like that, although I'm not quite sure for which use case). I > think I'd prefer to stay in userspace for this hackathon, but if someone > comes up with an idea for a small kernel module I'm willing to try to > help with that too (I have no experience with network drivers on any OS > but I'm interested) and I can also help with one of the visualization > projects. I think I'm better at helping out than coming up with a good > idea by myself so instead I'll look at the projects that people come up > with and just try to contribute to one of those. > > This is my first time attending any RIPE NCC event and hackathon and I'm > already looking forward to it. > > I'm ente on IRC (and other places too). > > I'm glad I got this over with. > > See you there! > > Moritz > > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > From cristian at trueneutral.eu Mon Oct 30 20:28:08 2017 From: cristian at trueneutral.eu (Cristian Sirbu) Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2017 19:28:08 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Projet proposal: Rapidly deploying an IPv6 testing platform for education In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Samer, all, I love the teaching angle of this project and it's quite similar to an idea I came up with for a previous hack. This got me thinking that maybe we can create some modules that would be used by both at the hackathon. The idea I'm talking about is called Pocket Internet ( https://github.com/inognet/pocketinternet) and what it aims to do is bring up an infinitely scalable topology that interconnects small pods (ISPs) into an organically grown network (the Internet). Each pod design would be based on a blueprint inspired from real life SPs and be as lightweight as possible while still allowing for enough policy/complexity to be built in. The goal of it is to provide labs for teaching BGP and Automation tools, but it could also be a test-bed for new BGP features or anycast type applications. I didn't propose this idea for this hackathon because I thought it was more focused on BGP and routing (both v4 and v6 of course) than on IPv6 itself, but your project description actually opened my eyes: the Internet is not only about routing, at a minimum the pocket would need some clients + DNS and Web servers (e.g. simple websites with CDN content)! And being able to also simulate some delay/loss in transit would be great for showcasing what happens in browsers with dual-stack connectivity for example. My initial experiments have been with Docker containers running BIRD and a predefined layout... you mentioned Mininet and it may be just the thing for interconnecting them and simulating traffic conditions (or perhaps https://github.com/thombashi/tcconfig). After a bit of searching it seems there's a fork called https://containernet.github.io/ that allows Docker containers to run inside mininet, which would be an interesting way to deploy various services in addition to routing: DNS, WWW. The project would need some way to visualize the topology as it grows/shrinks - one of the ideas was that by using templated pods you could scale it to any number of participants (students or trainees) or complexity in a dynamic way as long as you had the resources to run additional containers (or money in the case of IaaS :) ). I'll stop here for now, would love to hear everyone's thoughts + is it interesting, what could we achieve in the two days of frantic coding we have ahead of us etc. ? Cheers, Cristian On Sun, Oct 29, 2017 at 1:27 PM, Samer Lahoud wrote: > Dear all, > > I would like to propose a project that consists of rapidly deploying an > IPv6 testing platform that can be used in student labs (or also in > professional training). > > The description below is a first draft, I will be glad to receive any > comments and modifications if you feel interested in the project outcome. > > ==== > In a typical student lab, we would like to analyse the transition from > IPv4 to IPv6, the coexistence of the two versions, and also the interaction > with different applications. Let us take for example an IPv4/IPv6 dual > stack HTTP server, a dual stack DNS server, an IPv4 only HTTP server, and > an IPv6 only HTTP server. Playing with such servers will enable students to > understand different challenges related to the transition from IPv4 to > IPv6. For instance, when I type www.example.com in my browser, what will > be the formulated DNS queries? When my PC receives two DNS replies, what > HTTP/TCP connection will it try first? etc. > > My proposed idea is to use Mininet to automatically deploy the IPv4 and/or > IPv6 servers (Mininet http://mininet.org creates a realistic virtual > network, running real kernel, switch and application code, on a single > machine). Then, this (virtual) server platform can be bridged with any > hardware platform (for example student PCs, quagga routers, etc.) to obtain > a full Lab workbench. > > Some additional outcomes of the proposed project can consist of writing a > basic lab (with questions and answers) to promote the platform, and also > exploring some SDN functionalities enabled by the use of Mininet. > ==== > > If my proposed project is not retained, I will be glad to join efforts in > designing an automatic tool that computes the AS-path inflation between > IPv4 and IPv6 paths in the current DFZ routing table or maybe computing for > each country the percentage of IPv6 AS-paths originating and terminating in > the country but crossing ASes from other countries. > > Best regards, > Samer Lahoud. > ---- > Samer Lahoud > Professeur associ? > Universit? Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth > ESIB - Laboratoire CIMTI > Tel: (+961) 1 421 339 > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > -- Cristian Sirbu www.trueneutral.eu twitter.com/cmsirbu PGP 2C94 0C28 08F2 378F 45C7 4E11 8AFA 4E29 710D 0D66 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hakkrist at gmail.com Tue Oct 31 07:20:15 2017 From: hakkrist at gmail.com (Kristina Hakobyan) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 10:20:15 +0400 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions Message-ID: Hello everybody, As I see I am the last one who is going to introduce herself.) I am totally new in this kind of events, the previous one was ENOG14 in Minsk, Belarus (9-10 oct 2017) organized by RIPE NCC (I was participating as a Fellowship). I am not a developer, nor a designer and even my technical skills are at the basic stage, but my 8-year practice in domain registrations is too close to the subject of the hackathon, so I really hope to get a lot of new information from all of you, especially from trainers. From my side, I will try to do my best to be involved in the process. And of course a networking! New people, new experience, new knowledge etc. See you in Copenhagen) -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From BECHA at ripe.net Tue Oct 31 10:53:25 2017 From: BECHA at ripe.net (Vesna Manojlovic) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 10:53:25 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] an IPv6 testing platform for education / "Internet in a Bottle" / Internet illustrator / Pocket Internet In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <9b359834-c34d-de04-d91b-12b5f665663d@ripe.net> Hi all, (hackathon participants - I am adding 4 more people to this topic) Niels, Shane, Arnd & Sebastian have ween talking about a similar project == I have included the last stage of their discussion here == so maybe you can use some of their ideas. And so that you know that there is even more need for this project to succeed! Guys, scroll down a lot to see what Samer & Cristian have suggested -- or check here the list archives; and give your feedback /requirements... https://www.ripe.net/ripe/mail/archives/ipv6-hackathon/2017-October/000041.html https://www.ripe.net/ripe/mail/archives/ipv6-hackathon/2017-October/000045.html I hope that there will be more useful results to share after the hackathon... Here is also some mesh-networking SW that might help: https://wiki.techinc.nl/index.php/MeshNet#Software Vesna > Hi all, > > This sounds really good! Maybe it would be good to map the > different use cases we want to show, which would help us to > understand what technical approach (as suggested by Arnd) would be > most effective. > > Different concepts / issues I wanted to bring about is: > > 0. Concept of Packet Switching > 1. TCP IP > 2. DNS > 3. IPv4 > 4. IPv6 > 5. BGP > 6. BGP hijacking (adverserial route announcement) > 7. DNS > 8. DNSSEC > 9. DANE > 10 Censorship > 11. TLS/SSL > 12. Peering > 13. DDoS > 14. Censorship > Application Layer > - HTTP Request Header Identification > - Server > Transport Layer > - TCP/IP Header Identification > - Protocol Identification > Dechnical Interferece > - Packet dropping > - Performance degradation > > The question after this would be: > > What hosts would be represented? > > I had in my mind three different autonomous systems on a board, > linked through BGP, and an IXP, where two AS's have peering > agreements and with one AS we can show the role of the IXP in > peering. > > I am also cc-ing Shane, who might also be interested in this nice > little project (and with whom I worked on refugeehotspot.net). > > Looking forward to discuss! > > Best, > > Niels > > PS Sorry for the short mail, am doing ICANN + IETF these weeks, so > everything a bit rushed (but very enthusiastic!) > > > On Fri, Nov 04, 2016 at 03:29:48PM +0100, A.P. Marijnissen wrote: >> Hello >> >> >> >>>> >>>> Whether we do this in software (virtualization) or in hardware format, I >>>> think it would be hugely beneficial to be able to simulate the Internet >>>> for policy people and (relative) technical newbies. The idea is to have >>>> a board on which hosts, routers, ASs, BGP, and potential other devices >>>> are reflected and people