Hi Then I won't use this ipv6 address 2001:db8:cafe:1111::12 for test
Acutually, I have one in eth0 when I run ifconfig -a inet6 addr: fe80::20c:29ff:fe3c:92a1/64 Scope:Link but I also can't ping it ping6 fe80::20c:29ff:fe3c:92a1 connect: Invalid argument but ping6 ::1 is fine ping6 ::1 PING ::1(::1) 56 data bytes 64 bytes from ::1: icmp_seq=0 ttl=64 time=7.18 ms 64 bytes from ::1: icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.050 ms --- On Wed, 3/9/11, Karl Auer <ka...@biplane.com.au> wrote: > From: Karl Auer <ka...@biplane.com.au> > Subject: Re: ipv6 question > To: nanog@nanog.org > Received: Wednesday, March 9, 2011, 11:11 PM > On Thu, 2011-03-10 at 11:43 +1100, > Mark Andrews wrote: > > In message <1299711449.2109.98.camel@karl>, Karl > Auer writes: > > > On Wed, 2011-03-09 at 09:01 -0600, imNet > Administrator wrote: > > > > Where are you pinging it from? also, the > 2001:db8::/32 prefix is used > > > > for "documentation purposes" and might be > handled differently by the > > > > TCP/IP stack. > > > > > > Works fine in Linux - I've been using it (in an > isolated training room > > > setup) for years. > > > > > > Regards, K. > > > > It is not a good idea to use the documentation prefix > for anything > > other than documentation. How hard is it to > generate a ULA and use > > it? > > I suppose I took/take the view that it *is*, in a sense, > being used for > documentation. > > The network is a training network, isolated from the > Internet, and used > for demonstration purposes. It's a good way to engrave the > doco prefix > in the students' minds. It also allows all the slides, > exercises and > other documentation to use the documentation prefix and yet > directly > match the demonstration network. > > ULA prefixes have little internal logic and are hard to > remember. Not a > problem in production, but just another barrier in a > training > environment. "2001:db8::/32" is very easy to remember (I > guess that's > the point) and easy to add easy-to-use subnets into. > > However, I do appreciate that it's a bit of an edge case. > In my training > I specifically draw the students' attention to this fact. > > Thanks, K. > > -- > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Karl Auer (ka...@biplane.com.au) > > +61-2-64957160 (h) > http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer/ > > +61-428-957160 (mob) > > GPG fingerprint: DA41 51B1 1481 16E1 F7E2 B2E9 3007 14ED > 5736 F687 > Old fingerprint: B386 7819 B227 2961 8301 C5A9 2EBC 754B > CD97 0156 >