From ocl at gih.com Wed Jun 8 01:36:59 2011 From: ocl at gih.com (Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond) Date: Wed, 08 Jun 2011 02:36:59 +0200 Subject: [IPv6crawler-wg] Fwd: IPv6 Matrix Test results published for IPv6 Day Message-ID: <4DEEC42B.8020809@gih.com> FYI -------- Message original -------- Sujet: IPv6 Matrix Test results published for IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 08 Jun 2011 02:23:37 +0200 De : Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond Pour : IPv6 operators forum Please distribute widely. Apologies for cross-posting. LONDON - 8 June 2011 In preparation for the World IPv6 Day on 8th June 2011, the English Chapter of the Internet Society has released the latest figures from its IPv6 Matrix Project, showing the level of IPv6 connectivity amongst the world's 1 million busiest Web sites. A summary of those results can be found in its latest report, freely downloadable from: http://www.ipv6matrix.org/reports IPv6 reachable content needs to be available in order for IPv6 traffic to pick-up on the Internet. The IPv6 Matrix Project consists of a crawler testing connectivity to the world's busiest Web sites. Those are responsible for more than 95% of the Internet's traffic. The report shows that only a very small minority of Web sites are currently accessible using IPv6. Although figures worldwide show an increase in percentage of "dual stack" (IPv4 and IPv6) connectivity, this is so low that it can be compared to the Internet's early days, before the mid nineties rush triggered by the invention of Web Browsing. It is hoped that a significant rise in IPv6 connectivity will be observed after the World IPv6 Day, meaning that experimental connectivity on the day was found to be stable enough for corporations to keep their Web site running IPv6. The current results, finalised at the end of April 2011, were compared with September 2010 results. A sharp rise was found in countries where a main Web Hosting provider has upgraded to a dual stack infrastructure, but in most cases, the rise amounted to nothing more than a glitch in absolute values. In general, Europe leads the way, with Asia following, then the American continent, and finally Africa. Considering the advanced stage of exhaustion in the current IPv4 addressing scheme, the figures for IPv6 are very poor. The IPv6 Matrix Project ( http://www.ipv6matrix.org ) is an ISOC England managed project, supported by the Internet Society and other sponsors, collecting vital IPv6 network data since July 2010. To-date more than 70Gb of real networking data has been stored by this unique project for future analysis. The aim of the project is to track the overall natural spread of a new technology on the Internet, showing early and late adopters of technology worldwide. It also aims to trigger a wake-up call to countries noticing the advanced network infrastructure of their neighbours. For all enquiries, contact: contact at isoc-e.