are able to implement different policies and >>>> see how this impact the (LED colored) packet flow. >>>> >> >> >> >> This is the part Vesna and me have been talking about . >> >> Our premise when discussing this was to have a hardware version that >> consists of a board/sheet/panel with actual physical >> objects/machines/raspberry-pi's on it that'd allow you to set up >> internet-infrastructure and have it be a way to 'show what happens', >> preferably with visualization of packet-flow. >> >> >> >> One of the things that'd really be *good* visualization, after all, is >> to indicate a packet being SENT from one side; but also then the OTHER >> side showing that it RECEIVED something. That kind of thing requires >> direction; either static (an arrow) or motion (a procession of leds >> lighting up in direction of traffic-flow). To be able to do that, you >> need to give the observer the opportunity to understand what he/she is >> seeing, and what it means, before having the next event happen. I think >> that's the main challenge in this project. >> >> >> The visualization of packet-flow/direction is the hard part there. Some >> thoughts on 'Doing This Right' below (my favorite is Attempt 4 a,b or c, >> below) >> >> Attempt one: Simple! >> >> The obvious engineering approach is to simply hook up led-strings to the >> RX/TX leds of the interface in question and light up a string of LEDS >> that lead from one node's interface to another node's interface. >> >> That'd work fine; of course.. and is a super-simple hack to 'make things >> blink'; but that's about all it'll do. Remember that interfaces are >> 100mBit nowadays; so a full BGP-conversation will last less than a >> couple of miliseconds or so. >> >> Attempt two: wait.. what if.. >> >> So, let's imagine we 'slow things down' a bit by simply having the RX/TX >> blinks be trigger-events for turning the led-string on for a longer >> period; let's say anything up to 2 seconds or so. >> >> What'd be the result ? Well; if a route propagation floods through the >> network; the whole board'd light up for a moment or two and that'd show >> exactly the right kinda thing. But a next update of any protocol coming >> within that time-frame would keep the board lighted up; resulting in it >> being just 'on all the time'... hmmm >> >> >> But... wait it's worse: are those the only kinds of packets going over >> an ethernet-network ? >> No, we'll have ARP and stuff like that ..They'd have the board flash >> right up on regular intervals right through trying to display the actual >> conversation of stuff we're interested in showing... That's going to get >> in the way. >> >> Attempt three: We'll fix it in software! >> >> Okay.. so, simply pinning a bit of hardware onto things isnt optimal. So >> what if: >> 1: Take internet software (bgp, ospf, whatever) >> 2: patch it to run slower >> 3: patch it to control leds do 'smoke and mirror' flashing in a pattern >> we want to have people see >> 4:... >> 5:.profit ? >> >> >> This approach'd basically involve taking all the tools you'd ever want >> to show off and patch 'm in a way that they contain delays and slowdowns >> so that people can 'see what's going on' and then add some way of >> controlling LED-strings to show off the right kind of pattern for what's >> going on. >> >> Do-able; but the approach is burdened by having to know which things >> you'll ever want to show off and to be able to actually patch these >> things to include the required changes.. Not-so-great. Next to >> hardware-work, you add a lot of software-work to the project. >> Ontop of this, if anyone asks 'Oh, but.. what'd it look like if we ran >> X/Y/Z on this.. Or have you tried doing it with Q..' , you have no way >> of satisfying the audience (and your own) curiosity. >> >> >> Attempt four: There is no spoon...back to 1980 speeds! >> >> Here's my favorite approach, so far. >> What if we found a way to provide *unpatched, normal internet tools* >> access to a network-device that we could control the operational >> parameters of in such a way that we can: >> >> - Slow them down to speeds less than tens-of-bytes/s >> - Simulate connection-failures >> - Simulate packet-loss and packet-mangling (crc-errors) >> >> >> That'd solve the problem of things happening faster than you can follow >> with the human eye. It'd provide ways of adding buttons/knobs/whatever >> to simulate flapping connections and all kinds of other cool things. >> >> Then, let's see; what if we: >> a) Use ethernet connections and use a tcpdump and have it trigger a LED >> for incoming packets of the right type; indicating incoming traffic. >> >> OR >> >> b) Use ethernet connections and simply use the RX-leds of either side >> (this'll also show ARP traffic; but perhaps that's a good tradeoff vs. >> the much simpler engineering required) >> >> c) use not Ethernet but Serial Line connections between the devices. >> This has a couple of other advantages: most small computer-boards dont >> have many Ethernet ports available. For routers, it's kinda useful to >> have at LEAST two on each board; after all. Serial-lines, however, are >> easily added via USB or even just 'broken out' from some onboard >> pinheader. You can then also stick extra hooks into the serial-line >> handler or PPP or whatever, to handle control of the LEDS. >> >> >> >> I think that Attempt Four, either B or C really hits the most nails in >> the most flexible and interesting ways possible. >> >> As for 'running it all in VM's.... well.. 