[Bug 100108] Re: IPv6 disappeared

2008-03-07 Thread Martijn van de Streek
** Changed in: module-init-tools (Ubuntu) Status: New => Fix Released -- IPv6 disappeared https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/100108 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu

[Bug 100108] Re: IPv6 disappeared

2007-06-18 Thread Martijn van de Streek
It re-appeared before release, this bug can be close. -- IPv6 disappeared https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/100108 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is the bug contact for Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://list

[Bug 100108] Re: IPv6 disappeared

2007-04-18 Thread Nautilus
Agreed. It may be prudent to point out that Internet Protocol version 6 is the *current* Internet Standard Protocol. IPv4 is now deprecated. Catering to hardware which is not standards compliant is not the technical responsibility of the operating system, and moreover, it is certainly unacceptab

[Bug 100108] Re: IPv6 disappeared

2007-04-02 Thread Martijn van de Streek
The problem is not in the hardware, the problem is in the DNS servers that don't reply to requests, instead of properly replying NXDOMAIN or some other error code. The right fix might be to fix the resolver to look up ipv6 only after ipv4 lookup has failed, and/or to be more explicitly config

[Bug 100108] Re: IPv6 disappeared

2007-04-02 Thread Mark Schouten
Ipv6 is broken this way. When using autoconfiguration, after a reboot, services which have ipv6-support configured won't start anymore. Also other progs expecting ipv6 complain about the lack of it. It seems that the choice of putting ipv6 in the blacklist isn't one that's really beent thought thro

[Bug 100108] Re: IPv6 disappeared

2007-04-02 Thread Scott James Remnant
IPv6 support hasn't been removed, it's still supported, but it must be explicitly enabled. This is also true of other major operating systems, they don't enable it by default (that I'm aware of) because it causes problems. Most cheap commodity hardware, e.g. routers, DSL modems, etc. do not under