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For IPv6 transition, 2008 starts now

OMB tells agencies to assess impact

By Jason Miller, GCN Staff

How will IP Version 6 change the way your agency does business? Not sure? Too early to tell, you say?

Well, the Office of Management and Budget and the CIO Council want CIOs, chief architects and program managers to start figuring out the impact of this new technology well before the June 2008 deadline OMB has set for agencies to move to IPv6.

“We want agencies to approach this from the business and functions that are carried out,” said an OMB official, who requested anonymity. “We asked agencies to look at Lines of Business and determine what are the benefits that could be derived from the technology for your LOBs.”

In a planning guide issued last month, the CIO Council’s Architecture and Infrastructure Committee detailed the steps agencies should take to integrate IPv6 into their strategic plans and enterprise architectures. Agencies have until February to update their baseline and target architectures, which OMB will evaluate against the EA Assessment Framework Version 2.0. OMB was supposed to have released the framework in No- vember, but it is delayed, officials said.

OMB also expects agencies to complete their IPv6 transition plans and progress reports by February.

IPv6, the new generation of Internet Protocols, represents significant improvements in functionality and security over the 30-year-old IPv4 still mostly in use. Making the transition is expected to be a steady, sometimes difficult process that requires hardware and software upgrades, training, and policy changes.

The CIO Council planning guide is the first of four documents that the committee will produce to help agencies move to the new technology.

The other planning documents will address key transition elements, such as infrastructure and networking, applications, information assurance, testing and training, the CIO Council said.

The guide follows a pattern typical of OMB in moving agencies toward a difficult goal.

“OMB decreed that we do this, therefore we have to ask ourselves: How can we leverage this for our mission or for the Lines of Business or e-government?” said John Sullivan, the chief architect for the Environmental Protection Agency. “We have to prioritize what has to be done and how we will use IPv6.”

IPv6 will affect every part of an agency’s enterprise architecture, with its integration into the Business Reference Model being the most challenging part, experts said.

“There will be heavy lifting in the Technical Reference Model, but there also will be significant implications for how you design components and services as well,” said Reynolds Cahoon, National Ar-chives and Records Ad- ministration CIO and co-chairman of the Architecture and Infrastructure Committee.



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