Skip to content

Scanning the IPv6 Internet Using Subnet-Router Anycast Probing

This is a draft agenda: changes are still being made.

Speaker:
Maynard Koch, TU Dresden
Date:
Time:
Room:
Main Room
Session:
MAT
Duration:
15 min
Transcript:
Not Available
Meetecho chat:
Not Available
Type:
Talk
Slides:
Add to calendar

Abstract

Identifying active IPv6 addresses is challenging.
Various methods emerged to master the measurement challenge in this huge address space, including hitlists, new probing techniques, and AI-generated target lists.
In this presentation, we apply active Subnet-Router anycast (SRA) probing, a commonly unused method to explore the IPv6 address space.
We compare our results with lists of active IPv6 nodes obtained from prior methods and with random probing. Our findings indicate that probing an SRA address reveals on average 10% more router IP addresses than random probing and is far less affected by ICMP rate limiting.
Compared to targeting router addresses directly, SRA probing discovers 80% more addresses.
We conclude that SRA probing is an important addition to the IPv6 measurement toolbox and may improve the stability of results significantly.
We also find evidence that some active scans can cause harmful conditions in current IPv6 deployments, which we started to fix in collaboration with network operators.
All used tools are publicly available and we publish measurement results once a week under https://ipv6-sra.realmv6.org with detailed reports.

Recording

Video will be added soon.

Speaker

Maynard Koch

Maynard Koch

I am a PhD student and research associate at the Chair of Distributed and Networked Systems at TU Dresden, supervised by Prof. Dr. Matthias Wählisch. Before joining TU Dresden, I graduated with a BSc and MSc in Computer Science from Freie Universität Berlin. My research focuses on Internet measurements to improve network security. I'm particularly interested in DNS and scalable IPv6 scanning.

Rate this talk

Rating will open: Monday, 18 May 2026 09:00 (+0100).