Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack Sites

IPv6 is the most recent version of the Internet Protocol (IP), which can solve the problem of IPv4 address exhaustion and allow the growth of the Internet (particularly in the era of the Internet of Things). IPv6 networks have been deployed for more than a decade, and the deployment is still growing...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kwun-Hung Li, Kin-Yeung Wong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-06-01
Series:Information
Subjects:
IoT
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/12/6/246
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spelling doaj-3ed4304b34c649318e5cc13bbf2784c62021-07-01T00:07:47ZengMDPI AGInformation2078-24892021-06-011224624610.3390/info12060246Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack SitesKwun-Hung Li0Kin-Yeung Wong1School of Science and Technology, The Open University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, ChinaSchool of Science and Technology, The Open University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, ChinaIPv6 is the most recent version of the Internet Protocol (IP), which can solve the problem of IPv4 address exhaustion and allow the growth of the Internet (particularly in the era of the Internet of Things). IPv6 networks have been deployed for more than a decade, and the deployment is still growing every year. This empirical study was conducted from the perspective of end users to evaluate IPv6 and IPv4 performance by sending probing traffic to 1792 dual-stack sites around the world. Connectivity, packet loss, hop count, round-trip time (RTT), and throughput were used as performance metrics. The results show that, compared with IPv4, IPv6 has better connectivity, lower packet loss, and similar hop count. However, compared with IPv4, it has higher latency and lower throughput. We compared our results with previous studies conducted in 2004, 2007, and 2014 to investigate the improvement of IPv6 networks. The results of the past 16 years have shown that the connectivity of IPv6 has increased by 1–4%, and the IPv6 RTT (194.85 ms) has been greatly reduced, but it is still longer than IPv4 (163.72 ms). The throughput of IPv6 is still lower than that of IPv4.https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/12/6/246IPv6IPv4network performanceInternetIoT
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kwun-Hung Li
Kin-Yeung Wong
spellingShingle Kwun-Hung Li
Kin-Yeung Wong
Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack Sites
Information
IPv6
IPv4
network performance
Internet
IoT
author_facet Kwun-Hung Li
Kin-Yeung Wong
author_sort Kwun-Hung Li
title Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack Sites
title_short Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack Sites
title_full Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack Sites
title_fullStr Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack Sites
title_full_unstemmed Empirical Analysis of IPv4 and IPv6 Networks through Dual-Stack Sites
title_sort empirical analysis of ipv4 and ipv6 networks through dual-stack sites
publisher MDPI AG
series Information
issn 2078-2489
publishDate 2021-06-01
description IPv6 is the most recent version of the Internet Protocol (IP), which can solve the problem of IPv4 address exhaustion and allow the growth of the Internet (particularly in the era of the Internet of Things). IPv6 networks have been deployed for more than a decade, and the deployment is still growing every year. This empirical study was conducted from the perspective of end users to evaluate IPv6 and IPv4 performance by sending probing traffic to 1792 dual-stack sites around the world. Connectivity, packet loss, hop count, round-trip time (RTT), and throughput were used as performance metrics. The results show that, compared with IPv4, IPv6 has better connectivity, lower packet loss, and similar hop count. However, compared with IPv4, it has higher latency and lower throughput. We compared our results with previous studies conducted in 2004, 2007, and 2014 to investigate the improvement of IPv6 networks. The results of the past 16 years have shown that the connectivity of IPv6 has increased by 1–4%, and the IPv6 RTT (194.85 ms) has been greatly reduced, but it is still longer than IPv4 (163.72 ms). The throughput of IPv6 is still lower than that of IPv4.
topic IPv6
IPv4
network performance
Internet
IoT
url https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/12/6/246
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