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ocl at gih.com Wed Jun 8 22:07:55 2011 From: ocl at gih.com (Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond) Date: Wed, 08 Jun 2011 23:07:55 +0200 Subject: [IPv6crawler-wg] Fwd: Re: [LAC-TF] Funny IPv6 Addresses Message-ID: <4DEFE4AB.6060202@gih.com> An interesting (funny) thread, although in Spanish. The Sprint address is really short. I wonder whether this means that some ISPs will get just a prefix. it sounds like a surprising thing, a little like Class A addresses given in the past to early Internet adopters. Are we going down the path of address wastage? Kind regards, Olivier -------- Message original -------- Sujet: Re: [LAC-TF] Funny IPv6 Addresses Date : Wed, 08 Jun 2011 15:55:41 -0400 De : Hugo Salgado R?pondre ? : lactf at lac.ipv6tf.org Pour : lactf at lacnic.net Esta no es muy divertida, pero qui?n dijo que las IPv6 eran m?s dif?ciles de recordar que IPv4? :) sprint.net -> 2600:: Hugo On 06/08/2011 01:48 PM, Carlos Martinez-Cagnazzo wrote: > A mi las que me gustan son las que incluyen: > > ::cafe:caca > o > ::dead:beef > > Supe usar en otra vdia una workstation Sun (una Netra viejita) cuyo > host id era :ca:ca:fe, no se si era natural o producto del humor > del sysadmin anterior. > > :-) > > 2011/6/8 Jorge Amodio : >> En cualquier momento saltan los abogados a reclamar que esas son >> direcciones registrados con propiedad intelectual y nadie las va a >> poder usar aun cuando el prefijo de red sea distinto :-) >> >> Habr? que iniciar un PDP en ICANN al respecto ? Propongo organizar una >> conferencia en Aruba para discutirlo ... >> >> Cheers >> Jorge >> >> On Wed, Jun 8, 2011 at 4:34 AM, Arturo Servin wrote: >>> >>> Facebook; >>> 2620::1c18:0:face:b00c:0:1 >>> >>> BBC: >>> 2001:4b10:bbc::2 >>> >>> Cisco: >>> 2001:420:80:1:c:15c0:d06:f00d >>> >>> Others: >>> 2001:630:d0:f103::c0:ffee >>> >>> >>> Slds, >>> -as >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> LACTF mailing list >>> LACTF at lacnic.net >>> https://mail.lacnic.net/mailman/listinfo/lactf >>> >> _______________________________________________ >> LACTF mailing list >> LACTF at lacnic.net >> https://mail.lacnic.net/mailman/listinfo/lactf >> > > > _______________________________________________ LACTF mailing list LACTF at lacnic.net https://mail.lacnic.net/mailman/listinfo/lactf -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ocl at gih.com Thu Jun 9 08:58:53 2011 From: ocl at gih.com (Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond) Date: Thu, 09 Jun 2011 09:58:53 +0200 Subject: [IPv6crawler-wg] Fwd: RE: IPv6 Day Message-ID: <4DF07D3D.9040707@gih.com> FYI - as a follow-up to yesterday's IPv6 Day. The UK sadly shines by its connectivity problems with Nominet affected apparently. Kind regards, Olivier -------- Message original -------- Sujet: RE: IPv6 Day Date : Thu, 9 Jun 2011 03:08:53 -0400 De : Standeford, Dugie Pour : Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond Good morning, Olivier. Here's today's Washington Internet Daily with the story. Best, Dugie -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: wwid060911.pdf Type: application/pdf Size: 86801 bytes Desc: not available URL: From cdel at firsthand.net Thu Jun 9 16:44:44 2011 From: cdel at firsthand.net (Christian de Larrinaga) Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2011 16:44:44 +0100 Subject: [IPv6crawler-wg] IPv6 Day In-Reply-To: <4DF07D3D.9040707@gih.com> References: <4DF07D3D.9040707@gih.com> Message-ID: You been experiencing any problems getting mail out to Des? The day is about finding and working on those sort of issues. I think there needs to be several more IPv6 testing days as there is a lot lot more that needs to be done. This is not helped with the demand for everything in the v6 net to work at least as well as v4 even for features that v6 solves and not needed. Slavish following to v4 ways is something v4 aware engineers need to build confidence in v6 enough to embrace a different way. This transition