On Sat, 2010-06-05 at 07:14 -0400, James Knott wrote:
Hans Witvliet wrote:
On Fri, 2010-06-04 at 16:36 -0400, James Knott wrote:
BTW, I went to a coffee shop hotspot and ran nmap againt the IPv6 address of my firewall and also against a computer behind the firewall, reachable via IPv6 address. Nmap couldn't find anything with the firewall IPv6 address,
Which probably implies that this coffeeshop isn't connected to the IPv6 network. Only if you have a native v6 address, or use a tunnelbroker, it is possible to check ipv6 with nmap...
I use a tunnel broker, so I have an IPv6 address. The only place I don't is at the local library, where they block just about everything but browsers. As I mentioned, I could port scan my computers behind the firewall which have only IPv6 addresses available to the world.
You use a tunnelbroker, so you have a Ipv6 address: at home Or did you use your tunnelbroker to setup a second tunnel to the coffee-shop-hotspot? Untill they "see the light", most hotspots don't offer IPv6 afaicr, just a handfull of hotels in the far east. Well, they still have plenty time... ;-)) What was the estimated count-down date? 31-july-2011 And since a couple of months the depletion-speed is getting faster, it used to be end 2011. hw -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org