Dealing with filtered 6to4 clients

Paul Timmins paul at timmins.net
Tue Nov 3 00:19:02 CET 2009


Erik Kline wrote:
> 2009/11/2 Martin List-Petersen <martin at airwire.ie>:
>   
>> Erik Kline wrote:
>>     
>>> 2009/10/27 Martin List-Petersen <martin at airwire.ie>:
>>>       
>>>> Geert Hendrickx wrote:
>>>>         
>>>>> On Tue, Oct 27, 2009 at 12:10:35PM +0000, Martin List-Petersen wrote:
>>>>> Or, on your side, you could not serve AAAA records to (the DNS chaches of)
>>>>> the problematic network(s)?
>>>>>           
>>>> That is the better approach alright.
>>>>         
>>> Until the IPv6 Internet gets less sucky it's the pretty much the only
>>> approach we've been able to come up with.
>>>       
>> Hi Eric.
>>
>> No, you don't serve to anybody but who's on your whitelist.
>>
>> The last approach here was to serve to everybody and blacklist networks
>> that suck.
>>
>> I prefer the latter, but I do understand the approach. Some networks do
>> need the quality.
>>
>> Kind regards,
>> Martin List-Petersen
>> --
>> Airwire - Ag Nascadh Pobail an Iarthair
>> http://www.airwire.ie
>> Phone: 091-865 968
>>
>>     
>
> Right.  I meant the not-serving-to-problem-networks part.  We just
> assume that all networks could have problems, unless otherwise
> explicitly stated.  =)
>   
Is there a way to get on the approved list without a bunch of peering?



More information about the ipv6-ops mailing list