Technical lecture for network engineers - in German
- Date:
- 25. Februar 2013, 18 bis 20 Uhr
- Lieu:
Digicomp, Limmatstrasse 50, 8005 Zürich
- Event sponsor:
Digicomp. IPv6 Hands-on courses.
- Public cible:
- Security responsibles, network engineers, IT Professionals
We are pleased to invite you to the first event in 2013. This is also the first event of our new serie of technical-focused events which will be held at Digicomp in Zürich. They will take place the last Monday evening per month. Digicomp is sponsoring the venue and the apéro.
Gerd Pflüger, Cisco Consulting Engineer, opens the new event series with a very exciting lecture about LISP (Locator/ID Separation Protocol) and its use for IPv6 migration.
Agenda
17:30 - 18:00 | Pre-Lounge-Networking and welcoming |
18:00 - ca 18:40 | Presentation "Migration to IPv6 with LISP" by Gerd Pflüger - LISP - hos does it work? - LISP - Usecases - LISP - IPv6 migration details |
18.40 - ca 19:00 | Q&A and discussion |
followed by | Networking apero |
Location: Digicomp, Limmatstrasse 50, 8005 Zürich
Language: German
Registration: www.digicomp.ch/ipv6networking
Cost: CHF 20.- (collected at the evening)
Apero and snacks start around 7pm.
Content
Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP) is a new standard based routing architecture with new semantics for IP-adressing. With LISP you can connect IPv6 islands or IPv6 websites to IPv4 networks to facilitate and accelerate IPv6 migration.
This technical lecture explains the fundamentals of LISP. Gerd Pflüger depicts briefly the different use cases in order to present in detail the possibilities of LISP and IPv6 migration. Together we discuss the advantages and the different designs.
Speaker:
Gerd Pflüger, Cisco Consulting Engineer For many years I have asked myself what could eventually come after MPLS as a routing architecture. And actually, my expectation was that we will solve customer designs with MPLS forever. But now I know that we can do better: not label IP packets, but encapsulate them in IP. And LISP can do just that! LISP encapsulates in IP and offers similar services like MPLS, only that transport is much easier. Also the control-plane is much easier, going away from distribution of routing information per push to a request procedure with pull. Overall: a very important issue for all network designers!