is tough. I've not had any comment on problems reaching www.isoc-e.org on v6 or v4. Still there is time .... Christian On 9 Jun 2011, at 08:58, Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond wrote: > FYI - as a follow-up to yesterday's IPv6 Day. > The UK sadly shines by its connectivity problems with Nominet affected apparently. > Kind regards, > > Olivier > > -------- Message original -------- > Sujet: RE: IPv6 Day > Date : Thu, 9 Jun 2011 03:08:53 -0400 > De : Standeford, Dugie > Pour : Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond > > Good morning, Olivier. > > Here's today's Washington Internet Daily with the story. > > Best, > > Dugie > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ocl at gih.com Thu Jun 9 17:07:02 2011 From: ocl at gih.com (Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond) Date: Thu, 09 Jun 2011 18:07:02 +0200 Subject: [IPv6crawler-wg] IPv6 Day In-Reply-To: References: <4DF07D3D.9040707@gih.com> Message-ID: <4DF0EFA6.4000505@gih.com> Le 09/06/2011 17:44, Christian de Larrinaga a ?crit : > I've not had any comment on problems reaching www.isoc-e.org > on v6 or v4. Still there is time .... ocl at elephant:~$ traceroute6 www.isoc-e.org traceroute to www.isoc-e.org (2001:41c8:1:6062::d46e:bc35), 30 hops max, 80 byte packets 1 isoc-eng-v6gw1.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::1) 1.078 ms 1.614 ms 2.096 ms 2 2001:a88:0:2::39 (2001:a88:0:2::39) 33.027 ms 33.125 ms 33.223 ms 3 g1-1-6-t40-cr1.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::da) 1.088 ms * * 4 g7-1-t6-cr2.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::56) 1.291 ms * * 5 g4-0-t6-br1.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::3e) 1.569 ms * * 6 2001:7f8:4:1::8a61:1 (2001:7f8:4:1::8a61:1) 6.114 ms 4.785 ms 4.862 ms 7 2001:41c8:0:82::1 (2001:41c8:0:82::1) 162.196 ms 162.553 ms 162.640 ms 8 romana.bytemark.co.uk (2001:41c8:0:858::63) 8.059 ms 11.206 ms 11.122 ms 9 2001:41c8:1:6062::d46e:bc35 (2001:41c8:1:6062::d46e:bc35) 12.456 ms 8.932 ms 11.111 ms ocl at elephant:~$ Looks good! -- Olivier MJ Cr?pin-Leblond, PhD http://www.gih.com/ocl.html -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cdel at firsthand.net Thu Jun 9 17:22:10 2011 From: cdel at firsthand.net (Christian de Larrinaga) Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2011 17:22:10 +0100 Subject: [IPv6crawler-wg] Routing IPv6 ISOC-E.org - Re: IPv6 Day In-Reply-To: <4DF0EFA6.4000505@gih.com> References: <4DF07D3D.9040707@gih.com> <4DF0EFA6.4000505@gih.com> Message-ID: <6FCC2E11-F89A-4D4A-8423-1CE8C06663CD@firsthand.net> Well the route via that safe pair of hands David Freedman is certainly helpful. thanks David! (just polling experiences of dual stack to the local ISOC chapter site and services.) Would welcome your insights on what happened and recommendations for going forward following World IPv6 Day! best Christian Christian de Larrinaga On 9 Jun 2011, at 17:07, Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond wrote: > > > Le 09/06/2011 17:44, Christian de Larrinaga a ?crit : >> >> I've not had any comment on problems reaching www.isoc-e.org on v6 or v4. Still there is time .... > > ocl at elephant:~$ traceroute6 www.isoc-e.org > traceroute to www.isoc-e.org (2001:41c8:1:6062::d46e:bc35), 30 hops max, 80 byte packets > 1 isoc-eng-v6gw1.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::1) 1.078 ms 1.614 ms 2.096 ms > 2 2001:a88:0:2::39 (2001:a88:0:2::39) 33.027 ms 33.125 ms 33.223 ms > 3 g1-1-6-t40-cr1.