Penguin

Differences between version 15 and predecessor to the previous major change of IPv6.

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Newer page: version 15 Last edited on Sunday, November 28, 2004 11:45:01 am by AristotlePagaltzis Revert
Older page: version 12 Last edited on Sunday, February 8, 2004 5:58:43 pm by CraigBox Revert
@@ -27,11 +27,14 @@
 !!Getting IPv6 
  
 There are three methods; get a native allocation of IPv6 addresses from your Internet provider (uncommon; especially in New Zealand), get a tunnel from a tunnel broker, or use IPv6's built IPv4 compatibility. See [IPv6Setup] and [6to4]. 
  
-!! IPv6 in the DNS  
+Linux Reviews on why you want IPv6 now. Includes many tunnel sites to try it out now.  
  
-The average IPv6 address is represented as something like "fedc :ba98:7654:3210:fedc:ba98:7654:3210" . If you know a couple of IPv4 addresses off the top of your head, you will really want to think about making [DNS] work for you come IPv6 deployment! Thankfully [DNS] supports IPv6 addresses; there are two types of record, [AAAA] and [A6] . See [AAAAvsA6] for details about the differences
+http ://linuxreviews .org/features/ipv6/index .html .en  
  
+!! [IPv6] in the [DNS]  
+  
+The average IPv6 address is represented as something like "fedc:ba98:7654:3210:fedc:ba98:7654:3210". If you know a couple of IPv4 addresses off the top of your head, you will really want to think about making [DNS] work for you come IPv6 deployment! Thankfully [DNS] supports IPv6 addresses; there are two types of ResourceRecord, <tt>AAAA</tt> and <tt>A6</tt>. See [AAAAvsA6] for details about the differences.  
  
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 CategoryNetworking