'If it aint hardware, it aint >> much.' is all i'll reply to that. Yes, you can make an overview of >> virtual network-streams and make 'm blink the proper lines/etc on a >> display, projected onto a wall. The issue there is with having people >> really 'feel that it's real'; which is kinda the thing this was/is >> supposed to achieve. >> >> That, and I'm better with a soldering-iron than with an IDE >> -- >> Arnd > > -- > > Niels ten Oever > Head of Digital > > Article 19 > www.article19.org > > PGP fingerprint 8D9F C567 BEE4 A431 56C4 > 678B 08B5 A0F2 636D 68E9 > On 30/10/2017 20:28, Cristian Sirbu wrote: > Hi Samer, all, > > I love the teaching angle of this project and it's quite similar to an > idea I came up with for a previous hack. This got me thinking that maybe > we can create some modules that would be used by both at the hackathon. > > The idea I'm talking about is called Pocket Internet > (https://github.com/inognet/pocketinternet) and what it aims to do is > bring up an infinitely scalable topology that interconnects small pods > (ISPs) into an organically grown network (the Internet). Each pod design > would be based on a blueprint inspired from real life SPs and be as > lightweight as possible while still allowing for enough > policy/complexity to be built in. The goal of it is to provide labs for > teaching BGP and Automation tools, but it could also be a test-bed for > new BGP features or anycast type applications. > > I didn't propose this idea for this hackathon because I thought it was > more focused on BGP and routing (both v4 and v6 of course) than on IPv6 > itself, but your project description actually opened my eyes: the > Internet is not only about routing, at a minimum the pocket would need > some clients + DNS and Web servers (e.g. simple websites with CDN > content)! And being able to also simulate some delay/loss in transit > would be great for showcasing what happens in browsers with dual-stack > connectivity for example. > > My initial experiments have been with Docker containers running BIRD and > a predefined layout... you mentioned Mininet and it may be just the > thing for interconnecting them and simulating traffic conditions (or > perhaps?https://github.com/thombashi/tcconfig). After a bit of searching > it seems there's a fork called?https://containernet.github.io/ that > allows Docker containers to run inside mininet, which would be an > interesting way to deploy various services in addition to routing: DNS, WWW. > > The project would need some way to visualize the topology as it > grows/shrinks - one of the ideas was that by using templated pods you > could scale it to any number of participants (students or trainees) or > complexity in a dynamic way as long as you had the resources to run > additional containers (or money in the case of IaaS :) ). > > I'll stop here for now, would love to hear everyone's thoughts + is it > interesting, what could we achieve in the two days of frantic coding we > have ahead of us etc. ? > > Cheers, > Cristian > > > On Sun, Oct 29, 2017 at 1:27 PM, Samer Lahoud > wrote: > > Dear all, > > I would like to propose a project that consists of rapidly deploying > an IPv6 testing platform that can be used in student labs (or also > in professional training). > > The description below is a first draft, I will be glad to receive > any comments and modifications if you feel interested in the project > outcome. > > ==== > In a typical student lab, we would like to analyse the transition > from IPv4 to IPv6, the coexistence of the two versions, and also the > interaction with different applications. Let us take for example an > IPv4/IPv6 dual stack HTTP server, a dual stack DNS server, an IPv4 > only HTTP server, and an IPv6 only HTTP server. Playing with such > servers will enable students to understand different challenges > related to the transition from IPv4 to IPv6. For instance, when I > type www.example.com in my browser, what > will be the formulated DNS queries? When my PC receives two DNS > replies, what HTTP/TCP connection will it try first? etc. > > My proposed idea is to use Mininet to automatically deploy the IPv4 > and/or IPv6 servers (Mininet http://mininet.org creates a realistic > virtual network, running real kernel, switch and application code, > on a single machine). Then, this (virtual) server platform can be > bridged with any hardware platform (for example student PCs, quagga > routers, etc.) to obtain a full Lab workbench. > > Some additional outcomes of the proposed project can consist of > writing a basic lab (with questions and answers) to promote the > platform, and also exploring some SDN functionalities enabled by the > use of Mininet. > ==== > > If my proposed project is not retained, I will be glad to join > efforts in designing an automatic tool that computes the AS-path > inflation between IPv4 and IPv6 paths in the current DFZ routing > table or maybe computing for each country the percentage of IPv6 > AS-paths originating and terminating in the country but crossing > ASes from other countries. > > Best regards, > Samer Lahoud. > ---- > Samer Lahoud > Professeur associ? > Universit? Saint-Joseph de Beyrouth > ESIB - Laboratoire CIMTI > Tel: (+961) 1 421 339 > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > > > > > > -- > Cristian Sirbu > www.trueneutral.eu > twitter.com/cmsirbu > > PGP 2C94 0C28 08F2 378F 45C7 ?4E11 8AFA 4E29 710D 0D66 > > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > From sbut at itu.dk Tue Oct 31 13:15:22 2017 From: sbut at itu.dk (=?UTF-8?Q?sebastian_b=c3=bcttrich_/_ITU?=) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 13:15:22 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Service Announcement: Winter Swimming :) Message-ID: Dear all, looking forward to welcoming you to Copenhagen, and - while i dont know whether our hackathon will allow for a short after-lunch break - i would just like to bring to your attention the Open Day at the local Winter Swimming Pool, about 5 bicycle minutes from here - Sunday 13 - 16 h so, if any of you feel like taking a short dip to cool down their IPv6-heated brains and be all the more performant after, bring your swimming trunks and a towel :) It s still a bit too warm (air: 8 / water: 10 celsius), but good enough to be refreshing :) best, sebastian -- ========================================================== Sebastian B?ttrich, PhD Research Lab Manager IT University of Copenhagen - http://www.itu.dk pITLab - http://pitlab.itu.dk VAT : DK 29 05 77 53 address: Rued Langgaards Vej 7, 2300 K?benhavn S, Denmark office : 2C12 lab : 5C56 phone : +45 7218 5126 skype : sebastian_buettrich mail : sebastian at itu.dk www : http://itu.dk/people/sbut/ ========================================================== From sbut at itu.dk Tue Oct 31 13:21:48 2017 From: sbut at itu.dk (=?UTF-8?Q?sebastian_b=c3=bcttrich_/_ITU?=) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 13:21:48 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <1e66b077-88f5-4e88-edea-bfb7e7ee8db3@barfooze.de> Message-ID: <37bfb3a5-b838-b2db-0fd4-b2361268082e@itu.dk> Hello all, apologies also from me for my late answer- i m sebastian - one of your hosts here, and trying to make you feel as welcome as possible and let you have a great hackathon! Else i am Research Lab Manager at the IT University of Copenhagen, works with embedded/pervasive systems, wireless technology, open source / free software and solar energy to build networks, systems, skills and capacity - as a manager, developer, architect, consultant and teacher. This work is part based at the IT University of Copenhagen, part focused on developing countries and communities, especially in Asia and Africa. One current focus in his work for the NSRC is to help develop campus networks for research and education, with emphasis on global integration and sustainability. Looking forward to meeting you all, best sebastian On 10/30/2017 05:40 PM, Christian Teuschel wrote: > Apologies for my late introduction but academic obligations kept me > busy. Having said that a few days ago I finished my MBA in Big Data and > Business Analytics at the Amsterdam Business School. My thesis - and > that is the more important part - dealt with "Identifying Drivers for > IPv6 Deployment". Since the thesis is very fresh, I haven't had time to > publish any results but if you are interested I'd love to extend the > results with you! I'll provide you with more details in the next days > and at the venue. > > In my professional life have been working at RIPE NCC's R&D department > for the past 6 years. I run RIPEstat and contribute to RIPE Atlas. > And last but not least, I'm looking forward to get to know you and work > with you! > > All the best, > Christian > > > > On 27/10/2017 04:05, Moritz Wilhelmy wrote: >> Hello everybody. >> >> I've been interested in IPv6 adaption ever since I got into self-hosting >> and I've always been trying to have all my services available on a >> dual-stack setup. I worked as a sysadmin for a university chair and >> later a web company, but neither of them allowed me to roll out IPv6. As >> such, it has bothered me that IPv6 adoption rate remains rather low >> considering how long it has been around for. >> >> Over the years, I've contributed to some open source operating systems >> (various Linux distros, FreeBSD