Safari on the iPad seems to be preferring A over if a hostname has
both, though. I can browse to a bracketed IPv6 address so it is working.
I think perhaps it is time to update test-ipv6.com a bit, and have it
penalize the first number when IPv4 is used in preference. IPv4 CGN
will make
I tested today just for giggles, test-ipv6.com shows I have working ipv4
and ipv6 10/10 on both tests. Interestingly enough I was only seeing 3G on
the device at the time.
So I guess its not just on LTE or is it LTE devices ?
I'm running galaxy nexus on vz with stock jelly bean from the recent
On 9/27/12 8:52 AM, Jason Fesler wrote:
Safari on the iPad seems to be preferring A over if a hostname has
both, though. I can browse to a bracketed IPv6 address so it is working.
I think perhaps it is time to update test-ipv6.com a bit, and have it
penalize the first number when IPv4
On Sep 27, 2012, at 11:00 AM, chris wrote:
I tested today just for giggles, test-ipv6.com shows I have working ipv4
and ipv6 10/10 on both tests. Interestingly enough I was only seeing 3G on
the device at the time.
So I guess its not just on LTE or is it LTE devices ?
I'm running galaxy
Justin M. Streiner
On Thu, 20 Sep 2012, TJ wrote:
My understanding, and experience (albeit with Android), is that all
VZW LTE
is IPv6-capable.
I'd love to hear if Apple or VZW is at fault here, or if something
weird is
happening ...
I don't know about Apple devices on VZW, but
On Thu, Sep 20, 2012 at 10:15 PM, PC paul4...@gmail.com wrote:
Please don't hack or ddos it :-)
Unfortunately, while you do get an ipv6 address, mobile terminated data
doesn't work, so you don't have to worry about this. It is firewalled by
Verizon.
T-Mobile USA allows mobile terminated
So I'm back at the office this morning and the iPad is *not* getting an
IPv6 address but is showing LTE service. It did do IPv6 over LTE at home
so it's not a device problem. So I suppose the closest tower to my
office is not IPv6 enabled.
Is this an expected behavior in some areas or something
Quoting Randy Carpenter rcar...@network1.net:
Safari is definitely preferring IPv4.
In a happier note, if you tether a device via hotspot on an IOS6 iPad, the
clients get native IPv6. Strangely, they get addresses out of the
same /64 as the iPad's LTE interface. Anyone know how that is
Does Verizon have IPv6 on their LTE network everywhere or is it limited
to specific regions? I ask because I have a Verizon LTE iPad just
upgraded to iOS6 (which supposedly added this capability), but it's not
getting an IPv6 address on the LTE interface. Or does Verizon now need
to authorize
My understanding, and experience (albeit with Android), is that all VZW LTE
is IPv6-capable.
I'd love to hear if Apple or VZW is at fault here, or if something weird is
happening ...
/TJ
On Sep 20, 2012 8:28 PM, Seth Mattinen se...@rollernet.us wrote:
Does Verizon have IPv6 on their LTE
I'm also curious about this.
Jared Mauch
On Sep 20, 2012, at 8:26 PM, Seth Mattinen se...@rollernet.us wrote:
Does Verizon have IPv6 on their LTE network everywhere or is it limited
to specific regions? I ask because I have a Verizon LTE iPad just
upgraded to iOS6 (which supposedly added
On Sep 20, 2012 5:27 PM, Seth Mattinen se...@rollernet.us wrote:
Does Verizon have IPv6 on their LTE network everywhere or is it limited
to specific regions? I ask because I have a Verizon LTE iPad just
upgraded to iOS6 (which supposedly added this capability), but it's not
getting an IPv6
Oh... It works...
Your IPv4 address on the public Internet appears to be 70.194.10.15
Your IPv6 address on the public Internet appears to be
2600:1007:b010:a057:d91a:7d40:9871:f1a3
10/11 tests run
On Sep 20, 2012, at 8:26 PM, Seth Mattinen se...@rollernet.us wrote:
Does Verizon have IPv6
On Sep 20, 2012, at 8:39 PM, Cameron Byrne cb.li...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 20, 2012 5:27 PM, Seth Mattinen se...@rollernet.us wrote:
Does Verizon have IPv6 on their LTE network everywhere or is it limited
to specific regions? I ask because I have a Verizon LTE iPad just
upgraded to iOS6
On Sep 20, 2012 5:45 PM, Jared Mauch ja...@puck.nether.net wrote:
Oh... It works...
Your IPv4 address on the public Internet appears to be 70.194.10.15
Your IPv6 address on the public Internet appears to be
2600:1007:b010:a057:d91a:7d40:9871:f1a3
10/11 tests run
Cool!
