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    Performance analysis of 4to6 and 6to4 transition mechanisms over point to point and IPSec VPN protocols

    Narayan, Shaneel; Ishrar, Salman; Kumar, Avinesh; Gupta, Ruchinav; Khan, Ziafil

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    PID4320611.pdf (1.113Mb)
    Date
    2016-07
    Citation:
    Narayan, S., Ishar, S., Kumar, A., Gupta, R., & Khan, Z. (2016, 6). Performance Analysis of 4to6 and 6to4 Transition Mechanisms over Point to Point and IPSec VPN Protocols. Paper presented at Thirteenth International Conference on Wireless and Optical Communications Networks WOCN2016, Hyderabad, India.
    Permanent link to Research Bank record:
    https://hdl.handle.net/10652/3528
    Abstract
    This paper provide an overview of behaviour of transition mechanisms, with and without VPN Protocols. Performance metrics related to networks have been gathered from test-bed implementations. The two transition mechanisms we will be evaluating are 4to6 and 6to4. Both of these mechanism have certain advantages and disadvantages. VPN protocols, PPTP and IPsec were configured on the transition mechanism and compared with selected networking metrics. The key networking metrics that were captured in this research were throughput, delay, jitter, DNS throughput,DNS delay, DNS jitter, for both TCP and UDP protocols. VoIP throughput was also measured and discussed. The testbed consisted of two (IPv4/IPv6) capable Cisco routers, and two machines which were running Windows 7 and Windows Server 2012.
    Keywords:
    transition mechanism, IPv4, IPv6, 4to6, 6to4, point-to-point tunneling protocol (PPTP), internet protocol security (IPsec), virtual private network (VPN), performance evaluation
    ANZSRC Field of Research:
    080503 Networking and Communications
    Rights:
    This digital work is protected by copyright. It may be consulted by you, provided you comply with the provisions of the Act and the following conditions of use: Any use you make of these documents or images must be for research or private study purposes only, and you may not make them available to any other person. You will recognise the author's and publishers rights and give due acknowledgement where appropriate.
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    • Computing Conference Papers [147]

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