FWIW, I have a netbook (Windows 7) which does something interesting. I bring it up because it is something that may be applicable to CentOS. There is a tunneling pseudo-interface which is only IPv6; it has two addresses, the IPv6 address, and a local-link IPv6 address. The hardware interfaces also have two addresses, an IPv6 local-link back to the tunnel, and an IPv4 address given by the router. However, I am not sure that this is efficient for anything other than a light-use personal machine, and unfortunately I'm not sure what happens when it is connected to an IPv6 router! ): Attached is a screen shot since I'm not sure that my description gave it justice.
Rob
On Sun, Dec 5, 2010 at 8:21 AM, Tom H tomh0665@gmail.com wrote:
On Sun, Dec 5, 2010 at 8:13 AM, RedShift redshift@pandora.be wrote:
On 12/05/10 12:50, Rudi Ahlers wrote:
(
http://www.internetnews.com/infra/article.php/3915471/IPv4+Nearing+Final+Day... ),
Haven't switched yet, I have IPv6 at home using sixxs.
I can't even figure out what address ranges are reserved for private use,
is there even such a concept in IPv6?
I think that site-local ("fec0:: - fef::") is the ipv6 more-or-less-equivalent of ipv4 private addresses. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos