[162608] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: "It's the end of the world as we know it" -- REM
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (cb.list6)
Fri Apr 26 11:02:00 2013
In-Reply-To: <517A1037.8050801@bogus.com>
Date: Fri, 26 Apr 2013 08:01:45 -0700
From: "cb.list6" <cb.list6@gmail.com>
To: joel jaeggli <joelja@bogus.com>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Errors-To: nanog-bounces+nanog.discuss=bloom-picayune.mit.edu@nanog.org
On Apr 25, 2013 10:29 PM, "joel jaeggli" <joelja@bogus.com> wrote:
>
> On 4/25/13 10:16 PM, Matt Palmer wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, Apr 25, 2013 at 07:49:03PM -0700, Michael Thomas wrote:
>>>
>>> On 04/25/2013 07:27 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
>>>>
>>>> AWS stands out as a complete laggard in this area.
>>>
>>> Heh... that's why I put all kinds of question marks and hedges :)
>>> That's disappointing about aws. On the other hand, if aws lights
>>> up v6, a huge amount of content will be v6 capable in one swell-foop.
>>
>> Even if the only thing that supported IPv6 was ELB, and everything else
was
>> still IPv4 internally, that'd put a lot of traffic on IPv6 very quickly,
and
>> ELB is something *entirely* controlled by AWS (you CNAME to an ELB FQDN,
AWS
>> takes care of resolution and proxies a TCP connection to your instance).
>
> elb ipv6 support has been in place for some time (may 2011 for us east
and ireland)
>
> "IPv6 support is currently available in the following Amazon EC2 regions:
US East (Northern Virginia), US West (Northern California), US West
(Oregon), EU (Ireland), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), and Asia Pacific (Singapore).?
Yeah, I thought AWS ELB supported ipv6 too.
But if your ELB is tied to a VPC, that is NOT supported. I learned that one
the hard way, and now that is one less site that would be ipv6 but is not.
CB.
>>
>>
>> - Matt
>>
>
>