jdd wrote:
Le 10/09/2016 à 11:50, Per Jessen a écrit :
jdd wrote:
I too often notice that allowing IPV6 brake the home connectivity...
Where do you notice this? That is almost certainly due to a lack of skills and/or poor equipment. Either at home or at the providers.
nearly in any openSUSE install I have, I has to disable IPV6 to have a working system. Last time it was due to a very long lag time at connect. Initially I simply used default install.
I don't think this is the place to discuss this in depth :-(
In this thread ("ssh questions") perhaps not, but in general, IPv6 issues in openSUSE do belong here, I would say. I have never disabled IPv6 when installing or later. In my opinion, any problems are due to misunderstandings or a poorly configured network. I think Carlos had an example of the latter. (his providers problem, not his). I think James and Koenraad have both highlighted the issue in getting a Linux box to propagate an ipv6 prefix handed out by the provider. These are corner-cases though, they're not typical issues.
I simply don't promote IPV6 to anybody
That is of course your choice, but I would say it is wrong to suggest IPv6 doesn't work or isn't available. I promote it every chance I get. I've been on IPv6 for almost ten years, since October 2006 when I opened my first tunnel account. Back then I also imagined a steep learning curve, and I didn't really get started until 2009 when I got a static prefix from my provider. The learning curve is just not that steep - especially not from an end-users point-of-view. If you want to play, there are a few concepts you need to understand, I think James mentioned some of them, but that's it. The learning curve is not that steep. Just do it. -- Per Jessen, Zürich (22.4°C) http://www.hostsuisse.com/ - virtual servers, made in Switzerland. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org