-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 Content-ID: <alpine.LSU.2.20.1609121451080.4233@zvanf-gvevgu.inyvabe> El 2016-09-12 a las 08:53 +0200, Per Jessen escribió:
Carlos E. R. wrote:
Maybe when I said "I'm given an IPv6 address" we got a confusion. I mean that I get a response from some service that I have to contact that address to download some file or something. Not that the ISP gives my router an address to use as its own. Sorry.
Okay, I understand. So the resolver gives you an IPv6 address, yes that working is as designed. Unless a service is IPv6-only it is still not a problem. Unless your PC thinks it has IPv6 connecitivity.
I have a similar "issue" on a Leap422 test-desktop. It only has IPv6, no IPv4. The resolver keeps giving me IPv4 addresses for services that have no IPv6 address. :-)
Yes, that's the reverse issue of mine. My PC has some IPv6 connectivity, with local machines. Just no internet. I have to talk from memory, because the issue apparently disapeared when I changed the priority in gai.conf. Well, no, not the exact reverse, I got confused. The issue happened with sites that have both addresses, or those that only have IPv6. Those IPv6 addresses should simply be ignored if there is no IPv6 route to internet, IMO. - -- Cheers Carlos E. R. (from 13.1 x86_64 "Bottle" (Minas Tirith)) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) iF4EAREIAAYFAlfWpdYACgkQja8UbcUWM1z49wD+MBavVVzAHrx7V8INJMIZxf5a Wvu2dwfiUO03IFwtJY0A/1dq6gr0GsfTMq9OxLifX+48NKPhnEAh9JUliEfI6xGy =cl8I -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----