IPv6 Races Across The Atlantic

Nov. 10, 2003
The Internet is getting faster than ever. Scientists at the California Institute of Technology and the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) have set a new Internet2 land speed record using IPv6, the next-generation Internet protocol....

The Internet is getting faster than ever. Scientists at the California Institute of Technology and the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) have set a new Internet2 land speed record using IPv6, the next-generation Internet protocol. The team sustained a single-stream transmission control protocol (TCP) rate of 983 Mbits/s for more than an hour between CERN's facility in Geneva and Chicago, spanning more than 7000 km. That's the equivalent of transferring a full CD in 5.6 seconds.

This project overcame two significant hurdles. First, it achieved IPv6 forwarding at Gigabit-per-second speeds. Second, it established high-speed TCP performance across high-bandwidth/latency networks. Researchers at Caltech say that this development demonstrates how effectively IPv6 can be used and should encourage scientists and engineers in many fields to deploy the next-generation protocol.

"In the future, the use of IPv6 will allow us to avoid network address translations that tend to impede the use of video-advanced technologies for real-time collaboration," said Harvey Newman, Caltech professor of physics. "These developments also will empower the broader research community to use peer-to-peer and other advanced grid architectures in support of their computationally intensive scientific goals."

For more information, see www.caltech.edu or www.cern.ch.

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