> 26 okt. 2016 kl. 19:06 skrev Bajpai, Vaibhav <[email protected]>:
> 
>> 
>> On 26 Oct 2016, at 17:43, Jen Linkova <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> On Wed, Oct 26, 2016 at 5:27 PM, Philip Homburg
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> I wonder, if a host has a global IPv6 address that is not derived from any
>>> kind of transition technology or tunnel, and setting up a TCP connection is
>>> either slow or fails, then what percentage is due to an issue close to the
>>> host and what percentage close to the target.
>>> 
>>> I.e., if IPv6 is broken is there any reason to believe it is often enough
>>> due to ISP provided services that is would be worth reporting it in a
>>> roudabout way.
>> 
>> I'd say that it is much more likely to be broken close to clients, at
>> least for Alexa web sites..
> 
> We cannot generalise this without empirical data.
> 
> There is also v6 brokenness (or slowness) in ALEXA websites also 
> that not hosted by large CDNs. 

Every category of webbservers have problem with IPv6
Look at https://www.myndighetermedipv6.se/ -> "Authorities with AAAA in its 
www..”, more than 10% does not work over IPv6 today.

Another common IPv6 problem is the the firewall/load balancer where http work 
and https does not. With IPv4 it does

https://ipv6alizer.se/?address=https://www.gavle.se
https://ipv6alizer.se/?address=http://www.gavle.se

( https://ipv6alizer.se ’s main mission is the PTB-problem but it also tell us 
when it don’t work at all. )

Why does the owners don’t see this problems? The users don’t have IPv6 on the 
inside and they are the best monitors.

/Tobbe



> 
> -- Vaibhav
> 
> ===================================
> Vaibhav Bajpai
> www.vaibhavbajpai.com
> 
> Postdoctoral Researcher
> Jacobs University Bremen, Germany
> ===================================




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