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IPv6 Friendly ISPs?

ps asks: "In light of our recent discussions, does anyone know of an IPv6 capable ISP? DSL, cable, dialup even? Googling for this only shows one ISP in Japan that has IPv6."

8 of 61 comments (clear)

  1. Learn! by addaon · · Score: 3, Informative

    For those of you about to ask why anyone would care about IPv6... well, we've all heard the answers, mostly larger address space (sounds surprisingly familiar to the 32-bit / 64-bit bickering we hear). If you're really interested, though, and want to see why it matters to you as a developer or IT person, I think IPv6 Essentials is a good, though not great, read. Developers will be disappointed but educated; sysadmins will be pleased and educated.

    --

    I've had this sig for three days.
  2. Currently only tunnel brokers by Richard_at_work · · Score: 3, Informative

    I think currently there are only tunnel brokers who have a good eye on the IPv6 implementation for use by the general public. You may find that some of them do IPv6 native dialup, which is what the one i help run is considering providing.

    Most ISPs will allow you to use gif tunneliing, or another form of tunneling so you can have tunneled ipv6 access via a tunnel broker, but beware, if your ISP bans vpns, they may take this as a vpn also (totally out of context) and stop all traffic.

    Someone else on this story mentioned Oreillys IPv6 Essentials, which i also recommend. Its ISBN number is: 0-596-00125-8. It covers all you need to know, and more, so by the time you start actually using ipv6 rather than jsut running it alongside ipv4 on your lan, it works a treat.

    Disclaimer: I help run ipng.org.uk, a UK ipv6 tunnel broker.

  3. Re:You don't need an ISP, use a 6to4 tunnel by foom · · Score: 5, Informative
    Oh yes, I forgot, I also found a bunch of links that might be useful to anyone wanting to set up IPv6, so here they are:
  4. Re:I might be wrong but... by foom · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yep there is. Almost every OS includes those tools now. ping6, traceroute6, host -t AAAA name, telnet, etc.

    Linux has them. Windows XP has them. MacOSX has them. xBSD has them (at least some of the xBSDs that is, I don't use them so I don't really know).

    If you're using debian, apt-get install iputils-tracepath iputils-ping iputils-arping iproute.

    That'll give you the traceroute6, ping6, tracepath6. It also gives you the "ip" command which is a replacement for ifconfig and route and a couple more things. nslookup and dig and host all will find IPv6 addresses, if you specify to do so by asking for records of type "AAAA" (in MacOSX, it finds them by default, but seemingly not in linux). Both telnet and ssh work fine.

  5. Tunnel with freenet6 by kylegordon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Use http://www.freenet6.net to get yourself a free tunneling link to the 6bone. They'll also give you a /48 subnet if you tweak a few bits.
    Plenty of clients available too. In Debian, simply apt-get it from your closest mirror ;-)

  6. In Austria there are already IPv6 ISPs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    in austria you can use ATnet who seem to offer IPv6 since 1999. Their homepage is at
    http://www.atnet.at/produkte/internetzugang/ipv6.h tml

  7. Dutch ISP xs4all offers it at no extra charge by OttoM · · Score: 2, Informative
    Checkout this announcement,

    I'm using it here for some months.

  8. Link to Article Summarising Issue by sepluv · · Score: 3, Informative

    There seem to be very few ISP's. Although I'd loved to see a large and quick take-up, the change-over will probably take many years and probably a decade or decades. There is a good concise article summarising the advantages of IPv6, Understanding IPv6 from PC Network Advisor [PDF], which I think every1 should read. The Google cache has a HTML version .

    --
    Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley
    [This post is in the public domain (copyright-free) unless otherwise stated]