Hi Tony, We;re looking into this, its strange as network connectivity to webcast.ripe.net:1935 works fine and we see over 50% of viewers watching over ipv6. Testing with VLC i do see the same thing, but I can see curl connects to the stream OK. bohara@titan:~> curl -6 rtsp://webcast.ripe.net:1935/ripe/live -vvvv * About to connect() to webcast.ripe.net port 1935 (#0) * Trying 2001:67c:2e8:3::c100:a2... connected * Connected to webcast.ripe.net (2001:67c:2e8:3::c100:a2) port 1935 (#0)
OPTIONS * RTSP/1.0 CSeq: 1 User-Agent: curl/7.21.3 (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu) libcurl/7.21.3 OpenSSL/0.9.8o zlib/1.2.3.4 libidn/1.20 libssh2/1.2.6
< RTSP/1.0 200 OK < Supported: play.basic, con.persistent < Cseq: 1 < Server: Wowza Media Server 2.1.2 build24878 < Public: DESCRIBE, SETUP, TEARDOWN, PLAY, PAUSE, OPTIONS, ANNOUNCE, RECORD, GET_PARAMETER < * Connection #0 to host webcast.ripe.net left intact * Closing connection #0 I'll continue to look into this but rest assured we arnt missing v6 support on purpose! Ben On 2 May 2011, at 16:45, Marco Hogewoning wrote:
Hey Tony,
Thanks for noticing. I talked to ops, they are looking into the matter.
Grtx,
MarcoH
On May 2, 2011, at 3:31 PM, Tony Hain wrote:
While it is good to hear that Rob is finally 'taking IPv6 seriously', the actions of the remote webcast team state otherwise. There is a AAAA for webcast.ripe.net, but all attempts to connect to it for rtsp over IPv6 fail. Http over ipv6 to port 1935 does get a response from the macromedia service, but vlc always gives up on ipv6 and reverts to ipv4.
Tony
-----Original Message----- From: ipv6-wg-admin@ripe.net [mailto:ipv6-wg-admin@ripe.net] On Behalf Of Marco Hogewoning Sent: Friday, April 29, 2011 1:43 AM To: ipv6-wg@ripe.net Subject: [ipv6-wg] IPv6 theme day on RIPE 62
Dear colleagues,
For those of you who missed out on the original announcement and who are wondering why we haven't published an agenda yet. The upcoming RIPE Meeting does not have a formal seating of the IPv6 Working Group. Given the amount of content and the current state of affairs, the collective chairs decided to dedicate a full day to the topic.
So Tuesday's plenary session will be all about IPv6, covering a broad range of topics. We have talks about the state of the world, overviews of the available transitioning techniques and various presentations from people who already deployed IPv6 in their network. We are still busy with the final details of the agenda and the time schedule, but this is what we already have scheduled:
Dynamic IPv4 Address Release - Olaf Bonness
Transition Technologies Overview - Marco Hogewoning
IPv6 Mobility in Emergency Teams - Jan Žorž
RIPE 501 bis - Jan Žorž et al
IPv6 Routing Table Update - Gert Döring
IPv6 Deployment Real Case - Ragnar Anfinsen (Altibox Norway)
IPv6 Issues on AMS-IX Peering LAN - Arien Vijn
Deploying IPv6 Without Huge Costs - Case Study
IPv6 Geolocation - TBD
IPv6 Pending Badge Initiative - INEX
IPv6 CPE survey: Initial results - Mirjam Kuehne
As stated we are still busy with the final details and some speakers, for the latest updates please refer to the meeting plan at http://ripe62.ripe.net/programme/meeting-plan/plenary
For those who can't make it to Amsterdam, all the sessions will be broadcasted on the Internet and available for remote participation. Details for the webcast will be posted on http://ripe62.ripe.net, session will start at 09:00 CEST.
For those coming to the meeting, save travels and see you next week,
The IPv6 Working Group co-chairs.
Marco, Shane and David
Grtx,
MarcoH