and NetBSD) and a couple of IRC related >> projects, among other things. I know Python, Perl 5, sed/awk/grep/sh and >> C and I'm interested in writing system-level code, network services and >> web-backend code (I can't do frontend, sorry) that interfaces with >> system level code (I could imagine a web interface for dhcpd6 or >> something like that, although I'm not quite sure for which use case). I >> think I'd prefer to stay in userspace for this hackathon, but if someone >> comes up with an idea for a small kernel module I'm willing to try to >> help with that too (I have no experience with network drivers on any OS >> but I'm interested) and I can also help with one of the visualization >> projects. I think I'm better at helping out than coming up with a good >> idea by myself so instead I'll look at the projects that people come up >> with and just try to contribute to one of those. >> >> This is my first time attending any RIPE NCC event and hackathon and I'm >> already looking forward to it. >> >> I'm ente on IRC (and other places too). >> >> I'm glad I got this over with. >> >> See you there! >> >> Moritz >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> ipv6-hackathon mailing list >> ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net >> https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon >> > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > From baptiste at bitsofnetworks.org Tue Oct 31 13:59:36 2017 From: baptiste at bitsofnetworks.org (Baptiste Jonglez) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 13:59:36 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Round of introductions In-Reply-To: <37bfb3a5-b838-b2db-0fd4-b2361268082e@itu.dk> References: <5dd12382-d855-7738-0a58-2d27fc8cd92c@ripe.net> <1e66b077-88f5-4e88-edea-bfb7e7ee8db3@barfooze.de> <37bfb3a5-b838-b2db-0fd4-b2361268082e@itu.dk> Message-ID: <20171031125935.GB12255@lud.lan> Hi everybody, Better late than never: I am a PhD student in France, working on improving transport protocols on the Internet (improve overall latency, exploit multipath, etc). I like to tinker with both hardware and software, and I am starting to have a good experience with testbeds (both building them and using them for experiments). Besides my work, I have been a free software and IPv6 enthusiast for a number of years. I am volunteering for a non-profit network operator (AS 51083) that has been active since 2010, and we deployed IPv6 in 2013/2014 thanks to Bird. See you there, Baptiste On 31-10-17, sebastian b?ttrich / ITU wrote: > Hello all, > > apologies also from me for my late answer- > > i m sebastian - > > one of your hosts here, and trying to make you feel as welcome as > possible and let you have a great hackathon! > > Else i am > > > Research Lab Manager at the IT University of Copenhagen, works with > embedded/pervasive systems, wireless technology, open source / free > software and solar energy to build networks, systems, skills and > capacity - as a manager, developer, architect, consultant and teacher. > > This work is part based at the IT University of Copenhagen, part focused > on developing countries and communities, especially in Asia and Africa. > One current focus in his work for the NSRC is to help develop campus > networks for research and education, with emphasis on global integration > and sustainability. > > > Looking forward to meeting you all, > > best > > sebastian > > > On 10/30/2017 05:40 PM, Christian Teuschel wrote: > > Apologies for my late introduction but academic obligations kept me > > busy. Having said that a few days ago I finished my MBA in Big Data and > > Business Analytics at the Amsterdam Business School. My thesis - and > > that is the more important part - dealt with "Identifying Drivers for > > IPv6 Deployment". Since the thesis is very fresh, I haven't had time to > > publish any results but if you are interested I'd love to extend the > > results with you! I'll provide you with more details in the next days > > and at the venue. > > > > In my professional life have been working at RIPE NCC's R&D department > > for the past 6 years. I run RIPEstat and contribute to RIPE Atlas. > > And last but not least, I'm looking forward to get to know you and work > > with you! > > > > All the best, > > Christian > > > > > > > > On 27/10/2017 04:05, Moritz Wilhelmy wrote: > >> Hello everybody. > >> > >> I've been interested in IPv6 adaption ever since I got into self-hosting > >> and I've always been trying to have all my services available on a > >> dual-stack setup. I worked as a sysadmin for a university chair and > >> later a web company, but neither of them allowed me to roll out IPv6. As > >> such, it has bothered me that IPv6 adoption rate remains rather low > >> considering how long it has been around for. > >> > >> Over the years, I've contributed to some open source operating systems > >> (various Linux distros, FreeBSD and NetBSD) and a couple of IRC