That sounds sad.
Many stub resolvers are installed in small hardware device (for example, a
home router), that may not support IPv6.
On Tue, Dec 31, 2019 at 5:37 PM Shane Kerr
wrote:
> Stephane and all,
>
> On 30/12/2019 16.01, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
> > On Mon, Dec 30, 2019 at 05:18:01PM +
While I would not recommend this generally there are a few of us that operate
free secondary services that are dual stacked. Make sure one NS is dual stacked
and you are likely fine.
Sent from my iCar
> On Dec 31, 2019, at 4:47 AM, Shane Kerr wrote:
>
> Stephane and all,
>
>> On 30/12/2019
Stephane and all,
On 30/12/2019 16.01, Stephane Bortzmeyer wrote:
On Mon, Dec 30, 2019 at 05:18:01PM +0300,
Anand Buddhdev wrote
a message of 17 lines which said:
If your domain's authoritative name servers have only IPv6
addresses, then your domain will not be resolvable by many resolver
On Mon, Dec 30, 2019 at 05:18:01PM +0300,
Anand Buddhdev wrote
a message of 17 lines which said:
> If your domain's authoritative name servers have only IPv6
> addresses, then your domain will not be resolvable by many resolvers
> on the Internet, because many of them only have IPv4 connectivi
On 30/12/2019 10:38, Yonah Peng wrote:
Hi Yonah Peng,
> As IPv4 addresses were exhausted today, if we have deployed the
> nameservers with IPv6 addresses only, can they be resolvable by world wide?
If your domain's authoritative name servers have only IPv6 addresses,
then your domain will not be