That is from an
On Sep 20, 2012, at 8:49 PM, Cameron Byrne cb.li...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 20, 2012 5:45 PM, Jared Mauch ja...@puck.nether.net wrote:
Oh... It works...
Your IPv4 address on the public Internet appears to be 70.194.10.15
Your IPv6 address on the public Internet appears to be
thank god for unlimited 4g on vz :) hold onto it while you can they are
trying hard to kill it!
On Thu, Sep 20, 2012 at 8:58 PM, Jared Mauch ja...@puck.nether.net wrote:
On Sep 20, 2012, at 8:49 PM, Cameron Byrne cb.li...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sep 20, 2012 5:45 PM, Jared Mauch
One other thing... When on non-v6 wifi, it appears to still be using LTE for
v6... (At least according to test-ipv6.com)
This could result in some unexpected usage patterns..
- Jared
On Sep 20, 2012, at 8:49 PM, Cameron Byrne cb.li...@gmail.com wrote:
Cool!
That is from an ipad on vzw
On 9/20/12 5:39 PM, Cameron Byrne wrote:
Your problem is likely with Apple, they have not yet supported ipv6 on
the cellular interface afaik.
Well, that's true under iOS 5, but iOS 6 released yesterday (and
assuming you have a third gen iPad with LTE) was supposed to correct
that. It runs
Huh, so I come home and now I'm getting IPv6 from Verizon LTE. But I
definitely wasn't at the office. I verified with an app called IT
Tools that shows the interfaces and routing table, plus it does
traceroute/ping. Maybe the nearest tower over there doesn't support
IPv6? Odd.
Running
On 9/20/12 6:33 PM, Seth Mattinen wrote:
Huh, so I come home and now I'm getting IPv6 from Verizon LTE. But I
definitely wasn't at the office. I verified with an app called IT
Tools that shows the interfaces and routing table, plus it does
traceroute/ping. Maybe the nearest tower over there
Did Apple use their version of Happy Eyeballs on the iPads?
ISTR they cache certain timeouts, so if IPv6 was failing before it may take
awhile for it to become preferred again.
/TJ
On Thu, Sep 20, 2012 at 9:37 PM, Seth Mattinen se...@rollernet.us wrote:
On 9/20/12 6:33 PM, Seth Mattinen
On 9/20/12 6:47 PM, TJ wrote:
Did Apple use their version of Happy Eyeballs on the iPads?
ISTR they cache certain timeouts, so if IPv6 was failing before it may take
awhile for it to become preferred again.
Well, I can try creating a new DNS record that never existed before and see.
~Seth
On 9/20/12 6:47 PM, TJ wrote:
Did Apple use their version of Happy Eyeballs on the iPads?
ISTR they cache certain timeouts, so if IPv6 was failing before it may take
awhile for it to become preferred again.
It seems you may be correct.
~Seth
Safari is definitely preferring IPv4.
In a happier note, if you tether a device via hotspot on an IOS6 iPad, the
clients get native IPv6. Strangely, they get addresses out of the same /64 as
the iPad's LTE interface. Anyone know how that is working? I would have thought
they would use
On Thu, 20 Sep 2012, TJ wrote:
My understanding, and experience (albeit with Android), is that all VZW LTE
is IPv6-capable.
I'd love to hear if Apple or VZW is at fault here, or if something weird is
happening ...
I don't know about Apple devices on VZW, but my Android phone definitely
has
On Thu, 20 Sep 2012, Randy Carpenter wrote:
In a happier note, if you tether a device via hotspot on an IOS6 iPad,
the clients get native IPv6. Strangely, they get addresses out of the
same /64 as the iPad's LTE interface. Anyone know how that is working? I
would have thought they would use
Please don't hack or ddos it :-)
Unfortunately, while you do get an ipv6 address, mobile terminated data
doesn't work, so you don't have to worry about this. It is firewalled by
Verizon.
I actually tried to set up a VPN on a LTE data card using the ipv6 address
since the IPV4 one is behind
* PC
One more tip: IPv6 will work over the legacy 3g network. Don't ask me
much about it, but it tunnels it using eHRPD to the same IP/IPv6 headend
to enable seamless EVDO/LTE handover.
Interesting. Does this happens only if you start out in LTE coverage and
then roam onto EV-DO, or does
On Fri, 21 Sep 2012, Tore Anderson wrote:
I wonder if there will be similar magic provided for UMTS/LTE networks..
I doubt it. The path there should be to upgrade GSM/UMTS network to
release 9 and support v4v6 pdp context and then you don't need any magic
at all (as far as I can tell).
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