> ::ffff:0:0:0/96 == ::ffff:0:a.b.c.d

https://www.ibm.com/docs/en/zos/2.1.0?topic=addresses-ipv4-mapped-ipv6

Mapped IPv4 addresses have the ::ffff:a.b.c.d short form, without any 
intervening 0 word.  The CIDR form above just denotes that 96 bits
are the prefix (the "network" part) and, thus, the remaining 32 bits is the 
host part within the network.  IPv6 addresses are 128 bit long.

But the ::ffff:0:a.b.c.d notation is not a mapped IPv4 address, it's just some 
IPv6 address which is written with last
four octets in the IPv4 notation (any IPv6 address can be accepted this way), 
but when you convert it back from its binary
form, that won't re-emerge the same way because only IPv4 compatible (all 96 
leading bits zero) or IPv4 mapped (80 zero bits
followed by 16 one bits) followed by 4 bytes of IPv4 address) can be 
conventionally written in the IPv4 form (depending
on the system settings).

E.g. 1.2.3.4 (input) -> (binary rep) ::ffff:1.2.3.4 -> (output) 1.2.3.4

but

::ffff:0:1.2.3.4 -> (binary rep, same) -> (output) ::ffff:0:102:304

HTH,

Anton Lavrentiev
Contractor NIH/NLM/NCBI


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