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::da) 1.088 ms * * > 4 g7-1-t6-cr2.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::56) 1.291 ms * * > 5 g4-0-t6-br1.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::3e) 1.569 ms * * > 6 2001:7f8:4:1::8a61:1 (2001:7f8:4:1::8a61:1) 6.114 ms 4.785 ms 4.862 ms > 7 2001:41c8:0:82::1 (2001:41c8:0:82::1) 162.196 ms 162.553 ms 162.640 ms > 8 romana.bytemark.co.uk (2001:41c8:0:858::63) 8.059 ms 11.206 ms 11.122 ms > 9 2001:41c8:1:6062::d46e:bc35 (2001:41c8:1:6062::d46e:bc35) 12.456 ms 8.932 ms 11.111 ms > ocl at elephant:~$ > > > Looks good! > -- > Olivier MJ Cr?pin-Leblond, PhD > http://www.gih.com/ocl.html -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ocl at gih.com Thu Jun 9 17:57:52 2011 From: ocl at gih.com (Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond) Date: Thu, 09 Jun 2011 18:57:52 +0200 Subject: [IPv6crawler-wg] Routing problems resolved on IPv6 Day Message-ID: <4DF0FB90.20400@gih.com> Hello All, one good thing about IPv6 day is that if there was any kind of routing problem, because everybody was watching, those were resolved fast. For example, have a look at this thread, which I have pasted back together - taking the www.ipv6matrix.org upstream routing transient problem issue which appeared from time to time. Throughout the day, the IPv6-ops list was kept very busy. I never told anyone on the list about the occasional problem, but since we had a lot of exposure yesterday, someone picked this up quite spontaneously. Please see the chronology of things below (whilst of course keeping in mind that the chaps at 2020Media, our hosting provider, were also enquiring directly with their upstream about what was going on) If there was one take-away for this IPv6 day, it's that a lot of small problems like this were fixed in a matter of hours, and that was really great! :-) Kind regards, Olivier --- start here --- -------- Message original -------- Sujet: Re: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 08 Jun 2011 08:14:45 +0300 De : Tassos Chatzithomaoglou Pour : IPv6-OPS Seeing some ping-pong issues with www.ipv6matrix.org on NewNet. >tracert www.ipv6matrix.org Tracing route to elephant.ipv6matrix.org [2a00:19e8:20:1::aa] over a maximum of 30 hops: 1 <1 ms <1 ms <1 ms 2a02:2148:100:902::1 2 163 ms 64 ms 33 ms 2a02:2148:77:77:2::6 3 94 ms 34 ms 34 ms 2a02:2148:2:2000::1 4 88 ms 170 ms 90 ms 20gigabitethernet4-3.core1.fra1.he.net [2001:7f8::1b1b:0:1] 5 140 ms 97 ms 97 ms 10gigabitethernet5-3.core1.lon1.he.net [2001:470:0:1d2::1] 6 99 ms 159 ms 98 ms 2001:7f8:4::23e7:1 7 99 ms 115 ms 201 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 8 115 ms 98 ms 97 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 9 98 ms 98 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 10 102 ms 97 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 11 122 ms 97 ms 192 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 12 98 ms 132 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 13 99 ms 97 ms 97 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 14 195 ms 98 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 15 98 ms 97 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 16 97 ms 98 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 17 99 ms 98 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 18 129 ms 98 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 19 99 ms 98 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 20 98 