nanog mailing list archives
RE: Ipv6 for the content provider
From: "George Bonser" <gbonser () seven com>
Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2011 10:39:46 -0800
From: Charles N Wyble Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2011 10:23 AM To: nanog () nanog org Subject: Ipv6 for the content provider For the most part, I'm a data center/application administrator/content provider kind of guy. As such, I want to provide all my web content over ipv6, and support ipv6 SMTP. What are folks doing in this regard? Do I just need to assign ip addresses to my servers, add AAAA records to my DNS server and that's it? I'm running PowerDNS for DNS, Apache for WWW. Postfix for SMTP. Feel free to point me at any good manuals and say RTFM :)
Most load balancers these days will allow you to provision an IPv6 virtual IP that balances to v4 servers. So you can provide services over v6 without a lot of changes inside your network. You will need a DNS server that hands out AAAA records though.
Current thread:
- Ipv6 for the content provider Charles N Wyble (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Jack Carrozzo (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Dale W. Carder (Jan 26)
- RE: Ipv6 for the content provider George Bonser (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Owen DeLong (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider David Freedman (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Owen DeLong (Jan 26)
- RE: Ipv6 for the content provider George Bonser (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Owen DeLong (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Owen DeLong (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Bill Stewart (Jan 28)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Owen DeLong (Jan 28)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider George B. (Jan 29)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider Jack Carrozzo (Jan 26)
- Re: Ipv6 for the content provider LorĂ¡nd Jakab (Jan 26)