New on LowEndTalk? Please Register and read our Community Rules.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
All new Registrations are manually reviewed and approved, so a short delay after registration may occur before your account becomes active.
Comments
@desperand
I'm not a network expert, but
1. "Not only websites, but some softwares are IPv6 incompatible as well."
This just reminded me of some open source games, which could have been played in multi-player mode flawlessly online.
But their Client/Server mode is bounded to public IPv4, which was quite available 10 or 15 years ago in my country but quickly deprived of 5 or 6 years ago.
Well, I'm not an expert, but I've wondering for years why IPv6 is 128 bits instead of 64 bits.
I mean MAC has an address space of 48 bits, and 64 bits should be sufficient for everyone. Why bother to assign an address to a gain of sand?
And why don't use 128-system to represent the binary address?
I mean in that case, 2001:470:20::2 for instance, would be ~+-_*`~, isn't it lovely?
Maybe I should have consulted my teacher, but I doubt it.
Pointless
Why bother to assign an address to a gain of sand?
It would even be somewhat reasonable if there was one IP per grain. But each grain could get billions and we'd still have many many more available. It's ridiculous
but but. What if every atom needs its own IP?
there are only 3.4 x 10^38 IPv6 but 10^78 atoms in the universe. I think we need more IPs
No? Okay let's forget about it and make /64 the standard allocation instead of having a 64 bit IP system
The world needs more people like this! Good one Rick!
Definitely too soon to completely remove IPv4... At least use NAT for outbound connections.
I think it's to ensure there's enough addresses for everything, ever. Having a /64 allocation is useful because each device on the network can auto-configure its own public IPv6 address without having to manually configure it on each device or use a DHCP server.
That's less readable
In any case, why are people typing IP addresses so often that this is an issue? DNS exists for a reason. The only time I use the IPs of my servers is before I've configured the DNS. If you really don't want to use DNS for some reason then deploy a
/etc/hosts
file across all your clients.I tried installing dotnet on an ipv6 only VM, guess what, it failed because MS repo(packages.microsoft.com) has no v6. 🤣
For occasional outbound IPv4 connection (software updates), proxy through your other dual-stack server.
https://yoursunny.com/t/2020/EUserv-IPv4/
No need to incur cost for IPv4 on every server if it's not running regular traffic.
Backup storage server and backend database server generally do not need IPv4; frontend user-facing server can have IPv4.
Oh, I don't see me using this in the near future but thanks for sharing, it might come in handy someday. xD
Very reasonable, theoretically. However I'm wondering if there is any exception realistically.
But before any formal discussion or query, I need to read some materials about IPv6.
Thank you for explaining.
As for the 128-system representation, that's a serious joke, which is a joke.
Actually there are at most 122 items when I counted the number of all alphabets + numbers + common symbols on an English keyboard.
They should delete the A record for their customer portal too. Only IPV6 AAAA goodness allowed here.
Not so much to ensure everything gets an IP (that happens at a much lower number). It's for network planning. Towns and cities grow by thousands and millions over a century. This is IP protocol designed to be long term and not shit the bed in 30 years.
Seriously, all these people who rant about all the IP's and atoms in the world are NOT Network Engineers and likely have very little to no networking experience beyond their NAT router at home.
It also looks really bad when people whine about the length as well. They look really, really basic compared to regular people that make writing an IPv6 IP look like kindergarten shit.
And yes, DNS makes this a non-issue for anyone who isn't completely shit at their job.
What was their previous brand? The same owner, just new name?
Customer VPSes were under the "ViridWeb" brand, but they got all transferred to Fiberia and all old plans, including offers, were cancelled since.
And then one of the NAT customer decided to spam or host illegal stuff, DC receives complaint, IP null-routed or similar and poof .. all 65K customer's VM over that 1 IP are down.
@FlorinMarian should be able to give some professional insight on that.
fantastic job!
We are looking to do the same at our hosting company, only ipv6 for the lowest priced servers(vps). But also add carrier grade nat to get ipv4 working, with option to rent ipv4 address if it's needed.
Go for it, more and more providers are doing it already.