ms 109 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 21 99 ms 97 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 22 98 ms 139 ms 98 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 23 99 ms 99 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 24 99 ms 99 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 25 99 ms 98 ms 155 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 26 100 ms 99 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 27 100 ms 123 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 28 99 ms 98 ms 132 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 29 99 ms 99 ms 99 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 30 102 ms 222 ms 213 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 Trace complete. -- Tassos -------- Message original -------- Sujet: RE: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 8 Jun 2011 00:22:12 -0500 De : Frank Bulk R?pondre ? : frnkblk at iname.com Pour : 'Tassos Chatzithomaoglou' , IPv6-OPS Perhaps not anymore? nagios:/tmp# traceroute6 www.ipv6matrix.org traceroute to www.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa), 30 hops max, 80 byte packets 1 2607:fe28:0:1003::2 (2607:fe28:0:1003::2) 3.923 ms 4.353 ms 5.383 ms 2 router-core.mtcnet.net (2607:fe28:0:1000::1) 6.074 ms 6.372 ms 6.713 ms 3 sxct.movl.mtcnet.net (2607:fe28:11:1002::194) 8.271 ms 8.516 ms 9.341 ms 4 v6-siouxcenter.movl.153.netins.net (2001:5f8:7f06::9) 16.877 ms 17.124 ms 17.332 ms 5 v6-ins-kb1-et-11-6-307.kmrr.netins.net (2001:5f8:2:2::1) 20.513 ms 20.781 ms 21.116 ms 6 v6-ins-kc1-te-9-2.kmrr.netins.net (2001:5f8::10:1) 21.508 ms 17.599 ms 17.863 ms 7 sl-crs4-chi-te0-2-0-1.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:4::6) 26.898 ms 26.054 ms 26.249 ms 8 sl-crs3-chi-po0-1-2-0.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:0:2:1239:144:232:3:143) 27.093 ms 26.052 ms 26.103 ms 9 sl-st30-chi-po0-4-0-0.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:0:2:1239:144:232:8:184) 26.206 ms 20.901 ms 23.879 ms 10 * * * 11 10gigabitethernet7-2.core1.nyc4.he.net (2001:470:0:1c6::1) 63.056 ms 64.132 ms 63.923 ms 12 10gigabitethernet3-3.core1.lon1.he.net (2001:470:0:128::2) 131.639 ms 131.642 ms 132.250 ms 13 * * * 14 2a01:178:9191:3::17 (2a01:178:9191:3::17) 133.774 ms 134.849 ms 134.514 ms 15 2a01:178:500::6 (2a01:178:500::6) 128.390 ms 128.413 ms 128.602 ms 16 2a00:19e8::1:d (2a00:19e8::1:d) 128.893 ms 127.646 ms 127.683 ms 17 2a00:19e8::1:5 (2a00:19e8::1:5) 127.557 ms 126.850 ms * 18 elephant.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa) 128.325 ms 127.747 ms 127.941 ms nagios:/tmp# -------- Message original -------- Sujet: Re: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 08 Jun 2011 08:57:56 +0300 De : Tassos Chatzithomaoglou Pour : IPv6-OPS ping-pong is still on... Judging from your output, hop 13 must be LINX (hop 6 in my output). Then going through 2a01:178:9191:3::17 in your output vs 2a01:178:9191:3::200 in my output. Trying a trace on LINX LG (226.x peers), it returns your path. Trying a trace on LINX LG (224.x peers), it returns my path (or "Command timed out"). Looking Glass Query results Type escape sequence to abort. Tracing the route to elephant.ipv6matrix.org (2A00:19E8:20:1::AA) 1 2001:7F8:4::23E7:1 4 msec 0 msec 0 msec 2 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 0 msec 0 msec 3 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec 4 msec 0 msec 4 2A01:178:9191:3::200 0 msec 0 msec 0 msec 5 2A01:178:9191:3::1 