On 14/01/2014 10:21, Justin Krejci wrote:
> Also when troubleshooting HTTP connectivity in general but can be really help 
> when dealing with a transition from IPv4 to IPv6 if you install the browser 
> extension IPvFoo for Chrome (IPvFox for Firefox) it can take out a 
> significantly complicated step in the troubleshooting process as it easily 
> shows you all of the IP addresses (v4 and v6) being connected to on any given 
> page and which are SSL and or non-SSL as well. It's very small and quite 
> useful.

Thanks for that - nicer than ShowIP on Firefox. If you're running ShowIP, you 
need to
disable it when installing IPvFox.

   Brian

> ________________________________________
> From: [email protected] 
> [[email protected]] on behalf of 
> Jeroen Massar [[email protected]]
> Sent: Monday, January 13, 2014 12:13 PM
> To: Sammer Mati; [email protected]
> Subject: Re: Reaching google.com using Chrome
> 
> On 2014-01-13 19:02 , Sammer Mati wrote:
> [..]
>> We ran wireshark and found out that the IPv6 address is different for
>> Google.com when using IE or Chrome! I haven't tested yet with Windows7
> 
> That is just pure DNS selection luck...
> 
> Note that a lot of properties on this massive Internet are using
> Geo-DNS, load-balancing, BGP-based routing tricks/anycasting and a lot
> of other nasty funny tricks.
> 
> Hence, as you did not include any traceroute or other data, little else
> anybody can say...
> 
> Greets,
>  Jeroen
> 
> 

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