related > >> projects, among other things. I know Python, Perl 5, sed/awk/grep/sh and > >> C and I'm interested in writing system-level code, network services and > >> web-backend code (I can't do frontend, sorry) that interfaces with > >> system level code (I could imagine a web interface for dhcpd6 or > >> something like that, although I'm not quite sure for which use case). I > >> think I'd prefer to stay in userspace for this hackathon, but if someone > >> comes up with an idea for a small kernel module I'm willing to try to > >> help with that too (I have no experience with network drivers on any OS > >> but I'm interested) and I can also help with one of the visualization > >> projects. I think I'm better at helping out than coming up with a good > >> idea by myself so instead I'll look at the projects that people come up > >> with and just try to contribute to one of those. > >> > >> This is my first time attending any RIPE NCC event and hackathon and I'm > >> already looking forward to it. > >> > >> I'm ente on IRC (and other places too). > >> > >> I'm glad I got this over with. > >> > >> See you there! > >> > >> Moritz > >> > >> > >> _______________________________________________ > >> ipv6-hackathon mailing list > >> ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > >> https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > >> > > > > _______________________________________________ > > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > > > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 833 bytes Desc: not available URL: From shahin at gharghi.ir Tue Oct 31 17:17:00 2017 From: shahin at gharghi.ir (Shahin Gharghi) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 19:47:00 +0330 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Projects & teams! In-Reply-To: <74adc674-23db-7df0-3b46-e342e97f76d5@ripe.net> References: <74adc674-23db-7df0-3b46-e342e97f76d5@ripe.net> Message-ID: Hi There are some good ideas and I'd love to work on them. By the way these are some bubbles on my mind: -Comparing more-specific routes announced by IPv4 and IPv6 One of our problems in BGP, is huge number of more-specific routes. This number should be less because of gigantic size of IPv6 prefixes. I think it is good to have a measurement tool that compares number of IPv6 and IPv4 routes per total allocated routes -Guess percentage of IPv6 traffic by looking at public DNS servers Mostly people use public DNS revolvers like google and openDNS. We can check their databases and guess the percentage of IPv6 users and traffic by total queries -Make a tool to suggest potential neighbors around you for peering This tool works for both IPv4 and IPv6. We can ask for an AS number and check all of right neighbors of it's left peers and suggest them to client for peering See you in Copenhagen. On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 2:14 PM, Vesna Manojlovic wrote: > Hi all, > > it is useful to present a project that you would like to suggest for the > IPv6 hackathon, so that other people can join your team. > > There are some listed on the Etherpad already, mostly by Dave -- who can > not even make it to the event itself! Thanks, Dave! > > https://pad.riseup.net/p/ripe_ncc-ipv6-hackathon > > > Other ideas were floated in your introductions; and maybe on the IRC.. > > Let's try to narrow down the proposals to 5-7 projects, so that we can > save time on Saturday morning (Day 1)... by making very short > intro-talks, because people already got to know each other over email ;-) > > So: either start a new thread with your project name; > or reply to this email & add some details.. > or write on EtherPad about your project.. ask people to add names.. > or.. get creative in some other way :) > > > Thanks, > Vesna > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > -- Shahin Gharghi -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sds at ripe.net Tue Oct 31 17:52:44 2017 From: sds at ripe.net (Stephen D. Strowes) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 16:52:44 +0000 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Projects & teams! In-Reply-To: References: <74adc674-23db-7df0-3b46-e342e97f76d5@ripe.net> Message-ID: On 31/10/2017 16:17, Shahin Gharghi wrote: > There are some good ideas and I'd love to work on them. By the way > these are some bubbles on my mind: > > -Comparing more-specific routes announced by IPv4 and IPv6 > One of our problems in BGP, is huge number of more-specific routes. > This number should be less because of gigantic > size of IPv6 prefixes. I think it is good to have a measurement?tool > that compares number of IPv6 and IPv4 routes per > total allocated routes It's difficult to compare apples to oranges, but yes, tools to compare and summarise the v4 world to the v6 world as observed in BGP data would be interesting. (We've considered time-based comparisons in the past, but now I think about it, a v4/v6 comparison would be