8 msec 4 msec 4 msec 6 2A01:178:9191:3::200 0 msec 0 msec 0 msec 7 2A01:178:9191:3::1 4 msec 4 msec 0 msec 8 2A01:178:9191:3::200 0 msec 0 msec 0 msec 9 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec 4 msec * 10 2A01:178:9191:3::200 0 msec 4 msec 0 msec 11 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec 4 msec 0 msec 12 2A01:178:9191:3::200 0 msec 0 msec 0 msec 13 2A01:178:9191:3::1 4 msec 0 msec 0 msec 14 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 0 msec 4 msec 15 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec 4 msec * 16 2A01:178:9191:3::200 0 msec 0 msec 0 msec 17 2A01:178:9191:3::1 4 msec 0 msec 0 msec 18 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 4 msec 4 msec 19 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec 20 msec 0 msec 20 2A01:178:9191:3::200 0 msec 0 msec 4 msec 21 * 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec 4 msec 22 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 0 msec 4 msec 23 2A01:178:9191:3::1 8 msec 4 msec 4 msec 24 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 4 msec 4 msec 25 2A01:178:9191:3::1 8 msec 4 msec 4 msec 26 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 0 msec 8 msec 27 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec * 4 msec 28 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 0 msec 0 msec 29 2A01:178:9191:3::1 0 msec 4 msec 4 msec 30 2A01:178:9191:3::200 4 msec 0 msec 0 msec Destination not found inside max hopcount diameter. -- Tassos -------- Message original -------- Sujet: Re: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 08 Jun 2011 09:19:11 +0300 De : Valeriu Vraciu Organisation : RoEduNet Pour : Tassos Chatzithomaoglou Copie ? : IPv6-OPS Hi, Traceroute6 from AS2614 looks like this: bwt:~/tmp/# date Wed Jun 8 09:13:34 EEST 2011 bwt:~/tmp/# traceroute6 www.ipv6matrix.org traceroute to www.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa), 30 hops max, 40 byte packets 1 2001:b30:1::1 (2001:b30:1::1) 0.549 ms 0.604 ms 0.710 ms 2 2001:b30:0:5::1 (2001:b30:0:5::1) 0.379 ms 0.506 ms 0.579 ms 3 te-4-3.br1.nat.roedu.net (2001:b30:0:b::1) 1.760 ms * * 4 buca-b1-link.telia.net (2001:2000:3080:14b::1) 0.412 ms 0.484 ms 0.470 ms 5 s-fre-i28-v6.telia.net (2001:2000:3018:29::1) 58.488 ms 58.571 ms 58.695 ms 6 s-fre-i28-v6.telia.net (2001:2000:3018:29::1) 58.778 ms 58.697 ms 58.074 ms 7 2001:2000:3080::2 (2001:2000:3080::2) 82.394 ms * * 8 ten1-0-0.t40-cr1.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::119) 82.530 ms * * 9 g4-1-t40-br2.ipv6.router.uk.clara.net (2001:a88:0:1::d9) 82.557 ms 82.495 ms 106.984 ms 10 2001:a88:0:2::3a (2001:a88:0:2::3a) 83.676 ms 83.729 ms 83.778 ms 11 elephant.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa) 83.080 ms 83.079 ms 83.031 ms -------- Message original -------- Sujet: RE: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 8 Jun 2011 09:20:50 +0200 De : Johan REMY Pour : IPv6-OPS >From the same computer but two different IPv6, I get different result (as16347 for both). One is working and the other is looping between "2a01:178:9191:3::200" and "2a01:178:9191:3::1" Maybe there is loadbalancing based and source IPv6 and one the router doesn't know the right route ? The first one : 10 14 ms 23 ms 24 ms 10gigabitethernet1-3.core1.lon1.he.net [2001:470:0:42::1] 11 14 ms 14 ms 14 ms 2001:7f8:4::23e7:1 12 13 ms 14 ms 13 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 13 14 ms 14 ms 14 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 14 