CUSTOMER STORY | U.S FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY

A10 and Secunetics Power a Federal Agency’s Transition to Native IPv6

Overview

Facilitated federal IPv6 transition goals

Ensured high availability and scalability for critical resources

Met extensive security and operational standards

COMPANY
U.S. Federal Government Agency

INDUSTRY
Government

SOLUTIONS
A10 Thunder CGN

INTRODUCTION
An executive department of the U.S. Federal Government supports its mission with a diverse, modern infrastructure of data centers, cloud environments, edge and IoT systems, wired and wireless networks, and a broad spectrum of websites, applications, and databases.

Challenges & Approach

In any large government agency, technology modernization is both a top priority and a major challenge. The agency needs to comply with the longstanding federal government mandate to transition its infrastructure to IPv6.

While it is the goal of the federal government to migrate entirely to IPv6-only network environments, the fact remains that there will always be IPv4-only resources both inside and outside federal networks. Without a way for IPv6-only networks to communicate with IPv4-only networks, the transition cannot happen.

As a result, organizations like the federal agency will need to maintain access to legacy IPv4 components for the foreseeable future even as they roll out new IPv6 infrastructure.

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Our objective is to deliver a modern infrastructure that is fully visible and fully in control at all times, intelligent and easy to operate, adaptive to the mission demand, and innately secure.

Soe Oo
Principal, Secunetics

A10 Solutions

Implementing a Simple yet Highly Capable Carrier-grade Networking Solution

For this agency, Secunetics has been a critical partner to achieve a complete redesign of its IPv6 translation architecture. Within each of the agency’s two network domains, the semi-centralized solution would include separate Thunder CGN solutions for its internal network traffic and the internet-bound traffic. The agency maintains two data centers, so the same solution would be implemented redundantly in both locations to provide high availability and seamless load-sharing, and to allow in-service updates without impacting users.

The implementation process began with a proof of concept based on common use cases. A Thunder CGN virtual appliance made it simple for Secunetics to deploy the solution, demonstrate its capabilities, and work through technical project details without the need for a physical device.

Two professionals in formal attire discussing a document with focus and collaboration.

“We found that A10’s Thunder CGN provided a better solution than the agency’s existing networking vendors for the requirements, including its NAT64 implementation, of application layer gateways, robust support for vendor-independent standard routing protocols such as BGP and OSPFv3, and NetFlow logging features, even though it meant bringing in a new vendor.”

Outcome: Transparent IPv6 Enablement with Future Flexibility

Public sector expertise streamlined the complex federal procurement process
IPv6-only systems and users can now seamlessly accessIPv4-based resources
IPv4 and IPv6 coexist efficiently within the agency’s networks
Modular IPv6 translation allows maximum flexibility for future network changes