Hi, I purchased SUSE9.1 Pro. It is very good. However, I have a question. It is that there is time lag, when seeing Web, since IPv6 is effective. The site corresponding to IPv6 tries to carry out a name resolution with IPv6. And after waiting for 5 seconds, failure is noticed, and a name resolution is carried out with IPv4. Then, I did try to abolish IPv6. It was not effective although the following was added to /etc/modprobe.conf.local. alias ipv6 off alias net-pf-10 off Now, name of ipv6.ko, netfilter/ip6_tables.ko and netfilter/ip6table_filter.ko in /lib/modules/2.6.4-54.5-smp/kernel/net/ipv6 is changed, and I avoided the problem of that. Aren't there any good idea? Regards, eshsf
eshsf, My suggestion if you just want IPv6 disabled is to grep around for where its either probed on startup because I believe you see it in a verbose output so it must be getting loaded by something. Other than that, recompiling the kernel and stripping things like IPv6 out would solve the problem. On Thursday 10 June 2004 2:44 am, eshsf wrote:
Hi,
I purchased SUSE9.1 Pro. It is very good. However, I have a question. It is that there is time lag, when seeing Web, since IPv6 is effective.
The site corresponding to IPv6 tries to carry out a name resolution with IPv6. And after waiting for 5 seconds, failure is noticed, and a name resolution is carried out with IPv4.
Then, I did try to abolish IPv6. It was not effective although the following was added to /etc/modprobe.conf.local. alias ipv6 off alias net-pf-10 off
Now, name of ipv6.ko, netfilter/ip6_tables.ko and netfilter/ip6table_filter.ko in /lib/modules/2.6.4-54.5-smp/kernel/net/ipv6 is changed, and I avoided the problem of that.
Aren't there any good idea?
Regards,
eshsf
Although Fedora Core 2 was able to disable by adding "alias net-pf-10 off"
to /etc/modprobe.conf.
Hmmm...
eshsf
On Thu, 10 Jun 2004 12:14:32 -0400
Nick Bargnesi
eshsf, My suggestion if you just want IPv6 disabled is to grep around for where its either probed on startup because I believe you see it in a verbose output so it must be getting loaded by something. Other than that, recompiling the kernel and stripping things like IPv6 out would solve the problem.
Now it was able to disable(ipv6) when was Kernel version up(2.6.5-7.75-smp) on YOU. The following was added into /etc/modprobe.conf. # diff /etc/modprobe.conf /tmp/modprobe.conf.old 325,326c325 < #alias net-pf-10 ipv6 < alias net-pf-10 off ---
alias net-pf-10 ipv6
thanks,
eshsf
On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 13:04:01 +0900
eshsf
Although Fedora Core 2 was able to disable by adding "alias net-pf-10 off" to /etc/modprobe.conf.
Hmmm...
eshsf
participants (2)
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eshsf
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Nick Bargnesi