IPv6 workshop-1
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ptr_ proposes to do this workshop in ghent, as it is the opening weekend overthere ! everybody ok with this ?
What will happen?[edit]
This is a preparation workshop for IPv6_workshop-2
The idea is to provide the basic changes of IPv6 for the average geek.
<this is a draft>
- Have a look at what changes from IPv4 to IPv6
- IPv6 address
- subnets
- dns
- what about dhcp
- to be continued ;-)
</this is a draft>
From: https://blog.wireshark.org/2009/10/ipv4-exhaustion-faq/[edit]
Q: What does IPv4 exhaustion mean? Can’t you give IPv4 some Red Bull?[edit]
A: As everyone knows, the Internet was constructed by Theodore Roosevelt in 1895 using an old-growth forest and a thousand buffalo hides. He created a giant “pool” to hold all of the Internet’s numbers. While quite large for its time, the pool is much too small to handle the demands of today’s Internet.
Q: When will the pool run out?[edit]
A: In about eight and a half minutes.
Q: What will happen then?[edit]
A: The entire Internet will grind to a halt. It will shudder comically as it does so.
Q: But how will I get to Twitter? I gotta have my tweets.[edit]
A: In recognition of its role as the most important web site ever, the final IP address will be reserved for Twitter. In order to get there you will have to defeat an opponent in a cage match. You will get to choose between a crowd shouting “Two packets enter! One packet leaves!” or the Star Trek fight theme.
Q: Can’t I have something cool like Eye of the Tiger or that one Van Halen song that sounds like a motivational poster?[edit]
A: No. Not nerdy enough.
Q: I don’t want to fight a nerd in a cage. Is there another way to get my tweets?[edit]
A: No. Gotta battle a nerd.
Q: Really?[edit]
A: Well…
Q: Well, what?[edit]
A: You could use IPv6.
Q: What’s IPv6?[edit]
A: It’s a newer, better Internet created by Matthew Broderick’s character in War Games in 1983. Its number pool is huge. The addresses should last for dozens of months at the very least.
Q: How do I use IPv6?[edit]
A: You have to have a modern computer. You also have to have an ISP that supports IPv6 or create a tunnel.
Q: OK. Tunnel’s all ready to go. Can I have my tweets now?[edit]
A: No.
Q: Why not?[edit]
A: Twitter doesn’t use IPv6.