Wasn't the 'evil bit' able to hold the value 2 ?

Use all evil bits for IP addresses and we'll soon have no need for IPv6.

:D

~C.

On 2/15/13 6:45 PM, Warren Kumari wrote:
> 
> On Feb 15, 2013, at 5:06 PM, Patrik Fältström <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> On 15 feb 2013, at 18:19, Joe Touch <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>     - the Bert version uses DNS strings that aren't valid
>>>     (*, +, ',', ++)
>>
>> Are we going to open again the question whether the DNS protocol can handle 
>> any value in the octets, as compared to the hostname definition that says 
>> something more limited? ;-)
> 
> Sure -- the DNS protocol *cannot* "handle any value in the octets" -- in 
> fact, there are an *infinite* number of values it cannot handle *in the 
> octets*. For example, it cannot handle 257. It also cannot handle 321, nor 
> 19.3...
> 
> :-P
> W
> 
>>
>>   Patrik
>>
> 
> --
> Don't be impressed with unintelligible stuff said condescendingly.
>     -- Radia Perlman.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

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