IPv6 was introduced in 1994 and has been in development at the
IETF for over 10 years. It has now reached the deployment stage.
KAME, the de-facto open-source reference implementation of the IPv6
standards, played a significant role in the acceptance and the
adoption of the IPv6 technology. The adoption of KAME by key
companies in a wide spectrum of commercial products is a
testimonial to the success of the KAME project, which concluded not
long ago.
This book is the first and the only one of its kind, which
reveals all of the details of the KAME IPv6 protocol stack,
explaining exactly what every line of code does and why it was
designed that way. Through the dissection of both the code and its
design, the authors illustrate how IPv6 and its related protocols
have been interpreted and implemented from the specifications. This
reference will demystify those ambiguous areas in the standards,
which are open to interpretation and problematic in deployment, and
presents solutions offered by KAME in dealing with these
implementation challenges.
Covering a snapshot version of KAME dated April 2003 based on
FreeBSD 4.8Extensive line-by-line code listings with meticulous
explanation of their rationale and use for the KAME snapshot
implementation, which is generally applicable to most recent
versions of the KAME IPv6 stack including those in recent releases
of BSD variantsNumerous diagrams and illustrations help in
visualizing the implementation In-depth discussion of the standards
provides intrinsic understanding of the specifications
General
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