14 ms 13 ms 13 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 15 15 ms 14 ms 14 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::1 16 14 ms 14 ms 14 ms 2a01:178:9191:3::200 Etc... The other one (same computer, same /64 but different IPv6) : 10: 2001:470:0:42::1 12.006ms asymm 9 11: 2001:7f8:4::23e7:1 20.010ms asymm 10 12: 2a01:178:9191:3::200 16.008ms asymm 11 13: 2a01:178:9191:3::1 16.008ms asymm 10 14: 2a01:178:9191:3::17 16.008ms asymm 11 15: 2a01:178:500::6 16.008ms asymm 12 16: 2a00:19e8::1:d 20.010ms asymm 13 17: 2a00:19e8::1:5 20.010ms asymm 13 18: 2a00:19e8:20:1::aa 20.010ms reached Johan REMY -------- Message original -------- Sujet: Re: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 08 Jun 2011 10:42:51 +0200 (CEST) De : sthaug at nethelp.no Pour : frnkblk at iname.com Copie ? : ipv6-ops at lists.cluenet.de, achatz at forthnet.gr > Perhaps not anymore? > > nagios:/tmp# traceroute6 www.ipv6matrix.org > traceroute to www.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa), 30 hops max, 80 byte > packets > 1 2607:fe28:0:1003::2 (2607:fe28:0:1003::2) 3.923 ms 4.353 ms 5.383 ms > 2 router-core.mtcnet.net (2607:fe28:0:1000::1) 6.074 ms 6.372 ms 6.713 > ms > 3 sxct.movl.mtcnet.net (2607:fe28:11:1002::194) 8.271 ms 8.516 ms 9.341 > ms > 4 v6-siouxcenter.movl.153.netins.net (2001:5f8:7f06::9) 16.877 ms 17.124 > ms 17.332 ms > 5 v6-ins-kb1-et-11-6-307.kmrr.netins.net (2001:5f8:2:2::1) 20.513 ms > 20.781 ms 21.116 ms > 6 v6-ins-kc1-te-9-2.kmrr.netins.net (2001:5f8::10:1) 21.508 ms 17.599 ms > 17.863 ms > 7 sl-crs4-chi-te0-2-0-1.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:4::6) 26.898 ms 26.054 > ms 26.249 ms > 8 sl-crs3-chi-po0-1-2-0.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:0:2:1239:144:232:3:143) > 27.093 ms 26.052 ms 26.103 ms > 9 sl-st30-chi-po0-4-0-0.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:0:2:1239:144:232:8:184) > 26.206 ms 20.901 ms 23.879 ms > 10 * * * > 11 10gigabitethernet7-2.core1.nyc4.he.net (2001:470:0:1c6::1) 63.056 ms > 64.132 ms 63.923 ms > 12 10gigabitethernet3-3.core1.lon1.he.net (2001:470:0:128::2) 131.639 ms > 131.642 ms 132.250 ms > 13 * * * > 14 2a01:178:9191:3::17 (2a01:178:9191:3::17) 133.774 ms 134.849 ms > 134.514 ms > 15 2a01:178:500::6 (2a01:178:500::6) 128.390 ms 128.413 ms 128.602 ms > 16 2a00:19e8::1:d (2a00:19e8::1:d) 128.893 ms 127.646 ms 127.683 ms > 17 2a00:19e8::1:5 (2a00:19e8::1:5) 127.557 ms 126.850 ms * > 18 elephant.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa) 128.325 ms 127.747 ms > 127.941 ms > nagios:/tmp# I reached it earlier today - now I'm getting a loop again: % traceroute6 www.ipv6matrix.org traceroute6 to elephant.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa) from 2001:8c0:9602:1::2, 64 hops max, 12 byte packets 1 ge0-0-0-10.ar1.skxy.no.catchbone.net 8.520 ms 9.092 ms 10.041 ms 2 ge0-0-2.cr2.osls.no.catchbone.net 10.360 ms 8.603 ms 10.351 ms 3 te2-3-0.br2.mejv.se.catchbone.net 16.740 ms 14.078 ms 15.490 ms 4 10gigabitethernet1-3.core1.sto1.he.net 15.663 ms 21.437 ms 24.854 ms 5 10gigabitethernet3-3.core1.fra1.he.net 42.632 ms 49.032 ms 50.749 ms 6 10gigabitethernet5-3.core1.lon1.he.net 51.215 ms 53.237 ms 50.208 ms 7 2001:7f8:4::23e7:1 54.859 ms 54.911 ms 55.031 ms 8 2a01:178:9191:3::200 54.223 ms 56.567 ms 53.365 ms 9 2a01:178:9191:3::1 54.974 ms 54.340 ms 54.929 ms 10 2a01:178:9191:3::200 54.552 ms 54.361 ms 55.203 ms 11 2a01:178:9191:3::1 57.085 ms 52.958 ms 55.140 ms Steinar Haug, Nethelp consulting, sthaug