For me and you? Not much of anything whatsoever. For "The Internet" at large, however, it brings about the ability to continue to exist.I have to ask a silly question- given all the hassles what does IPv6 bring to the table that makes it worth the headaches?
For me and you? Not much of anything whatsoever. For "The Internet" at large, however, it brings about the ability to continue to exist.
Right now, today, there are no more IPv4 addresses available for assignment in the global internet. That means that if you form a new company and want a few publicly accessible servers, you had better hope that your internet provider has a couple left-over IPv4 addresses to assign to you. If they don't, you'll have to sit behind a NAT and deal with limitations related to that.
IPv6 solves the problem by making the address space MUCH larger. It does quite a few other things as well, but the address space is the most significant reason that end-users will notice right now.
In my own LAN?I think the question was aimed towards your usage of IPv6 in your LAN.
"Most" would be quite happy, and completely oblivious to IPv6 even existing. A company I work with is like that, and they refuse to enable IPv6 (even using only ULA's.) Their perspective is that if it isn't broke, don't fix it. (I keep trying to tell them that just because it isn't broken for them today, it WILL be broken for them tomorrow.)Through the magic of NAT most can use IPV4 and be quite happy.
"Most" would be quite happy, and completely oblivious to IPv6 even existing. A company I work with is like that, and they refuse to enable IPv6 (even using only ULA's.) Their perspective is that if it isn't broke, don't fix it. (I keep trying to tell them that just because it isn't broken for them today, it WILL be broken for them tomorrow.)
People like them depend on people like me to "test the waters" with newer technologies and discover how they can be used, abused, worked with, worked around, etc.
I'm like one of those other people in many areas of my life. For example, I expect my car to just work. I don't care, honestly, if it's using direct injection, fuel injectors, or even an old carburetor. I'm content knowing how to change the oil and do a basic tune up.
The massive difference is that if I'm using fuel injectors when direct injection is the newest tech, I don't have to worry about my car not working in a few years just because fuel injectors aren't used anymore. Someone will always be making replacement injectors (just as people are still making carburetors for older cars) and the same gasoline will still work.
In contrast, those who are desperately trying to ignore IPv6 are running the risk that their networks will suddenly one day be unable to get a new global IP address or that they'll be unable to access newer internet resources that might ONLY work with ipv6.
I'm not claiming mere curiosity. My home is my professional testbed and where I learn things.This seems more like IPv6 evangelism rather than technical curiosity...
I'm not claiming mere curiosity. My home is my professional testbed and where I learn things.
On the other hand, I wouldn't go so far as using the term evangelism. Unless someone asks for my advice (or I'm somehow responsible for the network), I don't push IPv6 on others. In the example I gave, I'm responsible for some systems, and those systems COMPLETELY break with ipv6... Some of those systems have to interact with other companies who ARE actively migrating to IPv6, so it's a big concern for me.
Keep in mind that a person who does software development MUST either stay ahead of the curve, or risk spending their career doing nothing but maintaining legacy systems.
I wish you had explained this much earlier. I think it's unfair that you neglected to mention it. It kinda pisses me off. I thought you wanted to solve a problem, but no.
Originally, I did want to solve a problem. Go back and read the very first post in this thread. Actually, I _STILL_ want to solve that problem. So far, the closest I've come is ntopng, but that has shortcomings. So, it's still unsolved in regards to pfSense (and based on checking dozens of other router/firewall products, there is no good solution that checks all the boxes I want.)
In regards to my son, I think if you go back and read, you'll notice that my son and schedules was just one example of a reason why MAC filtering is useful. The MAC filtering aspect wasn't even introduced until post 57. That, by the way, might be handled via ipfw and cron.
At the same time, I'm experimenting, learning and so on. I've made that clear a few times in this thread. Most recently (yesterday?), I posted a long comment where I very clearly stated in the top of the post that I was heading into philosophical discussion and rambling.
I'm sorry if you latched onto ONE example issue and ignored the rest of the thread that has been going on for quite some time and has reached a lot of different topics. I do appreciate the help and comments that you and others have offered, however.
Edit: In fact, in regards to the "learning" - You should be very well aware of this, as you replied to one of those posts with a comment that "not everyone wants to be your teacher for free." So... if your pissed about spending time in this thread since then, you should only be angry at yourself.
That is really cool! Thank you.
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