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The Great Big WLUG Guide to IPv6

What is IPv6?

IPv6 is an Acronym for Version 6 of the InternetProtocol. It is the next version from IPv4 (technically, IPv4 was the first production version. To paraphrase, to pick the replacement, there were four versions proposed, numbered 5 -> 8; 6 was the one that they picked.) It is sometimes known as IPng.

Why do I want to use it?

IPv4, with it's 32 bit address space, has 2^32 addresses (4,294,967,296). While that sounds like a lot, remember that there are more people than that on the planet, and various allocation decisions seriously cut down the usefulness of those 4 billion addresses (for example, 1/256 of the space, 127/8, is reserved to refer to "My Local Machine"! 16.7 million addresses for localhost!)

IPv6 has more addresses. How many?

340,282,366,920,938,463,463,374,607,431,768,211,456.

That’s more than 665,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 addresses per surface square metre on Earth. So, if you want your toaster to have a large block of IP addresses, you can! See IPv6Addressing for some information.

It also features funky new features such as different address scopes (LinkLocal, SiteLocal, GlobalScope), AnyCast, and MultiCast (and no more BroadCast). IPSec is native to IPv6 (it's available as an add-on to IPv4, but it's kludgy.) Read about some of the mysterious IPv6Flags.

Unfortunately no one supports it yet. One day....

IPv6 on WLUG

  • If you use IPv6 to connect to this wiki, you will get a DancingPenguin? instead of the normal WLUG logo in the top right corner.
  • For information about stting up IPv6 on the MetaNet, see MetaNetIPv6.
  • See our IPv6LessonsLearnt for some general hints about random things we've learnt while playing with IPv6.

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.

Linux Reviews on why you want IPv6 now. Includes many tunnel sites to try it out now.

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 record, AAAA? and A6?. See AAAAvsA6 for details about the differences.


CategoryNetworking