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A History of the Internet Protocol IP

Latest reply: Nov 8, 2021 17:03:26 733 18 6 0 0

Hi Everyone,


Today, I will discuss about a brief history of the Internet Protocol IP today. So, before we go through the Internet Protocol, we must first comprehend the fundamentals of the protocol. When two or more devices want to communicate with each other on the same network, they need a unique ID. Internet Protocol (IP) addresses are the unique numbers assigned to every computer or device that is connected to the Internet As shown in the figure 1. There are multiple IP devices are connected with central router and the uplink of the router is further connected to the Internet. And each device has allocated a unique IP address.

IP

Figure 1. IP device allocated a unique IP address


Also to identify that every device connected to the Internet, whether it is a web server, mail server, DNS, PDAs, IP Phones, household appliances, Health care, monitoring traffic management system and many more needs IP addresses illustrated in figure 2.



IP address

Figure 2. Identify IP devices


IPv4, was globally deployed, and introduced by ARPANET in 1980 and standardized in mid-1981s. After several years of rapid expansion and exponential growth of the Internet, the available IPv4 addresses have been fully allocated to Internet Services Providers (ISPs) and users which is 32-bits long. That’s why we need IPv6, the next generation of the Internet Protocol that has a massively bigger address space than IPv4.



At the time of standardization of IPv4, the world population was around 4.41 billion in 1980.
The ratio of IPv4 address to the world population was 1:1. shown in figure 3.

standardization

Figure 3. comparison between IPv4 and World Population


IPv4-1981
4.29 billion addresses, about a 1:1 ratio with the world’s population. What was the Internet like in 1981?
No WWW, no mobile devices, and most people never heard of the Internet As the major devices were mostly mainframe and minicomputers.


The Internet Become Most Popular

1989s introduced the World Wide Web(WWW). Everyone was getting on the Internet.

Internet routing tables grew rapidly – 20,000 routes in 1994. Due to the rapid growth rate, Internet Engineering Task Force(IETF) realized that it would soon run out of IPv4 address space. As shown in figure 4.


Internet Become Most Popular

                                              Figure 4. Internet popular and Internet routing tables growth



IPv4: Running Out of IPv4 Addresses
In order to slow down the running out of IPv4 address space, Internet Engineering Task Force(IETF) introduced two solutions such as, short-term solutions as well as Long-term solution.

The short term solutions included.

Network Address Translation (NAT) & Port Address Translation (PAT)
Private address space
Classless Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR)


The long-term solution.

IPv6


References

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc791
https://blog.apnic.net/2020/01/14/bgp-in-2019-the-bgp-table/
https://www.iana.org/numbers
www.census.gov


The post is synchronized to: Community Blog

Hi, @sachandio !
Because this article is very qualitative and valuable, we've decided to feature it on our Blog Collection: https://forum.huawei.com/enterprise/en/forum.php?mod=collection&action=view&ctid=431&orderby=views&order=desc
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azkasaqib
azkasaqib Created Sep 24, 2021 17:00:42 (0) (0)
 
Thank you very much for this great post. I just have a simple question: why do they pass from IPv4 to IPv6 directly. Why not IPv5?
What do you think folks?
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Hi Majdi,
Thanks for valuable comments on my post, as the reason is that IPv5 doesn't exist. It never made it to become one of the IP protocols. ... To evade confusion, the next protocol was named IPv6. The big problem IPv5 had was that it used the same IPv4 addressing and had the same limited number of addresses.

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Thanks for sharing
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BAZ
MVE Author Created Sep 24, 2021 10:23:23

Posted by Majdi.Chebil at 2021-09-24 07:45 Thank you very much for this great post. I just have a simple question: why do they pass from IPv4 t ...
P version 5 was skipped in favor of IPv6

IPv5 never became an official protocol. It is known as IPv5 started out under a different name: Internet Stream Protocol, or simply ST.

The ST/IPv5 internet protocol was developed as a means of streaming video and voice data by Apple, NeXT, and Sun Microsystems, and it was experimental.



With the development of IPv6 and its promise of nearly unlimited IP addresses and a fresh start for the protocol, IPv5 itself was never transitioned to public use in large part because of its 32-bit limitations.

IPv5 used IPv4's 32-bit addressing, which eventually became a problem. The format of IPv4 addresses is the ###.###.###.### format, which is made up of four numerical octets (a unit of digital information in computing consisting of eight bits), with each set ranging from 0 to 255 and separated by periods. This format allowed for 4.3 billion internet addresses;


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sachandio
sachandio Created Sep 24, 2021 10:37:10 (1) (0)
Great explained, thanks for supporting  
zaheernew
zaheernew Created Sep 24, 2021 16:38:10 (0) (0)
 
BAZ
BAZ Reply zaheernew  Created Sep 24, 2021 20:25:04 (0) (0)
Welcome  
BAZ
BAZ Reply sachandio  Created Sep 25, 2021 21:03:28 (0) (0)
Welcome  
Thanks for sharing
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BAZ
MVE Author Created Sep 24, 2021 20:25:27

IP well covered. Thanks
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An interesting lesson certainly.
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Hi, very good information and thanks for sharing dear
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