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RE: webpage for ipv6 programmers
RFC3493, 3542, 5414 and RFC4584 if you deal with Mobile IPv6.
Also, I'd recommend to have these 2 books on your bookshelf. These
books give you great detail of how IPv6 works, and they will be valuable
for you even you may not write code on KAME derived IPv6 stack.
IPv6 Core Protocols Implementation
By Qing Li, Tatuya Jinmei, Keiichi Shima
ISBN: 978-0-12-447751-3
http://www.elsevierdirect.com/product.jsp?isbn=9780124477513
IPv6 Advanced Protocols Implementation
By Qing Li, Tatuya Jinmei, Keiichi Shima
ISBN: 978-0-12-370479-5
http://www.elsevierdirect.com/product.jsp?isbn=9780123704795
HTH,
Junichiro Hamaguchi
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-v6ops@ops.ietf.org [mailto:owner-v6ops@ops.ietf.org] On
Behalf Of Ed Jankiewicz
Sent: Thursday, February 05, 2009 11:59 AM
To: v6ops@ops.ietf.org
Cc: Mikael Abrahamsson
Subject: Re: webpage for ipv6 programmers
also of interest is the book "IPv6 Network Programming" by Jun-ichiro
Itojun Hagino, Elsevier Digital Press, ISBN 1-5558-318-0
On 2/3/2009 5:49 AM, Mikael Abrahamsson wrote:
>
> Hello.
>
> I wonder if anyone happen to know a good webpage or book for
> programmers and what they need to know about programming applications
> in different programming lanuages and script languages to make their
> programs IPv6 capable. Something like "classical way in <language> is
> to use <API> but the new <API> is like this and should be used
instead".
>
> I think we know a lot about how to enable our networks for IPv6, but
> we need to educate a lot of programmers as well. There is plenty of
> references on how to program to avoid buffer overflows, (use snprintf
> instead of printf), I think we need equivalent for IPv6.
>
--
Ed Jankiewicz - SRI International
Fort Monmouth Branch Office - IPv6 Research
Supporting DISA Standards Engineering Branch
732-389-1003 or ed.jankiewicz@sri.com