Yes, i've actually set up an IPv6 router at work, and would love to add
some tunnels. Mail me at [EMAIL PROTECTED] if anyone is interested in
setting up a tunnel.
-Matt
On Sat, 3 Oct 1998, Joshua W. Scott wrote:
> Hmm...here's a thought: has anyone (here at UT) played with any I
Hmm...here's a thought: has anyone (here at UT) played with any IPv6
tunnels? Maybe this is something we could work on as a group...
jws
---
Joshua W. Scott [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Systems Administrator / Undergra
Ipv4 is the current version of IP protocols. Ipv6 is a new addressing
scheme and protocol. It has a 128 bit address space instead of the
current 32 bits. It's eventually going to replace Ipv4. But first
there is going to be a rather lengthy transition period. Microsoft is
working on a
I hope I don't sound clueless, but what exactly is IPv6 and IPv4? How would
we benifit from running either of these.. thanks for any info..
Gabe
-Original Message-
From: Matt Bradbury <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wednesday, July
Yes, that's what I'm doing. I'm currently tunneling to Merit University
in Michigan. I'm able to telnet/ping/etc to the 6bone, which is a
backbone of people running Ipv6 around the world. Check out
www.6bone.net. Also check out the Linux Howto at:
http://www.bieringer.de/l
are you tunneling IPv6 over IPv4?
and who have you tried this with so far... hows it working?
On Wed, 22 Jul 1998, Matt Bradbury wrote:
> Is anyone here interested in running the new IPv6 code on their Linux
> box? I've recently set it up and was wanting to experiment some more
Is anyone here interested in running the new IPv6 code on their Linux
box? I've recently set it up and was wanting to experiment some more
with some more connections.
-Matt
---
Send administrative requests to [