On Fri, 2012-03-30 at 14:23 -0400, Bob Hoffman wrote: > I imagine some day in the near future there will be a switch to ipv6. A long way off; for a long time things will be dual-stack. It isn't either IPv4 or IPv6, they coexist just fine. > I cannot imagine ever remembering the ip address then...crazy. That's why there is DNS! :) > My question, since i have never done ip6 stuff, is what does that mean > on my webservers? Nothing more than IPv4 means for you web servers. It is just-another-address, configured in the same way as if you had multiple IPv4 addresses. > Would I just need to replace my ip4 with ip6 in my eths, bonds, bridges, > and configuration files...and copy out my iptables to ip6tables, and > change the dns servers? Nope, you don't replace, you add. > all that does not sound to harsh. It isn't at scary as some people make it out to be. And IPv6 gets rid of numerous hideous hacks that have been built into / onto creaky old IPv4. Die NAT Die! > anything especially daunting to make that switch (save from someone > having to do that on 100 computers really fast!!) And recent computer or distributions is sitting their quietly waiting for it's IPv6 address to arrive - probably automatically, via auto discovery. Clients are trivial. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20120331/2e6e0bcc/attachment-0005.sig>