I'm using NSNetService to advertise a Bonjour service on the local domain. (The 
documentation is ambiguous between using @"local." and @"local", but I've tried 
both with the same result.) When the Mac has a global (not link-local) IPv6 
address, NSNetService will include that among the resolved addresses (the 
others typically being link-local IPv4 and IPv6). Is that supposed to happen? 
And is there any way to stop it? Unfortunately, some clients not under my 
control are attempting to connect to my service via global IPv6 addresses, 
which doesn't work right.

-Jeff


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