New technologies like 5G and IoT place enormous demands on IP addresses. IPv6 has become the cornerstone of all connection. To embrace this new trend, CLOUD Service Providers offer IPv6 solutions for many industries such as banking, broadcasting and television, and media assets, assisting organizations in easily migrating from old architecture to IPv6.
IPv6
IPv6 uses 128-bit Internet addresses. As a result, it can support 2^128 Internet addresses—340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456 to be exact. The number of ipv6 addresses is 1028 times more than the number of ipv4 addresses. As a result, there are more than enough IPv6 addresses to allow Internet devices to grow for a very long period.
Some Key Benefits of IPv6
Next-Generation Internet
Promoting IPv6 Deployment
Communication of Private, Public, and Hybrid Clouds
Global Connectivity & Bandwidth
IPv6 & Enterprise
Enterprises will have to move to IPv6 sooner or later.
There are several grounds for this assertion; the most compelling is that IPv4 addresses are either exhausted or will be consumed very soon in some locations. This has long been known, long before the cloud was even imagined, but I've noticed an increase in the use of private IPv4 addresses for accessing resources in cloud platforms when both an organization's infrastructure and publicly acquired services (for example, storage) are hosted within the cloud.
Is it necessary to alter our approach to promoting IPv6 in the cloud era?