While I'm not personally familiar with it, I have heard that
(ironically enough) the IPV6 community Comcast has created has become
a rather abundant source of valuable and up to date information. Their
IPV6 page is located at comcast6.net.

Let me disclaim that I actually do work for an ISP, and it's not
Comcast. I work for AT&T, so I don't say this in any partisan just in
my research discovered that this was one of the better sources of IPV6
information and tools.

On Wed, Jan 5, 2011 at 7:48 AM,  <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Guys.
>
> I have been tasked with a rather large IPv6 rollout.  We have a public
> IPv6 /32 assigned to us, and will ultimately be rolling out to a
> six-figure number of mobile devices, as well as our public-facing servers
> and internal servers and workstations.
>
> I have been researching this online, and found surprisingly little
> practical information.  Much of what I have found seems to be quite dated.
>
> We are, for all practical purposes, our own ISP, so we would be looking to
> set up our own tunnels, etc.
>
> All of our public-facing stuff is Linux- (or at least *nix-) based, as are
> most of our internal servers, although we do have a handful of Windoze
> servers internally for legacy applications, as well as a mix of Linux and
> Windoze workstations.
>
> Has anyone here performed a significant IPv6 rollout and / or can point me
> at some usable practical documentation?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Regards,
> Ozz.
>
>
>
>
>
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