| ▲ | iso1631 a day ago | |||||||
I don't have CG Nat, I choose a proper ISP. Opening a hole in my ipv6 firewall or forwarding a port in in my ipv4 firewall is effectively the same thing, I define the policy (allow traffic arriving on $address on tcp/1234 to this server on vlan 12) and it goes live. Away from home, like I am at the moment, I vpn all my traffic back home, to work, or to a mullvad endpoint. Neither the hotel wifi nor tethering off my phone gives me a working ipv6 address (anything other than an fe80::) anyway. All my workflows work on ipv4 only. Some workflows (especially around the corporate laptop) don't work on ipv6 only - maybe that's a zscaler thing, maybe its a windows thing. As such the only choice is ipv4 with ipv6 as a nice to have, or ipv4 only. Personally I prefer the smaller attack surface of a single network protocol. Sounds like ipv6 is a good solution for people who choose ISPs with CGNat. It doesn't matter to me if I vpn home via my ipv6 endpoint or my ipv4 endpoint, I expose a very minimal set of services. I guess if I wanted to host more than 4 servers on the same port at home it would be handy, as my ISP will only allow me to have 4 public IPs without paying for more. I don't host anything other than my wireguard endpoint and some UDP forwards which I specific redirect to where I want to go (desktop, laptop, server) - another great feature of nat, but yes nat66 can do that too. But where's the killer feature of ipv6. Is it just CGNat on poor ISPs? | ||||||||
| ▲ | knorker a day ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I'm not sure where that long story is supposed to convey. Cool story, bro. > Sounds like ipv6 is a good solution for people who choose ISPs with CGNat. I mean… this is just "not even wrong". > Is it just CGNat on poor ISPs? I already said no to this. Look, like I said, you appear to be unaware of so much about everything about the Internet, running an ISP, running a service provider, corporate networks, ISP-customer relationships, small businesses, BGP viable policies, cloud economics, etc… that it's hard to know where to even start. And while HN is great for some things, HN comments are just not suitable for something that is shaped more like a course or internship. This can't even be described as "gaps" in your knowledge. I'm put off by your confidence without the knowledge, and of course also by your implication that if you have CGNat then you should have just worked a little harder to not be so poor, to pay a better ISP, or you should move to a more expensive place where other ISP options exist. Of course ignoring that this doesn't scale to the population at all, and extra address bits are very relevant to scaling. | ||||||||
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