« first day  last day (15 days later) » 

12:17 AM
@qräbnö That was written by someone who does not really understand. Private IPv4 addresses are defined by RFC 1918, Address Allocation for Private Internets, and the addresses are used in multiple networks all over. IPv6 ULA addresses are meant to be unique (the "U" in ULA), not to be reused in multiple places, which is the reason they are required to have 40 random bits in the Global ID, giving a high expectation of uniqueness.
 
 
12 hours later…
11:52 AM
Keke, thank you.
 
 
8 hours later…
7:49 PM
It looks YOU are right. My root servers start with 2001: and 2a01:. So - Logan Devine and .is_global both failed?! ;)
 
8:02 PM
Will all external web requests over IPv6 in my reverse proxy will have "2000::/3"?
What happens when a small IOT device makes a request?
At the moment I only see IPv4. Legacy, I know. ;)
 
 
1 hour later…
9:24 PM
@qräbnö All the addresses from the public Internet will be in the range from 2000:: to 3fff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff (2000::/3). IOT devices also get Global (public) IPv6 addresses. The point of IPv6 is that there are enough addresses that every interface on every device gets a Global IPv6 address, restoring the way IP was originally designed (no more NAT kludge to work around).
 
keke, thanks
 
Some addresses internal to your site will be Link-Local addresses (fe80::/10), and it is possible to assign ULA addresses (fc00::/7 of which you can assign from fd00::/8 with certain limitations) for traffic that will never be allowed on the public Internet.
 

« first day  last day (15 days later) »