at nethelp.no -------- Message original -------- Sujet: Re: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 8 Jun 2011 11:38:50 +0200 De : Ignatios Souvatzis Pour : sthaug at nethelp.no Copie ? : achatz at forthnet.gr, ipv6-ops at lists.cluenet.de, frnkblk at iname.com Works from both "here"s at the moment. Work (DFN) -> clara.net -> 2001:a88:0:2::3a -> elephant Home (RH-TEC) -> 2a00:19ea::1:d -> elephant -is -------- Message original -------- Sujet: Re: Test your connectivity for World IPv6 Day Date : Wed, 08 Jun 2011 14:43:38 +0100 De : ben Pour : ipv6-ops at lists.cluenet.de >/ Perhaps not anymore? />/ />/ nagios:/tmp# traceroute6 www.ipv6matrix.org />/ traceroute to www.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa), 30 hops max, 80 byte />/ packets />/ 1 2607:fe28:0:1003::2 (2607:fe28:0:1003::2) 3.923 ms 4.353 ms 5.383 ms />/ 2 router-core.mtcnet.net (2607:fe28:0:1000::1) 6.074 ms 6.372 ms 6.713 />/ ms />/ 3 sxct.movl.mtcnet.net (2607:fe28:11:1002::194) 8.271 ms 8.516 ms 9.341 />/ ms />/ 4 v6-siouxcenter.movl.153.netins.net (2001:5f8:7f06::9) 16.877 ms 17.124 />/ ms 17.332 ms />/ 5 v6-ins-kb1-et-11-6-307.kmrr.netins.net (2001:5f8:2:2::1) 20.513 ms />/ 20.781 ms 21.116 ms />/ 6 v6-ins-kc1-te-9-2.kmrr.netins.net (2001:5f8::10:1) 21.508 ms 17.599 ms />/ 17.863 ms />/ 7 sl-crs4-chi-te0-2-0-1.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:4::6) 26.898 ms 26.054 />/ ms 26.249 ms />/ 8 sl-crs3-chi-po0-1-2-0.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:0:2:1239:144:232:3:143) />/ 27.093 ms 26.052 ms 26.103 ms />/ 9 sl-st30-chi-po0-4-0-0.v6.sprintlink.net (2600:0:2:1239:144:232:8:184) />/ 26.206 ms 20.901 ms 23.879 ms />/ 10 * * * />/ 11 10gigabitethernet7-2.core1.nyc4.he.net (2001:470:0:1c6::1) 63.056 ms />/ 64.132 ms 63.923 ms />/ 12 10gigabitethernet3-3.core1.lon1.he.net (2001:470:0:128::2) 131.639 ms />/ 131.642 ms 132.250 ms />/ 13 * * * />/ 14 2a01:178:9191:3::17 (2a01:178:9191:3::17) 133.774 ms 134.849 ms />/ 134.514 ms />/ 15 2a01:178:500::6 (2a01:178:500::6) 128.390 ms 128.413 ms 128.602 ms />/ 16 2a00:19e8::1:d (2a00:19e8::1:d) 128.893 ms 127.646 ms 127.683 ms />/ 17 2a00:19e8::1:5 (2a00:19e8::1:5) 127.557 ms 126.850 ms * />/ 18 elephant.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa) 128.325 ms 127.747 ms />/ 127.941 ms />/ nagios:/tmp# /> > I reached it earlier today - now I'm getting a loop again: > > % traceroute6 www.ipv6matrix.org > traceroute6 to elephant.ipv6matrix.org (2a00:19e8:20:1::aa) from 2001:8c0:9602:1::2, 64 hops max, 12 byte packets > 1 ge0-0-0-10.ar1.skxy.no.catchbone.net 8.520 ms 9.092 ms 10.041 ms > 2 ge0-0-2.cr2.osls.no.catchbone.net 10.360 ms 8.603 ms 10.351 ms > 3 te2-3-0.br2.mejv.se.catchbone.net 16.740 ms 14.078 ms 15.490 ms > 4 10gigabitethernet1-3.core1.sto1.he.net 15.663 ms 21.437 ms 24.854 ms > 5 10gigabitethernet3-3.core1.fra1.he.net 42.632 ms 49.032 ms 50.749 ms > 6 10gigabitethernet5-3.core1.lon1.he.net 51.215 ms 53.237 ms 50.208 ms > 7 2001:7f8:4::23e7:1 54.859 ms 54.911 ms 55.031 ms > 8 2a01:178:9191:3::200 54.223 ms 56.567 ms 53.365 ms > 9 2a01:178:9191:3::1 54.974 ms 54.340 ms 54.929 ms > 10 2a01:178:9191:3::200 54.552 ms 54.361 ms 55.203 ms > 11 2a01:178:9191:3::1 57.085 ms 52.958 ms 55.140 ms > OK fixed ben wilkinson newnet plc --- cut here -- end of thread --- A Hollywood Happy End. :-) -- Olivier MJ Cr?pin-Leblond, PhD http://www.gih.com/ocl.html -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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