Hoi,
Do we have statistics of the IPv6 traffic ?
Thanks,
GerardM
On 16 January 2011 13:13, Maarten Dammers maar...@mdammers.nl wrote:
On 8 June, 2011, Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, Akamai and Limelight
Networks will be amongst some of the major organisations that will offer
their content
On Sun, Jan 16, 2011 at 7:12 PM, Happy-melon happy-me...@live.com wrote:
I don't entirely understand the point of this. The plan seems to be get
a large enough fraction of 'the internet' to make a change which breaks for
some people all at the same time, so that those people get angry with the
On 8 June, 2011, Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, Akamai and Limelight
Networks will be amongst some of the major organisations that will offer
their content over IPv6 for a 24-hour test drive. The goal of the Test
Drive Day is to motivate organizations across the industry – Internet
service
On the mediawiki side of things:
http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/IPv6_support
On the wikimedia side of things:
http://wikitech.wikimedia.org/view/IPv6_deployment
I have no idea on the current stati or is that statues of those pages.
-Peachey
___
2011/1/16 Jon Davis w...@konsoletek.com:
I've run MediaWiki on an IPv6 only (and Dual Stack) enviroment and it works
just fine (from my limited testing). So the issues are probably more on the
infrastructure side and trying not to horribly maim the site for a day.
With anonymous editors? And
Mark Bergsma has been testing / gathering statistics on IPv6 at
nl.wikipedia.org:
* http://nl.wikipedia.org/?title=MediaWiki:Common.jsdiff=20163563
* http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/MediaWiki:Common.js/IPv6.js
* http://ipv4.labs.wikimedia.org/
* http://ipv6and4.labs.wikimedia.org/
--
Krinkle
Op
Maarten Dammers maar...@mdammers.nl wrote in message
news:4d32e0de.8020...@mdammers.nl...
On 8 June, 2011, Google, Facebook, Yahoo!, Akamai and Limelight
Networks will be amongst some of the major organisations that will offer
their content over IPv6 for a 24-hour test drive. The goal of the
I don't entirely understand the point of this. The plan seems to be get
a large enough fraction of 'the internet' to make a change which breaks for
some people all at the same time, so that those people get angry with the
ISPs that haven't got off their arses to fix said breakage, rather than