good too.) Maybe such tools exist already, but I often wind up doing things by hand. > -Guess percentage of IPv6 traffic by looking at public DNS servers > Mostly people use public DNS revolvers?like google and openDNS. We can > check their databases and guess the percentage?of IPv6 users and > traffic by total queries Although definitely not the same thing as what you suggest, a DNS-related measure is the query volume sent/rcvd over udp/tcp over ipv4/ipv6. Each of the root server operators publishes this; for example: http://a.root-servers.org/rssac-metrics/raw/2017/10/traffic-volume/a-root-20171029-traffic-volume.yaml I've played with this data in the past. The YAML output isn't always exactly the same, but they're pretty close. Data starts to look something like this: https://sdstrowes.co.uk/misc/v6dash/dns-v6-stats/udp.png > > -Make a tool to suggest potential neighbors around you for peering > This tool works for both IPv4 and IPv6. We can ask for an AS number > and check all of right neighbors of it's left peers and suggest them > to client for peering > > See you in Copenhagen. > > On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 2:14 PM, Vesna Manojlovic > wrote: > > Hi all, > > it is useful to present a project that you would like to suggest > for the > IPv6 hackathon, so that other people can join your team. > > There are some listed on the Etherpad already, mostly by Dave -- > who can > not even make it to the event itself! Thanks, Dave! > > https://pad.riseup.net/p/ripe_ncc-ipv6-hackathon > > > > Other ideas were floated in your introductions; and maybe on the IRC.. > > Let's try to narrow down the proposals to 5-7 projects, so that we can > save time on Saturday morning (Day 1)... by making very short > intro-talks, because people already got to know each other over > email ;-) > > So: either start a new thread with your project name; > or reply to this email & add some details.. > or write on EtherPad about your project.. ask people to add names.. > or.. get creative in some other way :) > > > Thanks, > Vesna > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon > > > > > > -- > Shahin Gharghi > > > _______________________________________________ > ipv6-hackathon mailing list > ipv6-hackathon at ripe.net > https://lists.ripe.net/mailman/listinfo/ipv6-hackathon -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From christian.teuschel at ripe.net Tue Oct 31 18:23:21 2017 From: christian.teuschel at ripe.net (Christian Teuschel) Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2017 18:23:21 +0100 Subject: [ipv6-hackathon] Project Proposal Message-ID: <001692f7-1e63-cc8c-454e-0948d74bd3a5@ripe.net> Hello participants, As promised, where are details to the project proposal! (It's also on our etherpad, so you can read all projects nicely collected in one place: https://pad.riseup.net/p/ripe_ncc-ipv6-hackathon) Drivers for IPv6 Deployment >From organizations that successfully implemented IPv6 we know that IPv6 is technical feasible and practically nobody questions that IPv6 is going to be the future of the Internet. Yet, today's Internet is run on IPv4 and companies seem to be reluctant to do the transition. In this project I suggest to take a data-driven approach to identify the factors that encourage (respectively discourage) companies to use IPv6. Since we will have only a limited time to work on it, I'd like to bootstrap this project with the recent work I did on this topic. In a nutshell, I introduced a metric that measures the IPv6 readiness of a company based on routing (BGP) data. The data crunching has been carried out for all ~80,000 global ASNs for the past 10 years and is readily available for the team. The analysis was done on global, regional (RIR), national and industry level. The project offers multiple, interdisciplinary items to work on but the main ones are: a) Produce reports based on the data: Analyze and interpret global, regional and/or national developments. This involves finding correlations with corresponding events. No programming skills required. b) Improve the metric The current metric associates IPv4 addresses with /48 in IPv6. This is very simple and does not take the specific requirements of an organization into account. c) Improve and extend ASN/organization to industry mapping The analysis on an industry level required a data set that mapped an organization to an industry type, which was done through the parsing and analysis of 22,000 company webpages for the RIPE NCC region. The scraping of webpages as well as the parsing require improving as the current precision is roughly 30%. The outcome would not only be useful for this topic but publishing this data set would benefit a whole group of Internet researchers. (Your name will be of course published along with the data set :)! This item would benefit of a multidisciplinary team: analytical, natural language, web development and data mining skills. All the best, Christian